PORN INDUSTRY Third performer tests positive for HIV



Performers should know the consequences of unprotected sex, a producer said.
LOS ANGELES TIMES
LOS ANGELES -- Another adult film performer -- the third in 2 1/2 weeks -- has tested positive for HIV, health care advocates for the pornographic movie industry said last week.
The actress, whose identity was not released, had already been on an adult industry "quarantine list" of about 50 potentially infected performers for the past 2 1/2 weeks.
The list was created after actor Darren James tested positive for HIV, which spurred much of the multibillion-dollar industry to temporarily shut down production. Within days of James, another actress who worked with him also tested positive for the virus.
Despite the latest case, the number of potentially infected performers remains the same because the sex partners of that actress were already on the quarantine list, said Sharon Mitchell, executive director of Adult Industry Medical Health Care Foundation, a Los Angeles-based nonprofit group that conducts HIV testing for the porn industry.
"This is the beauty of containment," Mitchell said, referring to the common industry practice of requiring performers to undergo monthly HIV testing before producers would allow them to work.
Consequences
While some expressed sympathy for the actress, others said performers should realize the consequences of sex without condoms -- a prevalent practice within the industry.
"If some guy offers you $1,500 [to perform unsafe sex] and you're stupid enough to do it, that's your fault," said producer Rob Spallone of Starworld Productions. "I tell girls don't let anybody talk you into doing anything you don't want to do -- even me."
Stopping the transmission of HIV, he said, would require performers to do something they never have before: band together.
"If they were smart enough, they'd all say they make the rules and tell us as directors exactly what they're willing to do and what they're not. They have the power, they're just too stupid to use it," Spallone said.
In a separate development, the ACLU Foundation of Southern California denounced Los Angeles County health officials for taking from AIM's office the medical records of more than 50 performers who had been on the adult industry quarantine list. The records included the performers' real names as well as contact information.
"In our opinion, this order was in violation of California and federal law protecting the privacy of medical records," stated a letter sent by the ACLU to the county Department of Health Services.