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Behind Bars for Being Pregnant and HIV-Positive

Margo Kaplan's picture

Editor's Note: At the request of advocates working with the HIV-positive pregnant woman imprisoned in this case, we have removed references to her full name and now refer to her as "Ms. T."

In May, 2009, U.S. District Judge John Woodcock sentenced Ms. T, who was about five months pregnant, for the crime of having fake immigration documents. While both the federal prosecutor and defense attorney urged the judge to sentence T. to 114 days, which would allow her to leave prison with time served, Judge Woodcock doubled the recommended sentence and exceeded federal sentencing guideline recommendations for the sole purpose of keeping T. in prison until she gave birth. Judge Woodcock's sole justification for the extended sentence is that Ms. T. is HIV-positive. The judge felt that - despite the fact that T. had arranged for care outside the prison - keeping her in prison would best ensure that she would take anti-retroviral medication to reduce the chances of transmitting HIV to her child in utero. In issuing this decision, Judge Woodcock has created disturbing precedent that could allow the state to keep people in jail based solely on the fact that they have HIV or are pregnant.

To understand how misled Judge Woodcock's decision was, it is useful to understand a little about how HIV can be transmitted from mother to child, or "vertically." HIV can be transmitted during pregnancy, childbirth, or breastfeeding. While all babies born to women living with HIV will have HIV antibodies when they are born, 75% of those babies will "serorevert" and will not develop HIV infection. Thus, without any medical intervention, the rate of transmission is, on average, 25%. Taking antiretroviral drugs during pregnancy and birth or opting to have a cesarean section can reduce the rate of transmission to less than 2%. The best course of treatment to ensure the health of the mother and her child always depends on the individual woman's medical history and circumstances, and should be a decision she makes after consulting with her physician.

Judge Woodcock's decision ignores the complex factors involved in a pregnant woman's medical treatment decisions - as through being HIV positive makes one incapable of reasonable decision-making - and glibly equates being HIV-positive and pregnant with committing a crime. When reading the sentence, he makes clear that his sole reason for keeping Ms. T. in prison was that she was HIV-positive and pregnant, and that, had she been pregnant and not HIV-positive, he would release her with time served. He reasons that he could keep T. in jail "to protect the public from [her] further crimes."

Judge Woodcock bends himself into bizarre logical contortions to justify his decision. He states, "I don't think the transfer of HIV to an unborn child is technically a crime under the law, but it is as direct and as likely as an ongoing assault." Frustrated with what the law actually forbids, Judge Woodcock invents a new category of actions that, while not "technically" crimes "under the law," he still has the authority to punish with imprisonment. However, if judges could hold people in prison for any "direct" and "likely" action they found morally reprehensible, they would have unlimited discretion. This is precisely what the rule of law is intended to prevent.

While some states do, indeed, criminalize HIV exposure, Judge Woodcock does more than this - he imprisons a woman for the mere possibility that she might transmit HIV in the future. His reasoning essentially criminalizes being HIV-positive and allows the state to jail anyone with HIV simply because they have HIV and are capable of transmitting it to another. It classifies anyone with HIV as a threat to society who can be incarcerated at the whim of the state to protect public health. As Regan Hofmann eloquently explained in her May blog, criminalizing HIV transmission contributes to the stigmatization of HIV and actually harms prevention efforts. The imprisonment of those with HIV based on the mere fact that they might transmit it to others is even more abhorrent as a matter of law and policy.

Some might be tempted to think that the judge in fact is helping Ms. T. by ensuring she at least has access to medications. This argument might have some merit if Ms. T. were asking the judge to keep her in jail because she was concerned about deportation or her ability to access care. But the fact is - and Judge Woodcock recognized - Ms. T. did not want to remain in prison, much less give birth in prison. Her attorney stressed that Ms. T. had arranged for medical treatment outside of prison at a facility - unlike the prison system - specifically equipped to meet her medical needs.

Whatever Judge Woodcock's protective intentions, using imprisonment to coerce pregnant women to make the medical care choices we think best is an outrageous abuse of the system. By keeping her in prison because he felt it would be best for the fetus, Judge Woodcock was unable to see and treat Ms. T. as a competent adult with the ability and the right to make her own medical decisions. Instead, he reduced her to a fetal container - an obstacle to providing the care he wanted for the child she was carrying. Not once in the transcript of the sentencing proceeding does Judge Woodcock consider Ms. T.'s own medical care or her health interests. She is guilty of being HIV positive, while her fetus is, in his view, "a wholly innocent person."

Judge Woodcock's decision perpetuates the myth that people with HIV are somehow "other" - more reprehensible, less responsible, and deserving of whatever state intervention helps protect the "innocent" remainder of society. It also furthers the view that pregnant women lose their autonomy and their rights by virtue of their pregnancy, and that pregnancy should enable the state to detain a woman if the state disagrees with the care she is choosing for her own body. While Ms. T.  may have had counterfeit immigration documents, having HIV and being pregnant does not make her any less "innocent" or any more deserving of punishment.

This post originally appeared on the Center for HIV Law and Policy blog.


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23 comments
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Thank you for publicizing this case, which is one in a long line of cases where judges or other state actors subject women to different treatment because they are pregnant. This unfair treatment is usually overturned when challenged; however, not all women have the resources or legal assistance they need to bring an effective challenge.

 

The judge’s action in this case rests on unfounded assumptions that prisons are good places for pregnant women and people with HIV. A studyof the District of Columbia jail, for example, found that women experience delays and interruptions in access to antiretroviral medications for HIV – delays which can lead to drug resistance and which have serious consequences for their health. People in prison have brought class action lawsuits challenging the inadequacy of medical care for people living with HIV. And women have given birth alone in their cells, without any medical attention whatsoever – including, for example, a woman in Maryland jailed specifically “to protect” her fetus.

 

The crux of this current case lies in what Margo Kaplan identifies as the judge’s decision to treat Quinta Layin Tuleh as nothing more than a “fetal container,” without regard to her own health needs or right to make her own medical decisions. Even the U.S. Attorney in her case recognized that prisons are not well suited to the task of providing prenatal care: “In the end, Bureau of Prisons custody is designed to incarcerate… Incarceration is mostly designed for the purpose of punishment, deterrence and community protection. The Bureau of Prisons is not well-designed to accomplish necessarily the end of providing medical care to a defendant and her unborn child.”

Submitted by Rachel Roth, RH Reality Check on June 10, 2009 - 8:26am.

As a woman who has been living with HIV for more than 24 years, I am outraged at the judge’s decision. I was infected in the early 1980’s by my fiancé and the personal discrimination I have had to endure over the last 24 years is indescribable. We have come a long way since the first HIV case; there is no doubt about that. The continued ignorance that still exists in our society continues to oppress those that are living with HIV. Many of us will not reveal our status out of fear. In addition, those of us who do stand up still risk discrimination in the work force, with health insurance, and in many institutions such as jails and hospitals. It is a difficult battle and I applaud you for discussing the topic.

Submitted by Anonymous on June 10, 2009 - 1:09pm.

Clearly imprisoning an HIV-infected woman just because she is pregnant and may transmit the virus to her infant is a bad precedent. However, I was under the impression that one reason the judge made the decision as described was because there was a possibility that the women, and her infant, would be deported to an area where PMTCT services, including non-medical interventions such as formula feeding were unavailable. Is this not the case? Also, if she were in agreement with the imprisonment, to protect her child and allow her to give birth in the U.S., would that change the nature of the ethical dilemma and bad precedent?

Submitted by Anonymous on June 10, 2009 - 2:17pm.

She should be sentenced in accordance with the LAW. How is that difficult to understand? Not only did he not follow sentencing guidelines, and prosecutorial recommedations, he WENT OUTSIDE HIS AUTHORITY as a judge. And he admittedly did so SOLELY BECAUSE SHE WAS PREGNANT.
That is called DISCRIMINATION.
Our LAWS need to be enforced without discrimination- we have fought for that for 200 years. It is the very basis of our society- EQUAL PROTECTION UNDER THE LAW.
So no, absolutely nothing changes the discriminatory sentencing and horrible precedent.
The sentence will be reversed, the prosecutors have appealed it.
It would be excellent if more people bothered to read the constituion before spouting off.

Submitted by Anon on June 10, 2009 - 7:12pm.

Check your facts. She is NOT an American citizen, and is therefore NOT entitled to the same rights as an American citizen, *including* Constitutional rights. She should have been immediately deported. Also, we (America) needs to do away with birthright citizenship.

Submitted by Anonymous on July 2, 2009 - 9:07pm.

Concerning pregnancy at a HIV of exaggerations more than it is enough. In the developed countries, such as the USA or the Great Britain, level of transfer of a HIV to children for a long time already makes less than 1%. For this reason during pregnancy of the woman hand over the analysis on a HIV - that it was possible to take all measures for protection of the child.

Submitted by Toyota on July 15, 2009 - 3:34pm.

That is distrubing...anon...good point. I guess we'll have to see what comes out in the news about it.

"Well behaved women seldom make history."-Laurel Thatcher Ulrich

Submitted by Progo35 on June 10, 2009 - 4:49pm.

The Judge's actions are criminal to my mind. The height of abuse of power, lack of ethical introspection, and bald prejudice enforced by police. Disgusting, criminal, abhorrent, inhumane and stupid. He should pray he never falls under the power of humans so intellectually and morally impaired as himself.

Submitted by Nezua on June 10, 2009 - 5:08pm.

Confirm our dark suspicions?

Submitted by Edward Craig on June 10, 2009 - 5:47pm.

What mostly concerns me is the abdication of humanity to a pervasive reliance on force and penal instituations across our entire culture. This is another stop on that line. Taser use growing, Taser deaths stacking up, 6.1Bn alloted for new prisons this year, ICE predicting 400000 arrests, keeping women in jail in response to her having HIV—I don't care what the reasoning was, it still surrenders humane and intelligent solutions to one that shrugs and kicks her to the curb where the C.O. is waiting. Primitive.

Submitted by Nezua on June 10, 2009 - 7:11pm.

She was jailed for having fake immigration papers. Send her home! I don't want to support her or her child.

Submitted by Broke on June 11, 2009 - 1:55pm.

I will reserve my real thoughts for you and reply only by saying that it is at best ignorant and misguided and at worst racist.
the mother is a human being, and she is having a child. only someone who could be so exclusionary and harsh because they dont want to have to "pay" for them is perhaps the one who is a danger to society.

are there no documented americans who are a danger to society?

Submitted by Anonymous on July 22, 2009 - 12:42pm.

At the root of this appalling judicial misogyny is that "he reduced her to a fetal container."

Enforced prison for this woman and all that comes with (informally as the culture of prison violence --- imagine the horror for a pregnant woman) is just another example of the violence imposed by men against women in man's longest war.

Stated another way, as typical of the stories shown by culture-reflective movies at the multi-plex globally on any given weekend, only male lives (and potential male lives as potentially male fetuses) matter to the sexual politics men have imposed by violence and brainwashing upon womankind. Women are incidental, props to the male psyche and phallus, in this sadly violent global culture dominant men have made.

Once the roots of male hypocrisy (on both the right and the left of male-run politics, different styles of rhetoric and privilege bandied about, but essentially for men with women as the underclass) can be faced without denial --- once seeing the roots of the problem as a war --- then a critical mass of women can free up to find coordinated solutions, as women, for women.

A solution-driven realm is the world I hope my daughter will have, after I'm gone, in the fast-changing global culture. For my part, I blog, http://thelongestwar.wordpress.com/, to show and tell what resonates as my lived experience among the dudes of a global dude-land no decent parent would ever want for a beloved daughter.

Submitted by Jude on June 14, 2009 - 1:03am.

To Jude:
You have some of the worst writing skills that I have ever seen. Your comment reads like a pathetic failed attempt at being intellectual and creative. I recommend you give up any writing aspiration you might have. You sound far too forced and fake.

Submitted by Ed Smith, Palm Springs, CA on July 2, 2009 - 9:01pm.

I am surprised by this considering that the USA is a a so called developed country. This kind of behaviour is not a good reflection to the developing world where most people are affected. Yes she had committed a crime using fake papers but she wanted to make a living hence fake papers. Immigration has been quite a issue because people are emigrating from poor resource settings to rich ones. The only way to stop this kind of thing is to make sure that wealth is equally distributed among the nations and we will not be getting people using fake papers. The judge is a louse and needs to be disbarred he comes from his middle class background with no inclination of what happens to the poor of the earth. Very disturbing indeed. I am shocked.

Submitted by Anonymous on June 26, 2009 - 4:55am.

Someone commented that "The only way to stop this kind of thing is to make sure that wealth is equally distributed among the nations and we will not be getting people using fake papers". This naive and foolish person has absolutely no understanding of reality. Each nation is responsible for itself. If the people of a nation do not like how their country is being run, they should do like the American colonists did in the late 1700s and take control of their fate. Individual charity is fine, but the U.S. government should NEVER EVER provide "charity" at the expense of the American tax payer. That is what is referred to as THEFT, and charity through theft is NOT charity. People show blatant disrespect for America's laws by sneaking into the U.S. illegally. Their very presence here illegally is an affront to America. That is unacceptable.

Submitted by Ed Smith on July 2, 2009 - 8:48pm.

did your founding fathers have papers when they came to the US? or did they flee on boats (and displace entire societies of native peoples once they were here).

is it right to assume that if your family was hungry, persecuted, or in danger, you wouldnt do anything you could to get them to a better place? would you put their survival asside to "respect" the borders of the country? borders which make it so difficult to enter legally, one has no choice but to make the sacrifice to live in a new country undocumented.

god bless my immigrant parents.

Submitted by seriously? on July 22, 2009 - 12:48pm.

The judge felt that - despite the fact that T. had arranged for care outside the prison - keeping her in prison would best ensure that she would take anti-retroviral medication to reduce the chances of transmitting HIV to her child in utero.

Submitted by travesti on July 1, 2009 - 7:10am.

That woman is here illegally, and as a result is NOT entitled to the same rights as an American citizen, nor SHOULD she be. There are consequences for entering a country illegally, as there should be. Also, "birthright" citizenship should be done away with. She actually should have been immediately deported.

Submitted by Ed Smith, Palm Springs, CA on July 2, 2009 - 8:57pm.

In issuing this decision, Judge Woodcock has created disturbing precedent that could allow the state to keep people in jail based solely on the fact that they have HIV or are pregnant.

Submitted by travesti on July 15, 2009 - 8:34am.

Thanks for sharing nice stuff. Actually I thought of writing same stuff in my personal hub But not as good as you have written.Any how thanks for sharing such a valuable stuff. I have bookmarked yoru blog.

Submitted by JOSHUA on July 30, 2009 - 2:51am.

This is cruel in my opinion. Yes she is not American but the case is very harsh.


Cheers


lawyers

Submitted by lawyer on August 12, 2009 - 2:11am.

Yeah, I know that. Every people in infected HIV positive can infect to their baby too. But, This info reminded me the bad effect of HIV. Stay strong to all people who have them.

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