Question
What are the legal repurcussions of knowing infecting someone with a disease?
Say you have AIDS and knowingly have unprotected sex with a partner. What are the legal repurcussions of this? As well as the civil repercussions?
And let’s take it a step further. What if you infect someone with a non-fatal virus or STD? Can they sue?
Interested to hear the responses. I have my own theories.
Answers
wow i don’t really know what they are but i don’t really think you can do anything but get help for yourself.
You cannot sue someone for giving you a disease, and even saying that it was sexually transmitted, than it automatically becomes your fault, your responsibility. Unless you were raped, which is a whole nother story.
The only way, and this is very technical, to sue someone for giving you a disease is if you have proof that they injected you with something or drugged you (“daterape drug”) and forcefully injected you with something (Almost impossible to prove)
But this crosses a lot of legal boundaries so you’d be talking about not necessarily being charged for giving somene a disease but something much greater.
Frankly its all circumstantial.
it is illegal to knowingly infect someone with HIV/AIDS
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1355/is_n26_v93/ai_20028177
i would assume that the same laws would apply for other STD’s
Wrong, that case is very cirsumstancial, which I believe I said in my previous statement? Hmmmm
The person who asked the question asked about “partner” not partners. This guy was having sex with a lot of different teenagers since 1996. So obv. he is going to be charged only because he did it to a lot of people because that is endangerment.
But not telling your partner ISN’T illegal! Providing your not promiscuous!
Cooldil17, WRONG! I don’t know which rock you’ve been living under, but this is a criminal act.
I believe you owe Patrick an apology, for your uncouth means of communication!
WRONG, it says reckless, which can be inferred as being multiple people! Which in this case we are talking about singular! ONE! So wrong again!
@lovelyy If you don’t know STD and AIDS are, you better learn PDQ (pretty damn quick). Stay away from the guys until you educate yourself.
@cooldil17— The wiki link I gave also says intentional, which is knowingly transmitting HIV! You are not a lawyer, and if you were, I wouldn’t hire you to represent my dog! Go play on MySpace!
@bulbatron: That is highly debatable and as for your immature myspace comment; Your how old? Exactly
@Cooldil17— It may be debatable. However, this would require someone with the ability to debate, and not just say WRONG! Show where you’ve received your information, so we at fluther, know your not just fabricating this nonsense in your head.
As far as the MySpace comment, I believe you would be better off there, and not misinforming our collective here! I’m 28, exactly.
There are likely legal/civil repurcussions…as we’ve all read in the link provided by Patrick (or SHOULD have read). But there is another very REAL, very VALID side to this debate (which may not truly even BE a debate – either it’s illegal or not): unless you are RAPED by someone with HIV/AIDS or another STD, you are partly to blame. Anyone who has sex and knowingly bypasses the opportunity to protect themself from the UNKNOWN needs their head checked. And while some STDs aren’t even preventable by simply using a condom, we all have the same information and should know better (and if we DON’T have the information, we shouldn’t be engaging in sexual acts to begin with). Your physical health is no more the responsibility of a total stranger than your bank account. Funny…some people actually value their bank account a bit more. The real debate hear should be one of moral obligation, not legal repurcussions – and I don’t believe that would truly be a debate worth while.
I’m a court reporter and recently did a deposition about this very issue. KNOWINGLY AND INTENTIONALLY spreading HIV in Florida brings a lawsuit. Don’t know where you live cooldil.
To Everyone: Sorry for all this, I thought I was right, but now I realize I’m not. Please don’t take my answer to this question as an example as of to how I answer all of the questions.
Thank you
I believe that a few years back an HIV positive man was charged with attempted murder when he spit on a police officer during an arrest.
There has been several cases attempted to validate and charge someone with Attempted Murder for knowingly spreading the AIDS/HIV virus. There have also been cases for the flu, bird flu, sars, etc… This is not as uncommon as one would think it to be.
@Cooldil: With all do respect my friend, you are wrong. Please know that I am not pointing this out to make you look bad or make myself look good or whatever but you seem so sure of your answer.
You can also be sued for not shoveling your driveway or sidewalk. Say, if I fall while chasing my dog onto your private property in the middle on winter and I break my leg. Say that I am also a leg model. I can sue you for so so so much money.
@Judochop: With all do respect I already apologized about all of this what more do you want me to do? I thought I was right but I’m wrong, it happens all the time, I mean I’m only human right?
I know that saliva does not transmit the virus, but the man who spit was not educated about his own disease and admitted that his intent was to infect the officer.
@Cooldil, yeah my bad brother. To be human is to error. If we did everything right no one would even know we were here.
http://www.thebody.com/content/art32643.html
http://www.doh.wa.gov/cfh/HIV_AIDS/Prev_Edu/HIV_Policy_Review/BEPH_Draft_1119.pdf
These two links show cases that should be of interest.
In Illinois, if you know you have HIV and have sex with another person, even if that person voluntarily had sex with you and voluntarily took no precautions, if you failed to disclose you were infected with HIV, it is a Class 2 felony called Criminal Transmission of HIV (a bad name, as it is a crime even if the other person was NOT actually infected with HIV):
(720 ILCS 5/12‑16.2) (from Ch. 38, par. 12‑16.2)
Sec. 12‑16.2. Criminal Transmission of HIV. (a) A person commits criminal transmission of HIV when he or she, knowing that he or she is infected with HIV:
(1) engages in intimate contact with another;
(2) transfers, donates, or provides his or her blood, tissue, semen, organs, or other potentially infectious body fluids for transfusion, transplantation, insemination, or other administration to another; or
(3) dispenses, delivers, exchanges, sells, or in any other way transfers to another any nonsterile intravenous or intramuscular drug paraphernalia.
(b) For purposes of this Section:
“HIV” means the human immunodeficiency virus or any other identified causative agent of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome.
“Intimate contact with another” means the exposure of the body of one person to a bodily fluid of another person in a manner that could result in the transmission of HIV.
“Intravenous or intramuscular drug paraphernalia” means any equipment, product, or material of any kind which is peculiar to and marketed for use in injecting a substance into the human body.
(c) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to require that an infection with HIV has occurred in order for a person to have committed criminal transmission of HIV.
(d) It shall be an affirmative defense that the person exposed knew that the infected person was infected with HIV, knew that the action could result in infection with HIV, and consented to the action with that knowledge.
(e) A person who commits criminal transmission of HIV commits a Class 2 felony.
(Source: P.A. 86‑897.)
No intent to actually cause harm is required.
While I was a corrections officer, an inmate who knew he had AIDS intentionally spattered me with blood. He was convicted of Aggravated Battery and Criminal Transmission of HIV, even though I did not contract HIV.
@hossman “While I was a corrections officer, an inmate who knew he had AIDS intentionally spattered me with blood. He was convicted of Aggravated Battery and Criminal Transmission of HIV, even though I did not contract HIV.”
I bet that scared the bejeezus out of you! Is that why you say “was a corrections officer”?
I would’ve quit, too!
Nope. I quit for other reasons. I didn’t know he had AIDS at the time, as federal law prohibits correctional officers from being told which inmates have HIV and which do not. I did know the probability was higher than in the general populace. I did sweat it out until 3 consecutive tests came back negative.
But blood is one of the least gruesome of the bodily fluids I had flung on me in my brief time with the DOC. Trust me, you don’t want to know.
I suppose it depends on location. In California, it’s a felony* to knowingly pass diseases without fair disclosure; but the law is so narrow in scope that it’s not really that effective.
*SB705

