Zevran wrote:Magic can kill. Knives can kill. Even small children launched at great speeds can kill.
Zevran wrote:Magic can kill. Knives can kill. Even small children launched at great speeds can kill.
sunglasses wrote:These laws were never meant for the people who think they're magically immune to stds and never get tested.
sunglasses wrote:Shrooms- my understanding of the law is that you have to intentionally and maliciously infect others. Not cases of you didn't know.
LegionofShrooms wrote:sunglasses wrote:Shrooms- my understanding of the law is that you have to intentionally and maliciously infect others.
There are also those that may not set out to maliciously infect others, but are knowingly infected themselves and don't take proper precautions such as practicing safe sex or disclosing their disease to their partner.
Hence why I think such actions would warrant a lesser (but still significant) charge of reckless endangerment, rather than a more severe one like criminally negligent manslaughter (for those where malicious intent can be proven).
Zevran wrote:Magic can kill. Knives can kill. Even small children launched at great speeds can kill.
DamianaRaven wrote:sunglasses wrote:These laws were never meant for the people who think they're magically immune to stds and never get tested.
Well, what (if anything) can we do with those dipshits? I'm sure they're spreading every bit as much disease as the vindictive fuckwits.
Zevran wrote:Magic can kill. Knives can kill. Even small children launched at great speeds can kill.
DamianaRaven wrote:What's "C. diff" and how is it transmitted?
How you get C. difficile
C. difficile bacteria are found in the digestive system of about 1 in every 30 healthy adults. The bacteria often live harmlessly because the other bacteria normally found in the bowel keep it under control.
However, some antibiotics can interfere with the balance of bacteria in the bowel, which can cause the C. difficile bacteria to multiply and produce toxins that make the person ill.
When this happens, C. difficile can spread easily to other people because the bacteria are passed out of the body in the person's diarrhoea.
Once out of the body, the bacteria turn into resistant cells called spores. These can survive for long periods on hands, surfaces (such as toilets), objects and clothing unless they're thoroughly cleaned, and can infect someone else if they get into their mouth.
Someone with a C. difficile infection is generally considered to be infectious until at least 48 hours after their symptoms have cleared up.
Italian handed 24 years in jail for infecting 30 women with HIV
The male companions of three of the women were also infected, as was the baby of a fourth.
-Under the pseudonym “Hearty Style”, 33-year-old accountant Valentino Talluto seduced dozens of young women on social networks and internet dating sites, often dating several at a time.
-Throughout the trial, which opened in March in Rome’s Rebibbia prison, the women described how Talluto had wined and dined them, claiming to fall in love before persuading them to have unprotected sex.
The women who had asked him to wear a condom said he told them he was allergic or had just been tested for HIV.
When the women discovered they were HIV positive – by chance, due to health problems or after other women he dated raised the alarm – they said he said it had nothing to do with him.
-The defence maintains Talluto’s actions were “imprudent, but not intentional”.
-Many of Talluto’s victims were students, some mothers. The youngest was 14 at the beginning of their relationship, the oldest around 40. Each described the horrors of HIV, from the stigma which distanced even family members, to the trials of treatment.
-Prosecutor Elena Neri told the court last month:
Talluto has never cooperated, he has made false statements, he has always denied any responsibility, even in the face of the evidence.
Daryll Rowe, 27, was convicted of five counts of grievous bodily harm with intent, and a further five counts of attempted GBH, following a trial at Lewes crown court.
The prosecution said Rowe went on a “campaign” in the Brighton area to infect as many men as possible during a four-month period from October 2015, and warned that there might be further victims.
The court heard that Rowe repeatedly sabotaged condoms, and then mocked victims saying that he was “riddled” with the virus after they raised concerns. One man said that Rowe was “laughing” when he called, adding: “Burn. I got you.”
Zevran wrote:Magic can kill. Knives can kill. Even small children launched at great speeds can kill.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 24 guests