The Morning Call

‘You’re essentiall­y criminaliz­ing being sick’

Bill proposes stiffer penalties for spitting on police officers

- By Joseph Darius Jaafari

HARRISBURG — A bill moving through the Pennsylvan­ia legislatur­e that would criminaliz­e spitting on a police officer is partially predicated on junk science, and public health experts warn it could harshly punish people who are sick with as little as a common cold.

Anyone who knowingly has a communicab­le disease and spits or throws feces, urine or other bodily fluids on law enforcemen­t could face up to seven years in prison under the measure introduced by Rep. Lou Schmitt, R-Blair. The penalty would be lower for people without an illness.

Currently, spitting on any person can be charged as a summary offense or misdemeano­r in Pennsylvan­ia, and Schmitt said his bill offers added protection for police. He fought back against Democratic attempts to limit the scope to only include on-duty officers and to exclude protesters who accidental­ly spit.

Similar bills have been adopted in other states, where people who are HIV positive have been sentenced to serve more than a decade for spitting on an officer.

The language of Schmitt’s bill is a carbon copy of a Pennsylvan­ia law from the 1990s that makes it a felony for inmates to spit on another person if they are known to have a communicab­le disease.

“They were lazy,” said Elizabeth Randol, legislativ­e director for the ACLU of Pennsylvan­ia. “They just duplicated the assault by prisoner statute.”

The law and Schmitt’s bill name HIV and hepatitis B as two examples, even though those viruses can’t be transmitte­d through saliva.

“The fact that this passed the ‘laugh test’ by the sponsors and co-sponsors is evidence that there is an urgent need for public health officials to step in and do training on the roots of transmissi­on of infectious diseases,” said Catherine Hanssens, executive director and founder of the Center for HIV

Law and Policy in Brooklyn. “It’s kind of indefensib­le.”

Schmitt, the main sponsor of the bill, admitted to copying the language from the ‘90s law, which he said may be outdated.

“I’ve already agreed that the reference to HIV … should be removed,” he said. “It not only stigmatize­s HIV, it criminaliz­es it.”

But a closer look at Schmitt’s bill, which passed the state House 146-56 last week, shows the language could end up being used for people with more common viruses such as the flu or even a cold.

“This bill is remarkably vague,” said Robert Field, a law professor who specialize­s in public health at Drexel University. “You’re essentiall­y criminaliz­ing being sick.”

Schmitt said the bill’s tougher penalties would deter people from spitting on police officers in the first place. Asked for evidence that harsher penalties have deterred crime, Schmitt said he did not have “any empirical evidence at all that it would deter,” adding, “I don’t know.”

That lack of research has at least one representa­tive calling foul on the bill, saying it’s just another way for district attorneys to stack charges against people and possibly give police more authority in enforcing laws disproport­ionately against people of color and protesters.

“This is an evidence-free bill that does not protect law enforcemen­t,” Rep. Chris Rabb, D-Philadelph­ia, said. “There’s no proof ever that this has been a deterrent. If it did, the death penalty would have ended

violent crime decades ago.”

Spotlight PA is an independen­t, nonpartisa­n newsroom powered by The Philadelph­ia Inquirer in partnershi­p with PennLive/The Patriot-News, TribLIVE/Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, and WITF Public Media. A version of this story originally appeared in our free weekly newsletter.

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