Tag Archives: sex offender

Court overturns conviction of HIV-positive Iowan

The Iowa Supreme Court has thrown out the conviction of a man who pleaded guilty to criminal transmission of HIV, a victory to activists who say laws in many states are outdated and based on fear instead of medical science.

Nick Rhoades, 39, of Plainfield, had appealed his 2009 conviction, claiming his attorney was ineffective by letting him plead guilty when there was an inadequate factual basis to support the plea.

The court’s ruling overturns the Iowa Court of Appeals, which had affirmed a Black Hawk County judge’s conviction based on Rhoades’ plea.

“This is a step away from fear and a step toward embracing reason and science and medicine and we’re just thrilled about it,” said Christopher Clark, one of Rhoades’ attorneys who works for Lambda Legal, a gay rights organization based in New York.

The ruling followed a decision by the Legislature in May to revise Iowa’s infectious disease transmission law, making people eligible for 25-year sentences only if they intend to transmit a disease without someone’s knowledge. That change was prompted largely by the Rhoades case.

“This is a step away from fear and a step toward embracing reason and science and medicine and we’re just thrilled about it,” said Christopher Clark, one of Rhoades’ attorneys who works for Lambda Legal, a gay rights organization based in New York.

The ruling followed a decision by the Legislature in May to revise Iowa’s infectious disease transmission law, making people eligible for 25-year sentences only if they intend to transmit a disease without someone’s knowledge. That change was prompted largely by the Rhoades case.

The new law included a clause that will retroactively remove Rhoades and others convicted under the previous statute from required sex offender registration.

Rhoades had been sentenced to 25 years in prison and was required to register as a sex offender for life since Iowa’s law made HIV transmission a felony. After he appealed the sentence, the district court judge suspended it and placed him on probation for five years.

In the ruling, six of seven justices found there was insufficient factual basis to support Rhoades’ plea and returned the case to district court. Prosecutors must prove a factual basis existed for the plea. If they cannot, Rhoades must be allowed to withdraw his plea.

It wasn’t immediately clear whether Black Hawk County Attorney Thomas J. Ferguson would pursue prosecution further. A spokesman for the Iowa Attorney General’s office, which handled the appeals, said that decision is up to Ferguson.

“We anticipate that the county attorney will re-evaluate the case in light of the court’s decision and our office will provide any assistance of that review if requested,” said Geoff Greenwood.

Ferguson did not immediately respond to messages.

The court’s majority opinion written by Justice David Wiggins concluded intimate contact between Rhoades and the man he had sex with does not establish the necessary factual basis that an exchange of bodily fluid took place or that Rhoades intentionally exposed his partner in a way that could have transmitted HIV.

Rhoades had sex with a man he met in an Internet chat room. His attorneys argued there was no exchange of bodily fluid and the use of a condom indicates there was no intent to expose the partner to HIV.

Assistant Attorney General Kevin Cmelik has argued that intentional exposure is simply the act of having sexual contact with HIV present. Rhoades had been diagnosed with HIV in 1998 and has undergone antiviral treatment, which doctors said left the HIV viral load in his system undetectable.

The court found that intimate contact itself is not enough to establish a factual basis that an exchange of bodily fluid took place or that Rhoades intentionally exposed his partner.

Justice Bruce Zager wrote in a dissenting opinion that he believes there was enough evidence to support the guilty plea and conviction, based on “the acknowledgement by Rhoades that he had unprotected oral sex with the victim and his admission of intimate contact with the victim, combined with reasonable inferences based on common sense.”

Clark said Rhoades’ interest now is to have his conviction overturned so he is no longer branded a felon.

Thirty-nine states have HIV-specific criminal statutes or have brought HIV-related criminal charges resulting in more than 160 prosecutions in the United States in the past four years, Clark said.

Sex offender set fire to lesbians’ trailer in South Florida

A registered sex offender who lives at a South Florida trailer park has been charged with setting fire to another trailer, where a lesbian couple and eight children live, according to The Miami Herald.

Miami-Dade police say video footage shows 73-year-old Braulio Valenzuela-Villanueva setting fire to a mattress that was leaning against his neighbors’ home early Saturday morning at the River Park Trailer Court.

The Miami Herald reports he was arrested Monday and charged with attempted second-degree murder, arson and a hate crime.

Police say Valenzuela-Villanueva didn’t admit to setting the fire but said he said he despised the two women and believed they didn’t deserve children.

No injuries were reported from the fire.

State records show Valenzuela-Villanueva has previous convicts for grand theft and child molestation. Jail records show he was being held on $230,000 bail.

Walker points to registered sex offender as symbol of his success

During his state of the state address on Jan. 22, Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker praised a registered sex offender with three drunk-driving convictions as a symbol of his administration’s success.

“Each of these people were looking for a job, or a better opportunity, over the past three years,” Walker told viewers, referring to a group of people standing with him on stage. “They represent the people and the families behind the numbers. These are the faces of an improving economy in our state. Wisconsin is going back to work.”

One of those faces, that of Christopher Barber, 32, was seen applauding Walker.  But the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel learned that Barber only has a seasonal welding job for the snowblower and mower manufacturer Ariens. And although the company recommended Barber to the administration, it now now says hiring him was a mistake, due to his criminal record.

Barber has had his probation revoked for two separate convictions, including a 2005 conviction on third-degree sexual assault charges, MJS reported. He has also been convicted of forgery, battery and drunk driving. His last drunk-driving conviction was in 2011.

“We recommended him based on his performance on the job since he has been employed with Ariens Company beginning December of 2012,” Stilp told MJS. “As part of recommending him for the speech, we did not know the details of his record.”

Iowa man who didn’t tell his sex partner he had HIV wants conviction overturned

A Plainfield, Iowa man sentenced to 25 years in prison for failure to notify his sex partner he carried HIV went before the Iowa Court of Appeals this week.

Nick Rhoades had pleaded guilty to failing to disclose his HIV status before having sex with a Cedar Falls man in June 2008.

His attorneys say the contact was consensual, Rhoades used a condom and HIV was not transmitted.

Rhoades, whose sentence was reduced and who has been on probation, claims he should not have been advised to plead guilty because he lacked the intent to spread HIV required to be proven by state law.

Rhoades, who had to register as a sex offender for life, wants his conviction overturned.

Police: Christian coffee house manager is unregistered sex offender

An anti-gay pastor is under fire for having an unregistered sex offender manage his evangelical Christian coffee shop in Springfield, Mass.

Controversial Pastor Scott Lively, whose ministry operates the Holy Grounds Coffee Shop, has called the gay-rights movement an “evil institution.” Lively claims that “the Nazi Party was conceived, organized and controlled … by masculine-oriented male homosexuals.”

On Jan. 13, Springfield police arrested Holy Grounds’ volunteer manager Michael J. Frediani, 38, for failing to register as a convicted child offender.

Frediani was convicted in 1996 in New York of sexually abusing an 11-year-old girl. The conviction stemmed from an arrest in Canandaigua, N.Y., in 1995, for an offense described as “deviate sexual intercourse” with the victim.

Frediani is listed as a Class 3 offender in New York, which indicates that he poses a “high risk” to commit a new offense. In Massachusetts, he is listed as a Class 2 (moderate risk) offender.

Lively described Frediani as a “very kind and gentle and honorable man” and said he was not aware his coffee-shop manager was a sex offender.

“Michael had told me he had a very rough past before he became a Christian,” Lively said in an interview with Springfield’s newspaper The Republican. “I’ve only known him a few months. He strikes me as a very kind and gentle and honorable man.”

“When you come to Jesus Christ, and you accept his forgiveness for your sins, than you are forgiven by him and enter a new life,” Lively said. “You have a new life in him, completely different from the one you had before.”

Holy Grounds, which is located very close to the High School of Commerce, was already at the center of local controversy. Springfield Superintendent of Schools Alan J. Ingram has charged that teenage truants have been enticed to visit the coffee house during school hours by the “lure of free coffee and tolerance of their presence.”

Officials have gone into the coffee shop on a number of occasions to escort children back to school and to talk to Lively or the manager, officials told The Republican.