Ex-girlfriend
sues Charlie Sheen in first known lawsuit over HIV
status
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[December 04, 2015] (Reuters)
- A former girlfriend of
Charlie Sheen on Thursday sued the actor for assault,
negligence and emotional distress, saying they had sex
at least five times before he revealed he was
HIV-positive.
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Scottine Ross, 26, who said she met Sheen while she was
working as a porn actress and later became engaged to him, also
claimed the actor forced her to have an abortion after she
became pregnant in 2014, and had kicked and choked her on
numerous occasions during their one-year relationship.
The lawsuit, filed in California Superior Court, is the first
known legal action against Sheen since he revealed in a TV
interview in November that he had been diagnosed HIV-positive
four years ago.
The former star of TV comedy "Two and a Half Men," 50, said at
the time he had decided to speak out because he had paid some
$10 million to people for their silence.
Sheen, who is three times divorced and has dated many porn
stars, also said it was "impossible" that he had transmitted the
virus to anyone else. He said he "always led with condoms and
honesty when it came to my condition."
His attorney, Martin Singer, said on Thursday that Sheen plans
to "vigorously defend the lawsuit filed by Scottine Ross. We are
confident that Mr. Sheen will prevail in this action."
Ross' lawsuit said she first met Sheen in November 2013, when he
paid $10,000 to have sex with her. The couple had sex at least
five times before Ross discovered his medications for the
treatment of HIV, she said. The couple later fell in love and
had unprotected sex "like a normal couple."
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Ross alleged several violent outbursts during their relationship,
including being kicked, punched, put in a chokehold and having an
unloaded gun pointed at her.
She is seeking an unspecified amount of damages.
Sheen said in November that he had been blackmailed for years by
people threatening to disclose his HIV status. He also appeared
resigned to a stream of new lawsuits.
Under California's criminal statute, a person who knowingly exposes
another to HIV through unprotected sex must be proved to have had a
deliberate intent to infect them.
The law means that criminal prosecutions are rare but civil cases
can be brought on a range of grounds, including alleged negligence,
emotional distress or sexual battery.
(Reporting by Jill Serjeant in New York; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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