Los Angeles Times, December 28, 2001

Activists Split Over Jailed AIDS Protesters

By CHARLES ORNSTEIN, TIMES HEALTH WRITER

Two aggressive AIDS activists jailed in San Francisco are finding
support from an improbable source: those who call their theories
"crackpot" and consider their tactics indecent and abhorrent.

Michael Petrelis and David Pasquarelli are jailed in lieu of a combined
$1.1-million bail on charges of harassing, stalking and making criminal
threats against newspaper reporters, public health officials and AIDS
researchers.

Many mainstream activists disagree with the men's methods and their
beliefs that AIDS-prevention messages stigmatize Gay sex. But in the
past two weeks, about 200 people — including Gay activists and cultural
icons — have signed an "open letter" on the Internet opposing the
protesters' bail and the felony charges against them. Signers include
Tony Award-winning playwright and actor Harvey Fierstein; Peter Cashman,
a founding member of ACT UP Los Angeles; Poz magazine founder Sean
Strub; Patricia Nell Warren, who wrote the Gay-themed bestseller The
Front Runner; and Andy Humm, a cable TV host and former member of the
New York City Commission on Human Rights.

"Seems to me there is a shortage of sanity and perspective in this
matter," wrote Fierstein, author and star of the hit play Torch Song
Trilogy, in an e-mail to The Times.

"I, like everyone I know, abhor most of the messages and tactics" of
Petrelis and Pasquarelli, he wrote. "However … I fear the bullying of
protesters."

The Nov. 28 arrest of Petrelis and Pasquarelli has, in fact, caused a
rift among more mainstream AIDS activists.

Some believe the two men belong just where they are — in jail.

Kate Sorensen, a Philadelphia activist who was held in lieu of
$1-million bond for protesting at the 2000 Republican National
Convention, is among this group.

"I will fight for our right to demonstrate," Sorensen wrote to the two
men on the Internet after refusing to sign the open letter. "I will
fight for our right to free speech. I will fight this police state, but
I will not fight for you."

Sorensen further derided the men for "damaging the good work that real
AIDS activists have done for years" by criticizing prevention efforts
and disrupting meetings and workshops.

Others say the officials' response to the two men's tactics has been too harsh.

"It has caused a lot more people to ponder whether the bail is too high
and whether the charges are overblown," said William Dobbs, a New York
AIDS activist who drafted the open letter.

The pair are charged with a total of nearly three dozen felonies and
misdemeanors. Dobbs said the bail — $500,000 for Petrelis, $600,000 for
Pasquarelli — is higher than for some suspected rapists and murderers.

Reginald Smith, a manager in the San Francisco district attorney's
office, said the bail is consistent with standard judicial practice and
is justified because the alleged offenses continued despite warnings to stop.

"They have been jailed before. They've been released. They've been
admonished not to do anything. And they've done it again," Smith said.

'This Is Really AIDS Anarchism'

One top San Francisco health official said he can understand why some
outsiders may not understand the gravity of the charges or the need for
hefty bail. But they haven't experienced the fear that the duo instills
in their targets, said Dr. Jeffrey Klausner, who oversees control of
sexually transmitted diseases in the city.

"I think they would probably feel quite differently if these threats
were affecting themselves or their family members," he said.

In court papers, Klausner claims that both men called his home, and one
asked his wife whether Klausner had syphilis. Klausner notes that the
decision on bail rests with impartial courts, and "three judges
[separately] have either sustained or increased the bail."

"This is not about AIDS activism," he said. "This is really AIDS
anarchism and trying to destabilize the public health movement."

Petrelis and Pasquarelli acknowledge making — or encouraging others to
make — late-night phone calls using sexually explicit language to
newspaper reporters, public health officials and AIDS researchers. They
deny threatening those people.

Before their arrests, the men told The Times that they were upset by
reports from Klausner's office, printed in the San Francisco Chronicle,
showing syphilis rates on the rise among men who have sex with men. They
said they believed those statistics were concocted to collect more
federal money for the city.

In addition, the two men said they were angry about a magazine article
in which Klausner discussed the possibility of quarantining AIDS
patients who persistently engage in unsafe sex and pass the infection
along to others. The author later wrote a clarification saying that
neither Klausner nor his agency advocates such an approach.

Pasquarelli is a spokesman for ACT UP San Francisco, a breakaway group
not affiliated with the national or Los Angeles ACT UP. The Bay Area
group contends that AIDS is caused by the side effects of HIV treatment
rather than the human immunodeficiency virus itself.

Petrelis, who is not a member of ACT UP San Francisco, disagrees with
those views but shares the group's belief that federal AIDS funds are
being misspent on unnecessarily frightening and sexually graphic
prevention messages.

Signers Concerned About Free Speech

Many AIDS activists who signed the open letter stressed that their
decision had more to do with protecting free speech than endorsing the
jailed activists.

"You'll be very hard pressed to find anyone who supports their tactics,"
said Steve Ault, a longtime activist who helped organize the 1979 Gay
march on Washington. "My concern is very simply and directly a matter of
civil liberties. I'm concerned that their civil liberties are being
denied at this point."

Another concern among activists is that the men's actions have been
likened by authorities to terrorism.

"If you want to know what terrorism is about, one just needs to go about
2 1/2 miles from my apartment, and there's a huge, gaping hole of
carnage," said Ault, who lives in Brooklyn. "When the word terrorism is
used to describe what they have done, I think it's way out of place."

Bay Area prisoner rights activist Judy Greenspan said she has been on
the receiving end of angry phone calls from ACT UP San Francisco over
her support for prisoner access to HIV medications. Although calling the
tactics "totally misguided," she nonetheless signed the letter calling
for lower bail and reduced charges.

"We need to expose them and we need to do what we can to disarm them as
disrupters," she said. "But I don't think we need to depend upon the
D.A.'s office to do that. This is a very convenient case that will be
used against all of us that protest the actions of government."