By: Dave Aronberg, State Attorney, Palm Beach County, Florida
and
Dr. Dave Campbell, Chief Medical Correspondent, Morning Joe / MSNBC
Six days after taking a coronavirus test, Senator Rand Paul continued to work at the U.S. Capitol and attended a luncheon with his fellow GOP Senators. A physician himself, Senator Paul made the decision to continue working and exercising in the Senate gym after showing no symptoms of the illness. The revelation of his positive test shocked Sen. Paul’s colleagues and prompted rare public rebukes for his conduct from both sides of the aisle.
Palm Beach County residents expressed similar outrage when a retired New York physician awaiting his own test results boarded a JetBlue flight to Palm Beach International Airport. While on board, the passenger received a text message from his doctor alerting him that he had coronavirus. The individual notified the flight crew upon landing and agreed to self-quarantine. In response, JetBlue banned him for life for boarding the flight without disclosing to the airline that he was awaiting coronavirus test results. But this wasn’t enough of a sanction for many local residents, including the other passengers on the flight, who wanted to know if the irresponsible individual could be charged criminally.
During this stressful period, people are understandably concerned about the carelessness of others who ignore the need for social distancing and self-quarantines. In cases of negligence and intentional misconduct, how can law enforcement and prosecutors hold those accountable who put others at risk of contracting COVID-19?
Many people asked a similar question during the early years of the HIV epidemic. In response, at least 33 states passed laws to criminalize HIV transmission, including Florida, which makes it a third-degree felony (punishable by up to 5 years in prison) for individuals with HIV to knowingly withhold the information from a sexual partner. Such laws are now being re-evaluated throughout the country in light of breakthrough treatments for HIV and greater awareness that these laws can increase HIV-related stigma, which can discourage testing and legitimize discrimination.
Although mandatory notification laws for HIV are commonplace in the U.S., our state and federal statutes relating to the transmission of COVID-19 or other disease epidemics are largely silent.








