Important note: Information in this article was accurate in 2003. The state of the art may have changed since the publication date.
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Reuters NewMedia - Monday November 3, 2003
Mohammed Dica, 38, was sentenced at the Inner London Crown Court after a jury took less than three hours last month to find him guilty of grievous bodily harm.
Crown prosecutors said he was the first person to be successfully prosecuted in England or Wales for sexually transmitting disease since the 19th century. There have been similar prosecutions in the past in Scotland.
Judge Nicholas Philpot jailed Dica for a total of eight years for the attacks on two women whom he deliberately tricked into having unprotected sex with him.
Dica, from Mitcham, south London, told the women he did not need to use a condom during sex because he had had a vasectomy.
One of the victims said her life had been devastated.
"This has been a tragic part of my life," she said in a statement read out by police on her behalf.
"Not only did I find out that I had contracted HIV but I also discovered that the person who gave it to me, whom I trusted and loved, had been infected for five years."
The woman, who has children, said she was glad Dica had been stopped from infecting anyone else.
"Sadly this is not over for me. My sentence has just begun," she said.
Prosecutors said they would continue to bring cases against people who knowingly infected others with HIV or other viruses.
"This was a ground-breaking prosecution, which was the result of a massive team effort," Crown Prosecutor Rene Barclay said in a statement on Monday.
"The implications are that in the future people who are reckless in this way will be vigorously prosecuted."
Police believe Dica may have infected other women and appealed for them to come forward.
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