Plaintiffs File Federal Suit to Overturn Tennessee鈥檚 Aggravated Prostitution Statute

Lawsuit challenges requirement to register as a violent sex offender based on HIV status

October 24, 2023 12:57 pm

MEMPHIS, Tenn. 鈥 Tennessee鈥檚 Aggravated Prostitution statute and related sex offender registration requirements are unconstitutional and violate the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), according to a federal lawsuit filed today against the state by the 桃子视频, the Transgender Law Center, and the 桃子视频of Tennessee in the U.S. District Court in Memphis on behalf of four Jane Doe plaintiffs and OUTMemphis, the state鈥檚 oldest and largest service provider for LGBTQ+ people.

Plaintiffs argue that the Aggravated Prostitution statute is rooted in fear and discrimination, targeting people living with HIV for harsh punishment and forcing them to register as 鈥渧iolent sex offenders鈥 for the rest of their lives. Criminalizing people with HIV defies evidence-based best practices and is patently unlawful as it singles out people living with HIV 鈥 a protected disability 鈥 for harsher punishment.

鈥淧eople convicted of Aggravated Prostitution must spend years in prison and then register as violent sex offenders for the rest of their lives 鈥 meaning they cannot access the housing, employment, healthcare and community life that they need to get back on their feet,鈥 said Molly Quinn, executive director of OUTMemphis. 鈥淭his statute solely targets people because of their HIV status and keeps them in cycles of poverty, while posing absolutely zero benefit to public health and safety.鈥

鈥淗IV stigma is becoming a thing of the past, and it鈥檚 time for state law to catch up. OUTMemphis fights so that queer people are free to live in safety, with dignity, and we believe everyone deserves that regardless of their HIV status.鈥

Tennessee鈥檚 Aggravated Prostitution law was passed in 1991 at a time of national panic over HIV. The law targets people engaged in sex work, enhancing their charges from misdemeanors to felonies solely based on HIV status, making it difficult to find other employment. Since then, many states have moved on from criminalizing HIV, better understanding the rates and methods of transmission and the way criminalization is counterproductive to effective testing and treatment. New treatments such as Anti-Retroviral Therapy (ART) and Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) can reduce viral loads to undetectable levels, blocking the possibility of transmission.

And yet, Tennessee state law enhances sex work from a misdemeanor to a felony, solely based on HIV status, which has long been recognized as a disability protected from discrimination under the Americans with Disabilities Act. Tennessee has no comparable law for any other infectious disease, even those that are more prevalent and transmissible than HIV.

鈥淒isability discrimination is illegal,鈥 said Alexis Agathocleous, deputy director of the National ACLU鈥檚 Racial Justice Program, 鈥渁nd yet the Aggravated Prostitution singles out economically-marginalized people living with HIV for excessively harsh punishment. The results are predictable: Black women are the targets of this archaic, unscientific law 鈥 many of whom are simply trying to secure food, a place to sleep, or a way to meet their basic needs.鈥

Entirely divorced from science, Tennessee鈥檚 law applies indiscriminately, ignoring that either party to a sexual encounter can ensure against HIV transmission in many simple and effective ways.

鈥淓ach of us, regardless of our race, our genders, or our HIV status, deserves to be treated with dignity and respect and welcomed as full members of our communities,鈥 said Milo Inglehart (he/him), staff attorney at Transgender Law Center. 鈥淲ith today鈥檚 filing, we join the ACLU, ACLU-TN, OUTMemphis, and our individual plaintiffs to challenge the counterproductive and discriminatory Aggravated Prostitution statute that unlawfully singles out people living with HIV, disproportionately impacts Black transgender and cisgender women, and places lifelong, punitive restrictions on those who are criminalized for trying to survive.鈥

鈥淭he Aggravated Prostitution statute is a relic from when HIV first emerged in the 1980s and is motivated by fear, misinformation and discrimination 鈥 not sound science or evidence,鈥 said Jeff Preptit, ACLU-TN staff attorney. 鈥淚nstead of criminalizing HIV, which disproportionately targets transgender and cisgender Black women who are already socially and financially marginalized, lawmakers should invest in evidence-based public health responses to support people living with HIV to end the epidemic. All Tennesseans should be able to live a full life free from discrimination and harm, regardless of our health conditions.鈥

In addition to violating the ADA, the lawsuit also argues that, among other things, the law violates equal protection, due process and the prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment.

The plaintiffs are asking the court to strike down the Aggravated Prostitution statute and the resulting lifetime sex offender registration requirement as clearly discriminatory because they unlawfully punish people on the basis of a protected disability.

The complaint filed today can be found online at: /cases/outmemphis-v-lee?document=Complaint

Background on the legal challenge to Tennessee鈥檚 discriminatory Aggravated Prostitution law can be found here: /documents/fact-sheet-legal-challenge-to-tennessees-discriminatory-aggravated-prostitution-law

For more information about the case: /cases/outmemphis-v-lee#legal-documents

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