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Coming on 20/20: The Case of Philippe Padieu

Doctor Gives Key Testimony in HIV Case, Matching DNA of Victims' Virus With Lover's Strain

For the first time in Texas history and only the third time nationally, DNA sequencing was used to convict a man who knowingly exposed sexual partners to HIV, infecting at least six women.

Photo: Coming on 20/20: The Case of Philippe Padieu: Doctor Gives Key Testimony in HIV Case, Matching DNA of Victims' Virus With Lover's Strain
Prosecutors told jurors in closing arguments that Philippe Padieu knew he was HIV-positive in the fall of 2005 but continued to have unprotected, "high-risk" sexual intercourse with multiple women, exposing them to the virus that causes AIDS.
(Courtesy B. Sutherland)

A jury in Collin County, Texas, found Philippe Padieu, 53, guilty Wednesday on six counts of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon. Prosecutors told jurors in closing arguments that Padieu knew he was HIV-positive in the fall of 2005 but continued to have unprotected, "high-risk" sexual intercourse with multiple women, exposing them to the virus that causes AIDS.

"He's a predator," Assistant District Attorney Curtis Howard told jurors. "He's a ticking time bomb.  He's a lethal weapon."

Defense attorneys argued that Padieu was in denial, that he had no obligation to disclose his HIV status and that the sex was consensual.  "Mr. Padieu is not a predator," attorney Bennie House said. "He's a polygamist.  He likes sex."

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Six of Padieu's former sexual partners tested positive for HIV and came forward to press charges.

Look for Elizabeth Vargas' full report on the case on an upcoming "20/20."

Prosecutions involving the transmission of HIV are not uncommon in the United States. But what sets Padieu's case apart is the use of phylogenetic analysis and DNA sequencing as a forensic tool. Dr. Michael Metzker, an associate professor in molecular and human genetics at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, testified on behalf of the state. He had been hired to conduct a blind study on blood samples from each of the six victims and the defendant.

Metzker told the jury that based on the HIV strain present in the DNA of each sample, one individual stood out as being the most likely source of all of the other infections.  Prosecutors revealed that the sample belonged to Padieu.

Earlier in the six day-long trial, Padieu's doctor, Dr. Pedro Checo, an internist based in Frisco, Texas, testified that the defendant was tested for HIV in September of 2005, was informed that he was HIV-positive and was counseled about the importance of safe sex.

But six women who were intimate with Padieu after his diagnosis testified that he never disclosed his status.  Several of the victims said they raised the topic of safe sex and using protection.  His response, they said, was "I'm clean."

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