26 February 2010

The scandal of Scottish HIV exposure prosecutions...

When it was reported that Mark Devereaux had plead guilty to four charges of culpable and reckless conduct in the High Court in Dumbarton, I wrote about some of the implications and justification for Scots criminalisation of HIV transmission. Let’s be clear on our facts. Devereaux did not tell four of his sexual partners that he had been diagnosed with the Human Immunodeficiency Virus. Reportedly, he had been in long term relationships with two of these women. One of the women with whom Devereaux had an extended relationship was herself diagnosed as HIV positive as a result of their unprotected sex. The three other women were not. Yet four charges were pressed against Devereaux for culpable and reckless conduct. The three for mere exposure, as opposed to reckless transmission of HIV despite personal knowledge of that status, are the first such prosecutions in the United Kingdom. He has now been sentenced.

My first post on this subject asked a number of questions, explored a number of the issues. How do we construct harm? How do we select what harms are punishable by our criminal law? By contrast, this post makes a more specific argument. I believe that despite his strongly unattractive conduct, his lies, the emotional distress he has certainly caused a number of people – that it is absurd to prosecute a man for “exposing others” – and notice how passively this constructs female sexuality – to HIV. On transmission, my mind is less made up. However, as I commented earlier, the present legal position means that it is at least theoretically illegal for those who are HIV positive to engage in procreative sex in Scotland. This is scandalous. Finally, partly informed by the foregoing, sentencing the miserable Mark Devereaux to 10 years in prison is palpably excessive. Through his legal agents, I hope he ventures to lodge an appeal against the sentence handed down by the Court this month.


The Scottish legal magazine the Firm have Lord Pentland’s full sentencing statement of the 25th of February. They don’t begin well, confirming that “A man has been sentenced to ten years in jail after embarking on a series of sexual relations whilst in the knowledge that sexual contact would pass on the HIV infection to his partners” (my emphasis). This, as the facts of the case bear out, is total bunkum. Devereaux pled guilty to four charges of culpable and reckless conduct – three of which were prosecutions for “exposure”, while only one woman is now HIV positive as a result of Devereaux’s actions. We’re dealing with risk and potentialities here, not unavoidable necessities implied by the Firm’s would. Here is what Lord Pentland had to say:



“Mark Richard Devereaux, you have pled guilty to four charges of culpable and reckless conduct arising from a prolonged and sustained course of utterly irresponsible, dangerous and selfish sexual behaviour on your part. In short, knowing full well for many years that you had been infected with the Human Immunodeficiency Virus, you repeatedly and regularly had sexual intercourse with a number of women, without taking any steps to protect them against the risk that you would thereby transmit the virus to them. You were well aware from the medical advice given to you that you were at risk of infecting any sexual partner if you had unprotected intercourse, but you chose not to inform any of your partners that you had the virus and you chose not to use a condom or take any precautions.

You were engaged in long-term relationships with two of your victims and you infected one of these women with the virus. She decided to have an abortion when she discovered that she was infected. When the other of your long-term partners found your medication at one stage, you denied that it was for HIV and continued to have unprotected sex with her.

Those of your victims whom you did not infect were nonetheless each exposed to a considerable risk of contracting the virus. It seems to me that you callously and cruelly betrayed the trust placed in you by each of your partners and that you deceived them for your own self-centred reasons. Each of your victims has been devastated by these events. The person whom you infected will have to live for the remainder of her life with the knowledge that she now has the virus. She will require to have regular medical treatment and to take regular medication. She may suffer further consequences and must live with the uncertainty of that hanging over her. The charge in relation to her includes the serious aggravation that her life has been endangered. The others have all suffered great distress and anxiety on learning the truth about you and your deceitful and reprehensible conduct towards them.

I have taken full account of all that has been said on your behalf by Mr. Renucci and of the contents of the Social Enquiry Report. I accept that you have a good employment record and that you have no analogous criminal convictions. I am willing to accept, to some degree, that you pushed the reality of matters to the back of your mind, but this cannot in any sense excuse the highly irresponsible nature of your behaviour.

In my opinion, your persistent failure to be open about your condition and your prolonged insistence on having unprotected sex with a number of women over a period of several years shows a gross level of recklessness on your part and a total indifference to the welfare of those with whom you had intimate relations. In these circumstances, a substantial custodial sentence must be imposed. Had it not been for your guilty plea tendered at an early stage, I would have sentenced you to a term of thirteen years imprisonment.

You are entitled, as a matter of law, to a discount to reflect the fact that you pled guilty. In selecting the discount, I note that you made full admissions to the police when they interviewed you in July 2009. It is accordingly difficult to see that you ever had any possible defence to the charges. I accept, however, for the reasons set out by your counsel that your early admission of guilt had some utilitarian value. In the whole circumstances, I shall exercise the discretion conferred on me by reducing the sentence to one of ten years imprisonment. This is a cumulative sentence imposed in respect of all four charges. I shall backdate that sentence to
19 January 2010 since when you have been in custody in relation to this matter. I have already certified you for the purposes of the Sexual Offences Act 2003. The Clerk of Court will inform you in writing of the period during which the notification requirements will apply.”


Flatly, I’m appalled that the Court considers 13 years appropriate punishment for the charges as libelled, despite the reduced quantum for formal contrition and admission of fault. Moreover, a single ‘cumulative’ sentence is a suspicious beast – how does it break down? One year a piece for the exposure cases, ten for transmission? Giovanni Mola, whose case I discussed in my previous remarks, received nine years imprisonment for reckless and culpable transmission. He pled not guilty, however, and thus received no reduction for tendering a guilty plea. Given that comparator, it is difficult to tease out exactly how the case broke down in Lord Pentland’s mind. It is fair to argue that the exposure offences, which I’m particularly concerned with here, were tabulated to at least one year apiece.


Which brings us on to the nature of the conduct justifying such an imposition of penalty. Detective Inspector Martin Dunn, of Grampian Police, is quoted elsewhere remarking (fairly in the first sentence) that: “Devereaux acted with almost unbelievable irresponsibility and recklessness.” The Inspectors then embroiders this remark with another: “He has blighted the lives of all the women he had relationships with since being diagnosed”. I fail to see how this is true with respect to the three cases of culpable and reckless exposure. Like a tedious bore with his cyclically recurring ‘cancer-scare’ story, who relates how the queer, painless lump that put his world all out of joint and prompted melancholy reflections on his own morality was merely a benign cyst - yet still petitions for our interest and confirmation of his victim status. I don’t mean to imply that this whole process can have been easy for any of the women by any measure. I’m sure much upset and alarm resulted when Devereaux’s sexual partners realised that their past conduct may have had consequences which are unknown and challenging. But don’t let’s forget – only one of these women have any lasting physical repercussions. So why talk about them as if all four cases were fundamentally the same? Why the justifying innuendo, the implausible claims to permanent injury? “The others have all suffered great distress and anxiety on learning the truth about you and your deceitful and reprehensible conduct towards them”, said Lord Pentland. True enough, I’m sure. But hardly the stuff that state prosecutions are justified by, is it?


How many individuals sexually betray their fidelity to a partner – and generate analogous care and stress? How many parents inflict their neuroses on their guileless children to their permanent psychological injury and the disfigurement of their life’s potential? How many employers callously and with malice a’forethought, make their workforces redundant but luxuriate in inflated bonuses, to the workers’ significant anxiety, distress and manifest suffering? The point about all of this is not to collapse any of these claims to have suffered, to have been the victim of another. Rather, they highlight the crucial point – the criminal law doesn’t exist to salve hurt feelings or correct all the small and major injustices which we all inflict on one another. Its causes of action are generally and ought to be far narrower than the manifold capacity of humankind to err and sin. There but by the Grace of God, you might argue, for these three women, left unharmed. No thanks to Devereaux, certainly, but smiling Fortune and a bit of luck. Yet this isn’t just about one man, his lies, his breaches of trust, his scurrying and contemptible character. We operate within an ideology of legal rationality, where Devereaux the individual is separable from Devereaux the legal category, the formal authority, the basis for legal reasoning in the future. This second Devereaux concerns me acutely – the prosecution and punishment of HIV exposure and the criminalisation of the sex lives a section of the community should concern us all. Particularly with the tabloids commentating at a shrill fever pitch, full of passionate intensity.

3 comments:

  1. Does this not boil down to the issue of us having a responsibility not to cause harm to other people, or where appropriate, to warn them of the possible danger?

    There are a range of cases where this scenario already exists. If I get in my car after drinking then I can be prosecuted for this, even if I do not actually end up harming anyone.

    This same premise you could argue applies to cigarettes. If you want to sell cigarettes you have to warn people of the potential dangers, and allow them to make the choice.

    The problem in this case was the women concerned were never given this option. Mr Devereaux could have told them the situation in which case it would be their judgement as to the extent of risk and so whether or not to proceed.

    The fact that he chose not to tell them of this -clearly serious - risk suggests he thought they might reject him and thus delibrately chose to deny them full information.

    It is of course unfortunate that anyone should find themselves in the position where they have to tell such a major thing to a potential partner. And equally HIV+ people not being able to pursue a relationship must be equally heartbreaking.


    However there is not a right for anyone to have a relationship but people surely should have the right to make their own choices?

    In this case the women were never given that right leading to genuinely heart breaking circumstances and a potential early death for one. It's hard to see how a prosecution couldn't follow this.

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  2. The public reputation and stigma accorded to HIV infection, of physical and mental suffering and imminent premature death, has perhaps not moved sufficiently since the early days of the 1990s. Modern treatment has redefined this initial infection (HIV) from one of acute pathology leading rapidly to the devastating development of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS)- to a chronic long-term condition with an average survival expectancy (among younger patients) of some thirteen years as calculated in 2008. This average survival rate with HIV is set to increase with continued efficacy of detection at earlier presentation and better treatment and care.

    Not for a moment am I condoning the actions of the guilty party in this case but I wonder if the persistant public stigma etc., established in the early days with poor treatment outcomes, has something to do with his sentence?

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  3. Lallans, I generally find your missives well-argued and, sometimes even, am in agreement with them... but this time I think you've gone astray.

    I discussed Devereux's case as well, and will leave it with the words of one of the 'lucky' women who weren't infected.

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