With news cameras flashing, adult film performer Cameron Bay
told reporters that in her last porn shoot before testing positive for
HIV, her partner’s penis was bleeding — and he wasn’t wearing a condom.
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After stopping momentarily, the cameras continued rolling, she said.
Bay, whose positive HIV test sparked the first of two porn
moratoriums in the last month, spoke Wednesday at a Hollywood press
conference with other adult film performers, including two who said they
also contracted HIV this year. The press conference was coordinated by
the AIDS Healthcare Foundation, which advocates for mandatory condom use
in porn.
Five current and former porn performers spoke about the dangers and
uncertainty of life in the adult film industry. While the performers
said they can’t be sure when and where they contracted HIV, they agreed
the industry is not adequately protecting its performers.
Choking back tears, Bay continued to describe her last shoot, filmed at a public bar in San Francisco for Kink.com.
“There were up to 50 people in the room with us. And we were laying
on top of them. And they were touching inappropriately,” Bay said. “It
all happened so fast. I didn’t realize how unsafe it was until I saw the
pictures … You’re on a whole other level when you’re doing something so
extreme.”
Last week, Bay revealed that condoms were available, but not required
at the shoot. She said she didn’t think she needed to use a condom
because her male costar had recently tested negative for sexually
transmitted diseases, and she left the choice up to him. Kink.com
confirmed to HuffPost that Bay was offered a condom, but it was not
used.
Porn performer Patrick Stone told reporters he was asked to perform
in a shoot even after he tested positive for HIV. He said he was told he
was HIV-positive in an email on Sept. 10 from Performer Availability
Screening Services, which handles STD testing for the industry. Stone
said he never got a follow-up call or email from PASS, or from his
employer Kink.com, to discuss the results or schedule follow-up testing. Instead, he got an email from Kink.com two days later inquiring about scheduling a shoot this week, he said.
Since then, Stone has taken two additional tests that he said show
him as HIV-negative. He said he’s awaiting results from a fourth and
final test.
“It’s been kind of a whirlwind week for me emotionally,” Stone said.
“I feel that the testing process for PASS is not working. If I was
allowed to fall through the cracks like I did, who else is out there?
“I mean, they had me scheduled for a shoot tomorrow and as far as they knew, I was HIV-positive,” Stone said.
Kink.com said that it did not know about Stone’s positive HIV test when it scheduled him for the shoot.
“He had tested negative for us previously. Because of the moratorium,
tests were not updated on the PASS system for producers (because no one
was cleared for work),” Mike Stabile, spokesman for Kink.com, said in
an email to HuffPost. “He would have been required [to take] a new test
regardless before shooting.”
Another man who identified himself as a porn performer joined the
press conference by phone, saying he wanted to remain anonymous. He
claimed to have contracted HIV working in the industry and tested
positive in the last six months. That would make him the third performer
to test positive for the virus this year.
About two weeks after a shoot, he said he developed acute symptoms
and tested positive. He said he had tested negative for HIV two weeks
earlier.
A fourth performer, Rod Daily, said he learned he was HIV-positive
earlier this month. Daily, who has been in a romantic relationship with
Cameron Bay for about two years, has performed in gay porn since 2005
and said he always used condoms.
“That’s 12 years that I’ve shot with HIV-positive people, used
condoms and never been HIV-positive,” Daily said. “If anything, I know
that condoms do work. I was a guinea pig for that.
“I just don’t know how an industry stands here and says they care so
much about their performers and, a week after someone tests positive,
they’re out there shooting without condoms,” Daily said. “Ultimately,
it’s a business, and their main concern is money and not their
performers.”
Daily thanked the AIDS Healthcare Foundation “for everything they’ve done,” including helping him and Bay get medication.
Former performer Derrick Burts said he became infected with HIV in
2010 working as a porn performer. Burts said that, like Bay, he had only
worked in the industry for a few months before contracting HIV. In his
four-month porn career, he said, he contracted chlamydia, gonorrhea and
herpes as well.
“To me this is one huge flashback,” Burts said. “What’s the
acceptable number of cases of HIV or herpes or HPV or syphilis or any
other dangerous STD before people step up and do something about this?”
Another former performer, Darren James, who said he became infected
with HIV in 2004 working as a porn performer, said he “almost lost it”
listening to Bay tell her story.
“I didn’t want to see a whole army of people sitting at this table,”
said James, who now works for the AIDS Healthcare Foundation. “This
industry has failed and continues to fail. We all need to wake up.”
When Bay found out she had HIV on Aug. 21, the Free Speech Coalition,
which oversees a database of all adult film performers’ STD tests,
placed a moratorium on porn shooting. Six days later, the organization
lifted the moratorium.
A week after porn shooting had resumed, Bay’s boyfriend, Daily,
announced that he had tested positive for HIV. Two days after Daily said
he was HIV-positive, another performer, who wasn’t identified, tested
positive. That prompted the Free Speech Coalition to impose a second
moratorium.
The Free Speech Coalition announced this week that it would lift the
second moratorium on Friday. It also said it will begin requiring STD
testing of performers every 14 days, twice as often as before.
The Free Speech Coalition maintains that the three performers who
recently tested HIV-positive — Bay, Daily and the anonymous man — did
not contract HIV on a film set.
LA voters in November passed a measure mandating condom use in porn,
despite a large, coordinated campaign against it by the porn industry.
Industry insiders say there has been no enforcement of the new law.
The law was authored by the AIDS Healthcare Foundation, which
maintains that no amount of testing is safe without condom use. “It’s
like trying to prevent pregnancy with a pregnancy test,” said foundation
communications director Ged Kenslea.
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