Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Critics assail crime laws aimed at people with HIV

A man in Texas is serving a 35-year prison sentence for spitting at a police officer ? because he has the virus that causes AIDS and his saliva was deemed a deadly weapon. In Michigan, an HIV-positive man who allegedly bit a neighbor during an argument faced a bioterrorism charge.

Charges for the same acts would have been far less severe if the defendants had been virus-free. Now, a coalition of advocacy groups ? backed by an outspoken champion in Congress ? is ratcheting up a campaign to press for review and possible repeal of criminal statutes specifically targeting HIV-positive people.

"These laws are archaic," said Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Calif. "They're criminalizing a population of people who should not be criminalized."

Lee introduced a bill in September that would provide states with incentives and support to reform criminal laws aimed at people with HIV. Lee assumes the bill has little chance of passage while Republicans control the House, but hopes it will help raise awareness about the state laws.

"It's very important to start these debates, to get governors and legislators to look at it," she said in a telephone interview.

Thirty-four states have criminal laws that punish people for exposing another person to HIV, according to the advocacy groups working with Lee. Prosecutions occur even in the absence of actual HIV transmission, and the laws generally do not consider use of a condom as a defense, the groups said.

Many of the laws were enacted early in the AIDS epidemic, when fear of the disease's deadliness was at its highest and before advances in understanding how HIV was transmitted. The laws have not been revised even though AIDS ? thanks to the development of medication regimens ? is no longer viewed as a death sentence.

Police: Man may have infected hundreds with HIV

Scott Burns, executive director of the National District Attorney's Association, suggested that most prosecutors would oppose Lee's bill and argue that the laws remain necessary to deter HIV-positive people from reckless or irresponsible behavior.

"Notwithstanding that we've made tremendous medical advances, I don't know anyone who'd want to be infected with HIV and go through the treatment regimen," he said.

According to the Centers for Disease Control, HIV is spread primarily by unprotected sex with an HIV-positive person, sharing of tainted needles or syringes, and births by an HIV-infected mother.

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HIV is not spread by saliva, tears or sweat, and there are no documented cases of it being transmitted by spitting, according to the CDC. As for biting, the CDC says there is no transmission risk if the skin is not broken; in a "very small number of cases," transmission did occur when a bite drew blood and caused severe tissue damage.

While prosecutors defend the HIV laws as appropriate for certain cases, some activists argue that criminalization of exposure to HIV can backfire and actually fuel the spread of the disease.

They note that under most of the state laws, people who don't know they have HIV are less culpable than those who do know. This fact could deter some people from learning their HIV status, and thus preclude some HIV-positive people from getting treatment.

A better approach, the advocates say, is to encourage responsibility and disclosure without the underlying threat of arrest and prosecution.

The Obama administration's National AIDS Strategy, released in July 2010, echoes those concerns, saying some of the state laws "may make people less willing to disclose their status by making people feel at even greater risk of discrimination."

"It may be appropriate for legislators to reconsider whether existing laws continue to further the public interest," the strategy says. "In many instances, the continued existence and enforcement of these types of laws run counter to scientific evidence."

Advocates for changes in the laws say many people have served long prison terms and been forced to register as sex offenders for conduct that posed no meaningful risk of HIV transmission. Catherine Hanssens of the Center for HIV Law and Policy, one of the key groups in the advocacy coalition, blames the longevity of the laws on "a seemingly invincible ignorance" about transmission.

Annual surveys by the Kaiser Family Foundation have documented this phenomenon. According to this year's survey, 1 in 3 Americans has a basic misunderstanding about HIV transmission ? believing, for example, that one can get HIV from sharing a drinking glass or swimming in a pool with someone with HIV.

"We need to educate people," Hanssens said. "Before we change the laws, we have to change their minds."

As part of an initiative called the Positive Justice Project, Hanssens' center recently documented scores of cases since 2008 in which people were prosecuted on charges specifically related to being HIV-positive.

Among the cases:

?In March 2010, an HIV-positive man in Michigan faced bioterrorism charges of using HIV as a weapon after he allegedly bit a neighbor on the lip during an argument. Three months later, a judge threw out that charge; the defendant, Daniel Allen, was placed on 11 months of probation for assault.

?In Iowa, an HIV-positive man, Nick Rhoades, received a 25-year sentence in 2009 for failing to disclose his HIV status prior to a one-time consensual sexual encounter during which the virus was not transmitted. Rhoades' sentence was eventually suspended, but he was nonetheless required to register as a sex offender.

?In 2008, a homeless man with HIV, Willie Campbell, received a 35-year sentence for spitting at a Dallas police officer because under Texas law his saliva was considered a deadly weapon. Local health officials said the risk of HIV transmission from saliva was extremely low, but the prosecutor in the case said the tough sentence was warranted.

"No matter how minuscule, there is some risk," said Jenni Morse. "That means there is the possibility of causing serious bodily injury or death."

In Ohio, there have been several recent cases of people being charged with felonious assault under an 11-year-old state law making it a crime for anyone diagnosed with HIV or AIDS to have sex without disclosing that status to their partner. The law applies regardless of whether HIV is transmitted.

"If you participate in any sex act, no matter how major or minor, you must tell your partner you are HIV-positive before having sex ? even if you are practicing safer sex!" warns a fact sheet distributed by Ohio health groups.

In an ongoing case in Cincinnati, former professional wrestler Andre Davis faces the possibility of decades in prison after being convicted in November of 14 counts of assault for having sex with women without telling them he'd tested positive for HIV. His sentencing is set for Jan. 6.

In accordance with the judge's instructions, it was never established at the trial whether any of the women actually became infected with HIV through contact with Davis, whose wrestling stage names included "Gangsta of Love."

Davis' attorney, Greg Cohen, said the law regarding HIV and felonious assault is "fear-based" and flawed because it doesn't require proof that there was any attempt to cause harm. He has said he may file an appeal.

"You can't just assume someone intended to harm someone else just by sleeping with them," Cohen said in a telephone interview.

However, prosecutor Amy Tranter, in closing arguments at last month's trial, said Davis should go to prison for a long time.

"He's shown no remorse, no responsibility for anything that he's done," she said.

William McColl, political director of the Washington-based advocacy group AIDS United, believes criminal prosecutions should be avoided in HIV-related cases except possibly for the rare instances when an HIV-positive person deliberately seeks to transmit the virus to someone else.

In the more common cases where an HIV-positive sexual partner had no malicious intent and there is a dispute about whether the HIV status was disclosed, prosecution is probably inappropriate, McColl said.

Advocacy groups recommend that people with HIV ? to guard themselves against prosecution ? should find ways to document that they disclosed their status to sexual partners. This could entail making a video of a disclosure conversation, having the partner sign a letter confirming the disclosure, or having the partner join in a discussion with a health professional.

"When you are in love, or in the heat of the moment, it may seem impossible to do any of these things," advises the Positive Justice Project. "But remember that these are the tools that may help you fight an arrest or conviction."

For advocacy groups working on behalf of HIV-positive people, the criminalization laws represent a negative side of a mixed picture. Overall, activists are heartened by progress in combatting HIV-related discrimination, whether by private employers or the federal government.

However, everyday discrimination does persist despite the Americans with Disabilities Act, which extends its anti-discrimination protections to people with HIV. In Pennsylvania, for example, a 13-year-old boy recently was denied admission to a private school because he is HIV-positive.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45804757/ns/health-aids/

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Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Japan PM's public support plunges: Nikkei

Support for Japan's prime minister plunged in December as voters lost faith in his leadership, amid party turmoil and criticism over his handling of the nuclear crisis, a poll said Monday.

The share of voters who said they actively disapproved of Yoshihiko Noda, who only who took office in September, was up 14 points from a month earlier to 53 percent, the Nikkei business daily said.

The percentage of people saying they approved of the premier fell 15 points to 36 percent.

The trend mirrors the fate of Noda's five short-lived predecessors, who all came to power with relatively high approval ratings only to see them quickly fade. All were out of office around a year later.

The newspaper said parliamentary censure motions against two of Noda's ministers as well as a widening divide within his party over the drafting of a fiscal 2012 budget proposal had undermined public confidence in the premier.

The Nikkei said 78 percent of poll participants did not accept Noda's announcement this month of the effective end of the accident at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, the worst nuclear crisis in 25 years.

Noda had declared on December 16 that the reactors -- crippled by Japan's quake-tsunami disaster in March -- had reached a state of "cold shutdown".

The announcement means only that the temperature inside the reactors has remained below 100 degrees centigrade (212 Fahrenheit) for a period of time and that emissions of radioactive materials have dropped off.

The work to decommission the plant and clean up the area around it could take up to four decades, officials have said.

The survey came as the ruling Democratic Party of Japan struggles with deep factional divides over a wide range of issues, from ways to rebuild the tsunami-hit region to trade policies.

The Nikkei noted that Noda's falling popularity was echoed across the political spectrum. Support for the ruling party dropped four points to 28 percent, while that for the main opposition Liberal Democratic Party also fell four points to 26 percent.

Noda's proposal to double the five-percent consumption tax, a step deemed necessary by global experts to rein in Japan's enormous public debt, was also unpopular, the Nikkei said.

Some 53 percent of respondents opposed the plan, against 38 percent who supported it.

The Nikkei survey was carried out by telephone from Friday to Sunday and received 928 valid answers.

Source: http://www.terradaily.com/reports/Japan_PMs_public_support_plunges_Nikkei_999.html

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BP money buys sports towels, holiday lights, jingles

PANAMA CITY BEACH, Fla. -- Sports towels and fleece blankets. A poker tournament. A $1 million Christmas display. A prom for senior citizens. BP gas card giveaways. A ?most deserving mom? contest. And advertising, lots of advertising.

Florida Panhandle officials made the mix of eyebrow-raising purchases with $30 million BP gave them earlier this year to help tourism recover from 2010?s disastrous Gulf oil spill.

The money allowed seven area tourism bureaus to try promotions they could never have afforded otherwise, and it has propelled the Panhandle?s visitor counts to record numbers this year following a disastrous season right after the spill. The question now is what happens when the BP money dries up, most likely in April. The grants doubled and tripled the tourism-promotion budgets in these Panhandle counties, and officials worry the boost in visitors may prove fleeting.

ASSOCIATED PRESS/Panama City Beach, Romona Robbins A high-definition animated light show projects on the Sterling Reef in Panama City Beach, Fla. In the foreground of the Sterling Reef is the Christmas Tree Forrest and Ice Palace. Florida Panhandle officials made the mix of eyebrow-raising purchases with $30 million BP gave them earlier this year to help tourism recover from 2010?s disastrous Gulf oil spill.

Will numbers stay up?

?It is one thing to have your numbers go up when a tremendous amount of money is being put, not only in our economy, but in all of north Florida,? said Curt Blair, executive director of the Franklin County Tourist Development Council. ?We will see after April whether part of this was a real recovery ? or if we see fall-off. ? Whether we?ve done that or if we?ve just propped up the market.?

BP announced the $30 million tourism grants in April. Though the agreement for the $30 million doesn?t prevent Florida from pursuing any claims against BP or others, officials there decided a week later not to join other Gulf states in a lawsuit against Transocean, the owner of the Deepwater Horizon rig at the heart of the spill.

Florida?s tourism spending spree isn?t the first time that BP money has allowed government officials to snag items from their wish lists.

Separately, BP had already poured hundreds of millions of dollars into the four Gulf states in the months after the oil spill -- with few strings attached. The Associated Press documented earlier this year how some of the $754 million given to local governments had been spent on Tasers, SUVs and pick-up trucks, rock concerts, an iPad and other items with no direct connection to the oil spill.

In all, BP has given $150 million to Alabama, Florida, Louisiana and Mississippi for tourism promotion since the oil spill, with the Sunshine State getting the lion?s share -- $62 million.

Attention grabbers

Source: http://www.sunherald.com/2011/12/31/3659007/bp-money-buys-sports-towels-holiday.html

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Monday, January 2, 2012

Zeitgest Arts Brunch Benefits Community

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Source: http://twinports.wdio.com/news/restaurants/48996-zeitgest-arts-brunch-benefits-community

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Somber Russell Brand steps out in London

Russell Brand is on the move.

Just hours after filing to divorce his wife of 14 months Katy Perry, the British comic, 36, was spotted leaving London's Savoy hotel on Saturday.

PHOTOS: 2011's most shocking celeb splits

Maintaining a low profile, Brand hid behind dark sunglasses and a gray knit cap as he exited the luxury property.

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    5. Russell Brand, Katy Perry are divorcing

A source tells Us Weekly that Brand had spent most of New Year's Eve holed up in his hotel room watching the West Ham soccer team play (and lose) against Derby.

VIDEO: Look back at what went wrong for Katy and Russell

Citing irreconcilable differences in his December 30 filing, Brand was spotted without his wedding ring Thursday, as Perry, 27, continued to party solo with pals in Hawaii.

"Sadly, Katy and I are ending our marriage," Brand told Us in a statement after his filing. "I'll always adore her and I know we'll remain friends."

PHOTOS: Katy and Russell's zany romance

Brand and Perry wed Oct. 23, 2010 in a lavish six-day ceremony at a tiger reserve in India.

Copyright 2012 Us Weekly

Source: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/45844226/ns/today-entertainment/

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Sunday, January 1, 2012

County taking applications for 120 part-time bus driver jobs

Miami-Dade Transit is looking for part-time bus drivers now that some veteran full-time bus drivers are being trained to become Metrorail operators for the forthcoming elevated train line to Miami International Airport.

According to an MDT statement, people interested in the job can fill out an application via online at www.miamidade.gov/jobs through Tuesday.

?Those who are selected can earn as they learn,? the MDT statement said. ?Bus operator trainees earn $14.71 per hour, and continue gaining experience as part-time bus operators.?

By this spring, Metrorail is scheduled to begin operating its new line from the current Earlington Heights station to the massive public transportation hub known as the Miami Intermodal Center, which is being built just east of MIA.

MDT said it plans to hire 120 part-time bus drivers. MDT currently has 262 part-timers and 1,372 full-timers to drive its 822 buses.

To be selected, applicants must pass a background check and physical exam. They also must have a high school diploma or General Education Diploma (GED), a photo identification such as a Florida driver?s license, and proof of having passed the general knowledge, air-brake and passenger transport sections of the commercial driver license exam.

Those interested in applying can also obtain information by calling the Miami-Dade County Job Information Hot Line at 305-375-5627 or by visiting a South Florida Workforce One-Stop Career Center. Those without Internet access can use a computer at a public library.

Source: http://www.miamiherald.com/2011/12/29/2566243/county-taking-applications-for.html

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Jayhawks in the NBA

Darrell Arthur, Memphis

(did not play, out for season)

Mario Chalmers, Miami

Pts: 9. FGs: 3-5. FTs: 0.

Drew Gooden, Milwaukee

(did not play, coach?s decision)

Xavier Henry, Memphis

(did not play, ankle injury)

Kirk?Hinrich, Atlanta

(did not play, shoulder injury)

Marcus Morris, Houston

Pts: 3. FGs: 1-4. FTs: 1-2.

Markieff Morris, Phoenix

Pts: 0. FGs: 0. FTs: 0.

Paul Pierce, Boston

Pts: 12. FGs: 4-8. FTs: 2-2.

Josh Selby, Memphis

Pts: 9. FGs: 4-9. FTs: 1-3.

Source: http://www2.kusports.com/news/2011/dec/31/jayhawks-nba/

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