[Updated]US: SC man convicted again for exposing woman to HIV

 

 

Sentencing

SC man convicted again for exposing woman to HIV

April 14, 2014
Source: The State

A Taylors man received a three-year sentence for exposing a woman to HIV, but is expected to serve two years of probation, according to a court document.

GM, 45, of 8 Cohu Drive received the sentence last week in Cherokee County.

This is not the first time M has been accused of exposing a woman to HIV. M was sentenced to 4 1/2 years in February 2009 for exposing another woman to the virus.

In that case, M knowingly exposed a woman he met in Florida and lived with in Spartanburg before his arrest in March 2008. The victim became pregnant with M’s twins and learned about the disease during a prenatal check-up.

Sentencing

Four year sentence after pleading guilty

February 3, 2009
Source: wnct.com

A South Carolina man has been sentenced to more than four years in prison for infecting his girlfriend with HIV…. M will serve his sentence in Florida where he is already in prison for a similar crime.

 

Charged

Man charged with exposing girlfriend to HIV

March 22, 2008
Source: The State

SPARTANBURG — A Spartanburg man has been arrested on a charge he knowingly exposed a girlfriend to HIV, causing her to become infected, authorities say.

GM 39, was arrested Thursday afternoon at his home. Under state law, it’s illegal for someone who knows he or she is HIV positive to engage in sexual intercourse without informing the other person, said Maj. Dan Johnson with the Spartanburg County Sheriff’s Office.

“When you’re infected with HIV and pass it on to a partner in some form or fashion knowingly, you can see what a tremendous health issue that is,” he said.

According to the Sheriff’s Office, the woman discovered she was infected during a prenatal checkup after she became pregnant with twins in 2007. She told investigators she and M first engaged in consensual sex in 2006 in Florida. They moved to Spartanburg, where they lived together until January, when she moved back to Florida.

According to the Sheriff’s Office, M recently admitted to the woman he has been infected with HIV since 2002, but never informed her of his status or suggested practicing safer sex before that.

The crime is a felony that can carry up to 10 years in prison or a $5,000 fine upon conviction. In 2005, a Spartanburg County man pleaded guilty to knowingly exposing two people he met over the Internet to HIV and was sentenced to 18 months in prison and three years of probation. But such cases are rare, Johnson said.

“I’m not sure that I’ve ever seen one of those,” he said.

Spartanburg police Capt. Randy Hardy echoed his thoughts. “I can’t remember seeing that or having made a charge of that,” he said.

Tracey Jackson, executive director of the Spartanburg-based HIV prevention and advocacy group Piedmont Care, said sexual partners might not disclose their status — and most don’t report infection to law enforcement — because of the stigma that continues to shroud the virus, which causes AIDS.

“What you’re seeing here is fear of HIV and fear of stigma,” she said.

But no law, Jackson said, reduces the duty of all individuals to protect themselves, and all people who engage in sexual activity should discuss HIV with their partners. At the same time, people who are HIV positive shouldn’t be further stigmatized because of the actions of any one individual, she said.

There are also difficulties in enforcing the law, including proving someone exposed a partner during the suspected time period and knew he or she was HIV positive at the time.