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- THE WEEK, Page 23SOCIETYPossession of a Dangerous Weapon
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- Laws often fail to stop intentional spread of HIV virus
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- HIV-infected blood has become perhaps the most difficult of
- deadly weapons to control. Those who wield it often strike
- without warning or remorse. Parolee Terry Boatwright, facing
- accusations that he had raped and also injected his
- ex-girlfriend with his own tainted blood because he wanted her
- to know what it was like to live with HIV, shot himself to
- death during a standoff with Escambia County (Florida) sheriffs
- on Nov. 28. Two days later, a Portland, Oregon, judge sentenced
- Alberto Gonzalez to 113 months in prison for having unprotected
- sex with a 17-year-old girl last year and giving her marijuana.
- Gonzalez knew he had the AIDS virus since 1988.
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- More than 25 states have laws on the books making it a
- misdemeanor or felony for an HIV-positive person to spread the
- virus through methods ranging from sexual contact to the
- splattering of blood. In Louisiana the malicious transmission of
- the AIDS virus carries a maximum punishment of $5,000 and 10
- years in prison -- last month, for the first time, a man was
- prosecuted and convicted under the law. Lawrence Gostin, head of
- the U.S. AIDS Litigation Project, recommends education and
- counseling for HIV-infected people to convince them that they
- have responsibility to tell others about their condition: "I
- don't believe for a minute that harsh criminal punishment is
- making people change their behavior."
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