Italian jailed for 24 years for infecting dozens with HIV

Valentino Talluto seduced women via social networks before his arrest in 2015

Valentino Talluto during his trial  in the courtroom of the Rebibbia prison, Rome,  October 25th, 2017. Photograph: Tiziana Fabi/AFP/Getty Images
Valentino Talluto during his trial in the courtroom of the Rebibbia prison, Rome, October 25th, 2017. Photograph: Tiziana Fabi/AFP/Getty Images

An Italian man was sentenced on Friday to 24 years in prison for infecting more than 30 women with the HIV virus, after having unprotected sex with them despite knowing he was HIV positive, a court ruled.

Valentino Talluto, a 33-year-old accountant, seduced dozens of women via social networks for a decade before his arrest in November 2015. Police believe he had sex with at least 53 women during that time, passing on the virus to 32 of them.

The male partners of three of the women subsequently contracted the potentially fatal illness, as did an eight-month-old infant of another woman.

Allergic to condoms

Talluto often found an excuse not to wear a condom, telling his partners that he was allergic to them, or had just had an HIV test, the court in Rome heard.

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He expressed regret for what had happened, and claimed he did not realise the consequences of his actions.

Prosecutors had urged the court to give him life in jail, saying he had provoked a HIV epidemic. The court rejected this, convicting him instead of “grievous and incurable bodily harm”.

Many of the women only discovered they had HIV after they heard of Talluto’s arrest and had a test.

The HIV/Aids pandemic has killed around 35 million people worldwide since it began in the 1980s. – Reuters