NEW DELHI: An Ohio-based sex worker, an HIV-positive patient, despite knowing her illness had engaged with over 200 clients. State officials issued the warning, urging anyone involved in “risky business” with her to come forward for testing.
Linda Leccesse, who was arrested on May 13, reportedly had contact with at least 211 clients from various states since January 1, 2022, around the time she tested positive for HIV, a potentially lethal virus, according to officials, reported The New York Post.
“This case could stem anywhere from Florida up the East Coast, but there are local individuals that we will be reaching out to,” Washington County Sheriff’s Office Chief Deputy Mark Warden said in a press conference last week, according to the Parkersburg News and Sentinel.
Authorities have initiated efforts to notify known clients of Leccesse about the situation and are urging anyone else who may have had contact with her to come forward to authorities.
“They’re not in trouble, this is public-health awareness. This is not a scam,” Warden said.
Barbara Bradley, Health Department administrator said that the relatives of Leccesse’s clients and anybody that had sexual contact with them are also vulnerable to this “risky business.”
She was arrested for soliciting sex on Market Street, after which police learned she was HIV positive and had known for more than two years, as per The New York Post.
The next day she was indicted for engaging in solicitation after a positive HIV test, a third-degree felony.
Linda Leccesse, who was arrested on May 13, reportedly had contact with at least 211 clients from various states since January 1, 2022, around the time she tested positive for HIV, a potentially lethal virus, according to officials, reported The New York Post.
“This case could stem anywhere from Florida up the East Coast, but there are local individuals that we will be reaching out to,” Washington County Sheriff’s Office Chief Deputy Mark Warden said in a press conference last week, according to the Parkersburg News and Sentinel.
Authorities have initiated efforts to notify known clients of Leccesse about the situation and are urging anyone else who may have had contact with her to come forward to authorities.
“They’re not in trouble, this is public-health awareness. This is not a scam,” Warden said.
Barbara Bradley, Health Department administrator said that the relatives of Leccesse’s clients and anybody that had sexual contact with them are also vulnerable to this “risky business.”
She was arrested for soliciting sex on Market Street, after which police learned she was HIV positive and had known for more than two years, as per The New York Post.
The next day she was indicted for engaging in solicitation after a positive HIV test, a third-degree felony.