It was almost an afterthought when a Maricopa County Superior Court judge ordered former Phoenix police Officer Christopher J. Wilson to submit to an HIV test while he awaited trial on allegations of sexual misconduct with a minor. The law allowing judges to order such tests for defendants suspected of certain crimes has been in place for about 20 years, and they are routinely submitted without legal challenges. But Wilson chose to fight it. His first challenge was rejected in Superior Court, but his attorney, Robert Campos, said he plans to file an appeal with the Arizona Supreme Court, arguing that forcing Wilson to submit to the test without an evidentiary hearing amounts to a violation of his client’s constitutional protection against unreasonable search and seizure.
Ex-Phoenix officer in sex case fighting HIV-test order
News curated from other sources
US: Advocates seek to modernise HIV laws and HIV prevention education
Experts call for modernized HIV education and decriminalization in Oklahoma
November 16, 2024
US: New report shows that most of Indiana’s HIV criminal laws have yet to account for decades of advances in HIV science
Indiana has six HIV criminalization laws. Most criminalize conduct that cannot transmit HIV
November 15, 2024
US: First hearing imminent on two bills aiming to overhaul HIV criminalisation laws in line with modern science
Sweeping language introduced to modernize Ohio’s HIV laws proposed by an unlikely lawmaker
November 14, 2024
Kenya: Kenyan court dismisses HIV transmission case against domestic worker
Justice prevails as court stops unfounded HIV transmission charges
November 5, 2024
Mexico: Congresswoman presents HIV decriminalisation bill in Tlaxcala Congress
A bill to repeal the crime of the danger of contagion was presented before the Plenary of the Congress.
October 23, 2024