Overturns Conviction of Man Who Failed to Disclose HIV-Positive Status

Discussion in 'LGBT News and Events' started by mojoreece, Dec 21, 2016.

  1. mojoreece

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    By Ben Guarino December 21 at 5:15 AM for The Washington Post

    A year and a half ago, a former student-athlete named Michael L. Johnson was found guilty of, among other crimes, infecting a sexual partner with HIV.

    Also known by the nickname Tiger Mandingo, Johnson was a wrestler at Lindenwood University, near St. Louis, from 2012 until his arrest in 2013. Before Tuesday, Johnson, now in his mid-20s, had been serving the beginning of a 30-year sentence.

    But a panel of appeals court judges recently reversed the trial court’s judgment. The prosecution rendered Johnson’s trial fundamentally unfair, the panel wrote in an opinion Tuesday, by using cellphone recordings that “were not disclosed to the defense until the morning of the first day of the trial.”

    The wrestler discovered he was HIV positive in early January 2013, after a medical exam at Lindenwood University. A few weeks later, Johnson had unprotected sex with a fellow student, known only by the initials D.K.-L. in court documents. The student would testify in court that Johnson did not disclose his HIV-positive status.

    A month after Johnson’s positive HIV test, physicians diagnosed D.K.-L., too, with HIV. The doctors determined that the student only recently acquired the HIV infection. Johnson was the sole person, D.K.-L. testified, with whom he had had sex in the previous year. When D.K.-L. saw that Johnson continued to use hookup apps without informing potential partners he had HIV, the student contacted the Saint Charles police. They arrested Johnson on Oct. 10, 2013.

    During the trial, Johnson remained adamant that he informed his partners of the positive HIV test. He pleaded not guilty. The prosecution, however, impeached his testimony using three clips of cellphone conversations, recorded while Johnson was jailed. In one snippet of phone conversation, Johnson admitted he was just “pretty sure” he had informed his partners he was HIV positive.

    [Man who knowingly spread HIV sentenced to six months. Judge calls it a ‘travesty.’]

    After slightly more than two hours of deliberation, a jury declared Johnson guilty of three crimes, all felonies under Missouri law: one count of recklessly infecting a sexual partner with HIV, one count of recklessly exposing a partner to HIV and three counts of attempting to recklessly infect a partner with HIV. In July 2015, Judge Jon A. Cunningham of the Circuit Court for St. Charles County sentenced Johnson to 30 years in prison.

    The outcome was condemned by human rights and LGBT advocates as based on outdated policy. The Missouri criminal law that Johnson had violated dated to the late 1980s, a holdover from a time before antiretroviral therapies and pre-exposure prevention drugs, the critics argued.

    “The social stigma of being black, gay and HIV-positive was furthered in a courtroom where Judge Cunningham adjudicates through the frame of 1987 laws that respond largely to public panic rather than grounded science,” wrote Jeffrey Q. McCune, a Washington University gender and African American studies professor, in an op-ed in the Saint Louis Post-Dispatch after Johnson’s sentencing.

    Tim Lohmar, a prosecutor for St. Charles County in Missouri, disputed that the charges involved Johnson’s sexual orientation or race. In an August 2015 opinion piece also published at the Post-Dispatch, Lohmar wrote, “It was about the fact that Johnson intentionally withheld his medical status from multiple sex partners, and in doing so, denied them the right to make an informed decision as to whether or not they should engage in sexual activity with someone who has the potential to expose them to HIV.”

    [Jenny McCarthy slams Charlie Sheen for not telling her he had HIV]

    “The sex itself was not the crime. Consensual sex among adult individuals, regardless of one’s sexual orientation or one’s status as a carrier of a communicable disease, is not a crime,” the prosecutor added. “What is a crime is when one partner fails to disclose his HIV status to a sexual partner.”

    Presiding Missouri Court of Appeals’ Eastern District Judge James M. Dowd wrote Tuesday that Johnson’s trial was rendered “fundamentally unfair” by the prosecutors; they tarried too long handing over the cellphone calls recorded while Johnson was in the county jail. “The State’s blatant discovery violation here is inexcusable,” the judges concluded.

    Scott Schoettes, a lawyer with the LGBT rights organization Lambda Legal who said he assisted Johnson’s public defender, said the group was elated by the reversal. “Living with HIV is not a crime,” Schoettes said in a statement. “Except in the most extreme cases, the criminal law is far too blunt an instrument to address the subtle dynamics of HIV disclosure.”

    Johnson’s attorney also celebrated the decision. “Statutes like the one used to prosecute Mr. Johnson are inherently problematic, as they promote stigma and animus towards people living with HIV in violation of their legal and constitutional rights,” Lawrence Lustberg, Johnson’s lawyer, said in a statement to the AP.

    To his friends and fellow wrestlers, Johnson was sometimes known by his nickname, Tiger. In high school, as Johnson said in a 2014 profile at BuzzFeed News, a friend added Mandingo. Johnson embraced it, using it as an online handle for his dating and social networking sites. He took Mandingo to be the title of a “brave black slave fighter.” (He also told BuzzFeed he was aware of its slang association for a well-endowed black man.)

    “I know what it means to me — a black slave that’s a fighter,” he said in 2014. “I consider myself a fighter.”

    Johnson’s legal fight will continue: The panel of judges overturned Johnson’s conviction and remanded the case for a new trial.
     
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  2. DreG

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  3. Nick Delmacy

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    I was one of Michael Johnson's early online defenders and my long Cypher Avneue essay on his situation was even mentioned and linked in the BuzzFeed profile mentioned here as a rare opinion that saw through the witch hunting being done to him.

    Very glad to hear he will at least get a new trial.
     
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  4. OckyDub

    OckyDub is a Verified MemberOckyDub I gave the Loc'ness monstah about $3.50
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    Demonization, stigma, and this particular case aside...

    What should the punishment be for knowingly infecting someone with HIV? Saying the person being infected should have protected their self is not an answer but is typically the one given. I have yet to see an answer to this question from Human Rights, LGBT / HIV advocates.

    Simple question to me but never a simple answer because....reasons....
     
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  5. ControlledXaos

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    I don't think there's an answer to that that will satisfy everyone. It seems putting someone in prison doesn't help anyone. You can't even really sue people because some people wouldn't have the money to really pay for the damages.

    I wouldn't be surprised if the conservatives came up with a registry TBH for known non disclosurers.
     
  6. mojoreece

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    I think the crux of the matter will be what will happen at his new trail. Will it mistrial? Should a person serve time for not disclosing their HIV pos when having sex; even if they meant no malicious harm? If so, how much time should he serve, 1,2,5 years or maybe he just do community service? Also since the case has got so much publicity I wonder will this effect the case in any may negative or positive? If Mr. Johnson is freed of all chargers and released, how will he pick up the pieces and go on with his life?
     
    #6 mojoreece, Dec 22, 2016
    Last edited: Dec 22, 2016
  7. ControlledXaos

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    Write a book, sell the movie rights of his story, escort, personal train, IG thirst trap, HIV advocacy, Starbucks barista, finish his degree, etc.
     
  8. OckyDub

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    Or who will he infect next....
     
  9. mojoreece

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    [​IMG][​IMG]
     
  10. mojoreece

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    I Hope can is able to finish his degree and get come type of gainful employment. I also hope he is taking meds. Maybe he can to some type of HIV advocacy work. I really hope hes able to turn his life around after this and stop having unprotected sex.
     
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  11. Winston Smith

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    The conviction was overturned over a possible "Brady Material" issue; that is, prosecutors withheld material from the defense in a manner that prejudiced his attorneys ability to effectively respond and defend. The appeals ruling does not deal with the merits of the underlying statute.

    While I think jurisdictions are often hyper-religious and conservative in criminalizing certain diseases (it can be argued that this situation is a sexual tort and therefore civil liability might come into play), I think there has to be some repercussion for knowingly transmitting an incurable STI without disclosure to the sexual partner. HIV is generally avoidable, unless you get it accidentally like Arthur Ashe, not something that one can't help spreading like the cold or flu.

    Just as prosecutors withheld evidence from defense that allowed them to make reasonable choices, likewise Mandingo allegedly withheld information that denied sexual partners an opportunity to make a choice whether or not to engage in sex with the infected. If Mandingo didn't know his status that would be different as both parties are acting on incomplete info and best faith effort.

    The LGBT activists and lawyers are deliberately fudging the issues; this is not about gay rights or "oppression", it's about medical disclosure. The availability of treatments today doesn't change the fact that HIV is still a life-changing and (for now a still) incurable disease, regardless as to the attitudes of the 1980s when the law was passed. Diabetes is a generally incurable but treatable condition, but if it were transmissible, would folk still want to contract it if they didn't HAVE to, just because it's "treatable"?

    Mandingo was tried for non-disclosure of a transmissible disease, not being gay. Not informing people about one's HIV status robs them of information and the right to make life-changing choices. Disclosure not only would have given Mandingo an affirmative defense ("I told him and he wanted to smash anyway"), but then puts the onus on the other person ("ok, you're positive, I don't care").
     
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