E.R.R

E.R.R

Friday, November 7, 2014

Atlanta Woman Didn’t Tell Her Boyfriend She was HIV Positive for 9MONTHS

 
Angela London, 41, was dating her boyfriend for nine months when he found a bottle of HIV medication. He confronted her and she admitted to being HIV positive then fled to Texas. There is currently a warrant out for her arrest as Georgia state requires all HIV positive individuals to disclose their status before sexual intercourse or sharing a needle.
When her boyfriend found her prescription medication used to treat the virus, he confronted her, according to an arrest warrant obtained by the AJC. Angela London, 41, previously of Marietta, admitted to being infected, according to police.
Then, she moved to Texas. But she could be on her way back to Georgia to face a felony charge of reckless conduct for not informing the victim that she was HIV positive before having sex, according to police.
State law requires that HIV-infected  people disclose their infection status to another person prior to sexual activity or before sharing injection drug needles, according to the Georgia Department of Public Health.
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An Atlanta woman must not have cared about the health of the man she was having a s*xual relationship with. Angela London is going to be arrested when she is found because she had sex with her boyfriend of nine months while fully aware that she was HIV positive. The 41 year old woman hid her HIV status from her boyfriend but she must have forgot to hide her medication for treatment of the disease because he found it. When her boyfriend found the medication and confronted London, she confessed that she was HIV positive. Shortly after that, London packed up and moved to Texas. London is being charged with a felony for reckless conduct because she did not let her boyfriend know her HIV-positive status before engaging in a sexual relationship with him. Whether or not her boyfriend has been infected and is now HIV positive is unknown. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report that in the U.S., 1.2 million people are HIV-positive and 20% of them have yet to find out that they have been infected. An estimated 20,000 people in North America died of AIDS-related causes in 2011. African Americans have been hardest hit by HIV in the U.S. While African Americans are only about  14% of the population, 44% are accountable for the new infections.

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