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He emerged from prison a potent symbol of HIV criminalization

Reached by phone two days after his release, Johnson said he was rediscovering freedom through convenience store snacks, cartoons and his cellphone.

He emerged from prison a potent symbol of HIV criminalization

Johnson, 27, was released on parole Tuesday after an appeals court found that his 2015 trial was “fundamentally unfair.” His original sentence was longer than the state average for second-degree murder.

Reached by phone two days after his release, Johnson said he was rediscovering freedom through convenience store snacks, cartoons and his cellphone.

“I’m feeling really, really good,” he said.

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But there were periods when he felt intimidated by people who did not believe he had a right to stand up for himself, he added.

His case, which encompasses a half-dozen years of court appearances, unflattering headlines and stints in solitary confinement, has galvanized advocates working to update laws that they say further stigmatize and unfairly penalize people with HIV.

Johnson, who was a black, gay athlete at Lindenwood University in St. Charles, Missouri, has become a public face of people who are disproportionately affected by the virus and entangled in the criminal justice system. (If current trends continue, about half of all black men who have sex with men in the United States will eventually learn they have HIV, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.)

Johnson’s legal troubles began in 2013, when he was arrested after a white man he had had consensual sex with told the police he believed that Johnson had given him the virus.

Five other men, three of them white, would later testify that Johnson had not only failed to disclose his HIV status before engaging in consensual sex, but had willfully lied about it.

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Johnson has publicly maintained that he informed all six men he was HIV positive before having sex without a condom.

After a weeklong trial in 2015 in St. Charles County, a conservative, predominantly white area northwest of St. Louis, Johnson was convicted on multiple felony counts, including recklessly infecting another with HIV, which carries a 10-year minimum sentence.

The jury sought the maximum penalty of 60 1/2 years even though prosecutors offered no genetic evidence that Johnson had infected any of his partners, according to BuzzFeed News.

The judge ultimately sentenced him to 30 years in prison.

Today, some of the people who put him in prison say the sentencing and parts of the prosecution were mishandled.

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“We’re still operating under laws that were based on views that are outdated and are proven inaccurate by science,” said Tim Lohmar, the St. Charles County prosecuting attorney, whose office’s handling of the trial has been criticized.

Missouri is one of about 34 states with laws that make it a crime to expose another person to the virus without disclosure or add additional penalties for people with HIV who are convicted of separate offenses, such as sex work, according to the nonprofit Center for HIV Law and Policy. In six states, a person may be required to register as a sex offender if convicted of an HIV-related crime.

Many of these laws were written in the 1980s and 1990s under a fog of fear about the virus and how it was transmitted, and before the advent of effective treatments. In those years, Magic Johnson’s sweat on the basketball court and Greg Louganis’ blood on a diving board panicked fans and teammates. Parents pulled children from school in 1985 because an HIV-positive boy with hemophilia was in their seventh-grade class.

Back then, an HIV diagnosis meant debilitating symptoms and almost certain death.

For the past five years, Steven Thrasher, a journalism professor at Northwestern University, has chronicled Michael L. Johnson’s case for BuzzFeed News and recently completed his doctoral dissertation on race and HIV criminalization.

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Thrasher, who greeted Johnson outside the correctional facility Tuesday, said he was first drawn to the case because of its parallels with the history of black sexuality and lynching.

“Black men would just get lynched anytime they had sex with white women in the Reconstruction period,” he said. “There was no consensual sex that could be had between white women and black men.”

Johnson’s wrestler’s body — he called himself “Tiger Mandingo” online — was a source of fascination for some of his partners. But when Johnson tested positive for HIV, Thrasher wrote, he became “the perfect scapegoat.”

“It was not that he had no agency or responsibility in the story,” Thrasher said Thursday, but “he was really holding all of this anxiety and all of this worry about AIDS and stigma and HIV and queerness in America all on his shoulders.”

Lohmar, the St. Charles County prosecutor, said Thursday that “nothing about the trial was unfair,” except for his team’s failure to present certain evidence to the defense in time.

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Because prosecutors did not disclose some evidence to the defense until the morning of the trial — recorded phone conversations Johnson made while in the county jail — an appeals court decided to overturn the conviction 17 months after the original sentencing.

Instead of a new trial, Johnson, who previously had a clean criminal record, accepted a plea deal in which he did not admit guilt but agreed to a 10-year sentence.

Eric M. Selig, the lawyer who negotiated on Johnson’s behalf, said the original sentence was disproportionate to the crime.

“We don’t charge people with other incurable diseases, like hepatitis, with a criminal offense for exposing others,” he said.

During his incarceration, Johnson wrote thank-you notes to friends and strangers who had written to him in support, which he said helped him deal with homophobia in prison and self-doubt.

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“You lose your confidence,” he said. “I kept every single letter.”

In theory, HIV exposure laws are meant to encourage HIV-positive individuals to disclose their status before having sex, and to practice safer sex, with the ultimate goal of preventing the spread of the virus.

But there is no evidence that these laws have reduced risky behavior or encouraged disclosure, said Catherine Hanssens, executive director of the Center for HIV Law and Policy, which provided legal support for Johnson’s case.

In the eyes of the law, an HIV diagnosis is conflated with malice, she added.

“These laws effectively treat an HIV diagnosis itself as evidence that the person acted with bad intentions when sex or other types of physical contact are involved in a crime,” she said.

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Additionally, many laws do not reflect recent treatment options that can give patients a life expectancy almost as long as the general population. A pill taken daily can almost eliminate transmission, experts say. But there remain large barriers to eradicating the virus, including the high cost of antiretroviral drugs, access issues, medical mistrust and other social barriers in poor and black communities.

While some states, like California, have reduced penalties for HIV exposure, Missouri has one of the most punitive laws in the country. This year lawmakers introduced two bills into the Legislature that would have slightly reduced the penalty, but they never made it to a vote.

Lohmar said he learned of Johnson’s release after receiving a call from one of the witnesses in the trial, who was upset that he was not notified.

Johnson said he planned to return to college, learn a second language and share his story through advocacy organizations like the Ryan White Planning Council in Indiana. Younger people especially need to learn about the virus to prevent it from spreading, he said.

“You can’t do it without education.”

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This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

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