Criminalizing HIV may only fuel the epidemic
FREE AGENT / Laws create disincentive for testing
Shawn Syms / National / Thursday, July 17, 2008
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Want to know a great way to increase the spread of HIV? Criminalize it.

In Canada, a person with HIV can be put in jail if they have unprotected sex with someone who didn't ask about their HIV status. This means that HIV-negative people have the power to seek prosecution of HIV-positive people over sexual choices they made together, even if no HIV transmission occurs at all.

On first glance, this may sound fair. After all, isn't the person with HIV being dishonest, hiding information that any HIV-negative person deserves to know so they can avoid hopping in the sack with them in the first place? If you judge by media coverage, or common public sentiment, or even the views of many gay men, you might agree. But things aren't that simple.

The Supreme Court decided a decade ago that a person with HIV can be prosecuted if they engaged in sex that involved a "significant risk of serious bodily harm" — but the question of which activities meet that criteria and which don't hasn't been definitely settled.

If there are unanswered legal questions, the lack of community agreement is just as apparent. I think there's a shared ethical consensus that it's malicious to lie about HIV status to convince someone to have unprotected sex. Beyond that though, opinions are all over the map.

Some negative gay men assert their own responsibility to play safe and don't discriminate based on known or perceived HIV status — while others express righteous indignation that anyone would engage in even the safest of activities without informing others if they have HIV.

Some men with HIV feel that if they disclose, any behaviour that both parties agree to is acceptable. Others think playing extra safe should be enough. And significant numbers of people with HIV actually support criminalization. Can we all come closer together as a community on these questions? And does criminal prosecution under the law offer us any assistance in that goal?

"These laws harm public health — and they don't help anyone," argues Edwin Bernard, a writer and researcher who studies HIV criminalization laws around the world. "The subtle but very real impact of these legal cases is that people with HIV don't have the same sexual and reproductive rights as others."

If you read the judgments in court cases of so-called "reckless" HIV-transmission risk — more and more of which are prosecuting gay men — they seem to send the message that people with HIV are completely responsible for protecting the sexual health of others, and that HIV-negative people don't have any personal responsibility for the choices they make.

That's not exactly the case, says Richard Elliott, executive director of the Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network, which has advocated for the legal rights of people with HIV since 1992. He points out the kinds of charges levelled in these cases — such as "criminal negligence causing bodily harm" — are specific to criminal law, which is only concerned with the innocence or guilt of the accused person. In fact, the responsibility of the other partner when it comes to safer sex isn't even really considered.

So why could criminalizing the HIV-transmission risk actually increase the threat of HIV? Because it encourages the people at very greatest risk of passing HIV on — those who don't even know they have it — to avoid testing, diagnosis and treatment.

"This creates yet another disincentive for people to get tested," says Elliott, since knowing your HIV status makes you a target for criminalization — whether or not you consistently practice safer sex. That's because there is very little to protect someone from an HIV-negative person lying about them — and it's left to the judge to decide who is telling the truth.

Often the name of the person with HIV is dragged through the media in terms that are sensational at best, and inaccurate at worst — as was seen in the recent case of gay man Ryan Handy. The London Free Press headline blared "HIV positive man spread virus, jailed 8 months," even though he didn't do that at all. Consistently, the name of the accuser is withheld — potentially creating a safe space for malicious liars to attack responsible people with HIV with relative impunity.

"What's happening in Canada is a witch hunt against HIV-positive people," says Bernard. He points to the Quebec case earlier this month where a woman with HIV pressed charges against her boyfriend for domestic assault. The boyfriend countered that the woman had exposed him to HIV, even though the woman said she disclosed her HIV status early in the relationship and claimed the sex had been protected all along.

"This is a revenge case," says Bernard. "Any time anybody has a grudge against an HIV-positive person, it is now possible to make a complaint and it will always end up being a 'he-said/she-said' or 'he-said/he-said' case in court."

I'd like to expect that all judges and prosecutors are free of bias and well-informed about the real risks of HIV transmission — but that may be a foolish hope. Two months ago an American man with HIV was sentenced to 35 years in prison for spitting on someone. Late last year, an Ontario judge insisted that a witness with HIV and hepatitis C wear a protective mask in the courtroom despite zero risk to anyone in the room. And prosecutors have provided judges and juries with inaccurate information about the ability to medically determine which person infected which in HIV-transmission cases.

"So many of these cases are one person's word against another — and juries are predisposed against HIV-positive people," adds Bernard. "Condom use and disclosure must be proven. But unless people start using mobile phones to video the moment of disclosure and the condom being put on... it gets ridiculous."

There is a common perception that people diagnosed with HIV represent a serious risk to others. But the far more grave threat lies elsewhere — with people who believe themselves to be HIV-negative and who, with little risk of legal prosecution, go around having unprotected sex with anyone they want, perhaps with little discussion of sexual risk and responsibility.

Placing a legal burden on people who know they are HIV-positive goes after the wrong people the wrong way. These women and men have taken the responsibility to get tested and are most likely to be on treatment, which itself significantly reduces their likelihood of infecting others. And when we punish them and throw them in jail, we put them in a situation where they have less access to medication, safer-sex supplies or clean needles — creating a dire epidemic of HIV and hep C in our prison system among people who will eventually be released in far worse shape.

Meanwhile, Bernard points out, studies in Canada and the US have concluded that people who don't know their status — who may believe themselves to be negative — are the ones responsible for the majority of new HIV infections. "Nearly all new HIV infections can be attributed to HIV-positive persons unaware of their HIV status," he wrote in an analysis of multiple research studies for the online resource Aidsmap.

This is because these people are more likely to practice unprotected sex and because the amount of HIV in someone's system is dramatically elevated at the point of initial infection — making it easier to pass the virus on. (The ruling in one Canadian case has suggested these people may be legally liable as well, but this has not been definitively confirmed by the courts.)

All this means that practicing safer sex — rather than mandating that all people with HIV always disclose their status — is the best bet for everyone who wants to remain HIV negative. Disclosing HIV status doesn't protect positive men and women from legal action, and it opens them up to discrimination, stigma and danger.

That can include the threat of physical violence. "Do I risk getting beaten up by disclosing? Or do I risk getting criminally prosecuted if I just stay quiet?" says Elliott of the situation faced by some people with HIV. "This is a really good example of how the criminal law is of very little use in a really complicated human interaction."

"Disclosure is not the answer," says Bernard. He points to the case of David Summers, who, according to a report in the Halifax (UK) Evening Courier, violently beat and brain-damaged a man who disclosed his HIV status after sex, "leaving his victim unconscious in his blood-spattered flat." The report did not indicate that the sex was unprotected.

Bernard has reviewed legal cases of criminal HIV transmission from around the world. In his view, Canada's record is one of the worst. Per capita, he says, "Canada is criminalizing more people with HIV than anywhere in the world." The punishments in the US are the most severe, and the laws in Switzerland are most "draconian" — there, unlike in Canada, using a condom doesn't protect someone from prosecution.

Bernard and Elliott both point to the response to criminalization in England and Wales as hopeful. The UK Crown Prosecution Service developed a guidance document to advise prosecutors on HIV criminalization cases, incorporating input from AIDS service organizations. But Elliott cautions that the comparatively decentralized nature of the Canadian system makes a similar response here unlikely.

Is there any way out of this mess? "The fewer of these laws there are, the better off we will be, in terms of the health of the public at large," argues Bernard, suggesting that criminalization be replaced with a renewed focus on safer sex for everyone and testing, diagnosis and treatment for people who do acquire the virus. "HIV is everybody's concern and sexual health is everybody's responsibility."

Read previous Free Agent columns by Shawn Syms:



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Reader Comments


 
It could be worse
In Singapore, a man was arrested for performing oral sex on someone, which under almost any circumstance would be considered a no-risk activity for HIV transmission.
Singapore Scandal, Toronto Ontario
07/17/08 4:23 PM EST
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Virological Evidence Cannot Prove Transmission
Virological Evidence Cannot Prove Transmission In HIV Criminal Cases warn experts in the British Medical Journal. (BMJ-British Medical Journal: Sept. 6/07) Viral phylogenetics provides a way of assessing the relations between viruses from different people. It allows us to estimate the probability that viruses from two particular people have a recent common origin. But there are serious limitations on what can and cannot be inferred using this technique. The recent flurry of criminal cases brought against people in the United Kingdom accused of infecting their sexual partner(s) with HIV has resulted in several convictions, write Professor Deenan Pillay and colleagues in an editorial. This has caused concern amongst health professionals and community groups about the detrimental effect such cases may have on disclosure of HIV infection and uptake of voluntary HIV testing. In some cases, attempts have been made to present evidence on HIV viral sequence data in a similar way to DNA fingerprinting. In our view, this analogy is seriously misleading, say the authors.
Croft Woodruff, Vancouver BC
07/18/08 1:55 AM EST
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More on phylogenetic tests (comparing HIV strains)
Further to Croft's point, here is a detailed paper on what these tests can and cannot determine, and all the constraints that can impact their results: http://www.aidsmap.com/files/file1001199.pdf
Shawn, Toronto ON
07/18/08 6:58 AM EST
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It should remain criminal
Responsibility should never be compromised, if someone is hiv positive they have moral and legal responsibilty to reveal their status before engaging in high risk activity. At the very least they can insist on safe sex. This is a moral issue, people have to take responsibilty in being tested and make the right choices. When you knowingly endanger the life of other's the law has to be involved to some degree.
Frank, Ottawa Ontario
07/19/08 11:16 AM EST
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It's nice you think that, but...
The problem with Frank from Ottawa's argument is that it lays all responsibility on people who know their positive HIV status. They have all responsibility and no one else has any responsibility supposedly, whether or not they have any HIV in their bodies. Everyone feels they can and should have strong opinions about what HIV-positive people can do and should do. But many don't care much about what anyone else does, even though THAT is really important. That's where the greatest risk lies, as this article points out.
Joe Dunn, Toronto ON
07/20/08 9:32 AM EST
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Take your own responcibility
If you are like me, as an active gay man engaging in sex in a way that is considered promiscuis by those proclaiming a high moral ground then you have to take responcibility for your own actions. If you go to a sauna for example and have a couple of encounters (maybe even more) then the chances are pretty high that you will have sex with somebody with HIV. It may be annon sex - no talking! What you want - a badge of distiction like a brand/tattoo. And what a bout those engaging in BB sex - they all know whats happening and must not blame anyone but themselves for not securing their own safety. What about those who enjoy swallowing Jizz - like me - there is some chance - but thats my chance I take - I cant try and blame someone then. Maybe all HIV POZ men should have the bio-hazard symble tatooed on them - buy force - by some neo-nazi! Cheers Greg (HIV -)
Greg, Be-er Sheva Israel
07/20/08 10:16 AM EST
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recommended reading :)
I don't agree with Shawn's take on the issue. I think the public can claim a legitimate interest in punishing certain types of HIV transmission. I don't buy into the argument that this might lead to people not getting tested, but hey, that's neither here nor there, given that we don't know. In the absence of empirical evidence to the contrary we have a prima facie case in favour of the deterrence argument. It's the basis for having the criminal law to begin with I presume. Be that as it may, I do think the failure of forensics to determine beyond reasonable doubt (if at all) whether X was the cause of Y's infection makes convicting someone of transmitting the bug unacceptable (that is, until the evidentiary situation is improved). It's also worth noting, probably that most cases that have been prosecuted so far were not brought about grumpy regular visitors to gay saunas but quite different people (eg in the UK a 15 y/o teenage girl that was infected by her 10 y/ older lover who knew to be infected and insisted on not using condoms). I'm pretty much on Greg's side on this one (the harm to self argument that would apply to many, if not most transmissions among gay men) , but there's other cases where I am sympathetic to the idea of punishment. Anyway, here's a whole book making the argument against criminalisation: Matthew Weait, Intimacy and Responsibility, Routledge-Cavendish: London 2007.
udo schuklenk, kingston on
07/21/08 5:16 PM EST
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Let's get tested TOGETHER BEFORE we have sex.
A thought experiment... the strategy of "Let's get tested TOGETHER BEFORE we have sex, for A VARIETY of STDs. A sexual health checkup reduces ambiguity and can be like anything else potential sex partners might do together.
the zak, cambridge massachusetts
07/23/08 1:44 PM EST
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UNAIDS sides against criminalization
The international body UNAIDS just came out against HIV criminalization in a statement released at the AIDS conference in Mexico.
UNAIDS update, UNAIDS UNAIDS
08/10/08 12:11 AM EST
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here is the link
http://data.unaids.org/pub/BaseDocument/2008/20080731_jc1513_policy_criminalization_en.pdf
UNAIDS, UNAIDS UNAIDS
08/10/08 12:12 AM EST
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