Today, the Missouri Court of Appeals reversed a lower court decision and granted a new trial to Michael Johnson, an HIV-positive black gay man, who is currently serving 30 years in prison under an out-of-date law that criminalizes the sexual conduct of people living with HIV.
The court’s decision is based on the State’s failure to turn over until the very last minute conversations recorded at the county jail that were subsequently used against Mr. Johnson at trial. Earlier disclosure of these recorded conversations would have given Mr. Johnson’s lawyers time to prepare to counteract them or adjust trial strategy and could have affected the outcome of the case, the court held. The court remanded for a new trial.
Scott Schoettes, Lambda Legal HIV Project Director at Lambda Legal, who worked with Johnson’s public defender to provide “behind the scenes” assistance in preparation for Mr. Johnson’s defense at trial, released the following statement:
Lambda Legal is elated with the outcome at the appellate level in Michael Johnson’s case, and the second chance it provides Michael. The real barrier to justice for Michael is the law itself—and we must energize efforts to change the laws and eliminate HIV-based prosecutions in the absence of the intent to harm.