A woman in Austria was found guilty of fatally infecting her neighbor with COVID-19 in 2021, her second pandemic-related conviction in a year, according to local media. A judge sentenced the 54-year-old on Thursday to four months’ suspended imprisonment and an 800-euro fine ($886.75) for grossly negligent homicide.

The victim, who was also a cancer patient, died of pneumonia that was caused by the coronavirus, according to Austrian news agency APA. A virological report showed that the virus DNA matched both the deceased and the 54-year-old woman, proving that the defendant “almost 100 percent” transmitted it, an expert told the court.

“I feel sorry for you personally – I think that something like this has probably happened hundreds of times,” the judge said Thursday. “But you are unlucky that an expert has determined with almost absolute certainty that it was an infection that came from you.”

  • Flying SquidM
    link
    English
    1403 days ago

    The most relevant part of the article, to me, has not been quoted:

    This week, the judge heard statements from the deceased’s family, who said there had been contact in a stairwell between the neighbors on Dec. 21, 2001 — when the defendant would already have known she had COVID-19. But she denied the meeting, saying she was too sick to get out of bed that day. She also said she believed she had bronchitis, which she typically gets every year.

    But the woman’s doctor told police that the defendant had tested positive with a rapid test and told him that she “certainly won’t let herself be locked up” after the result.

    Seems pretty open-and-shut to me. If she had something like drug-resistant TB, there would be no question here.

    • @Nurse_Robot
      link
      English
      703 days ago

      With that context, 4 months and $800 doesn’t feel like enough

    • fistac0rpse
      link
      fedilink
      443 days ago

      Dec. 21, 2001 - do news sites no longer employ editors or proofreaders?

      • Drusas
        link
        fedilink
        103 days ago

        They almost all stopped doing so some years back. As someone who used to want to be a copywriter, reading modern articles with all of their constant mistakes is very frustrating.

    • @breakingcups
      link
      English
      133 days ago

      Huh, I’m surprised the doctor was allowed to comment on that.

      • @RedWeasel
        link
        English
        153 days ago

        Why? There a limits on health care privacy privilege. Also with regards to with attorneys as well.

        • @The_v
          link
          English
          63 days ago

          Medical privacy ends when the condition may cause detrimental effects to other people. It’s not that difficult of a concept to understand.

          Somebody who has epilepsy is not allowed to drive vehicles or fly a plane. They might have an episode while operating the vehicle and kill/injure others.

          Somebody with a confirmed deadly disease is not allowed to wander around spreading it to others. Their decisions to ignore quarantine restrictions will kill/injure others.

      • @stoly
        link
        English
        93 days ago

        Public health is a privacy exception.

      • Todd Bonzalez
        link
        fedilink
        English
        -213 days ago

        Welcome to a world without medical privacy.

        In the USA this wouldn’t happen because we have HIPAA.

        We also used to have Roe v. Wade…

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    313 days ago

    For months and under $1000 for murdering someone. That’s really not going to stop anyone doing it again.

    • XIIIesq
      link
      English
      32 days ago

      Murder implies intent. If the assailant, knowing they had COVID, purposefully coughed in to the face of the victim with the intent of infecting them, then you have a point. But the article does not imply that is what happened.

  • @anubis119
    link
    English
    313 days ago

    I understand the reasoning, I’m just not sure I like the precedence this establishes. The details are quite vague.

    The article says there was contact in a stairwell. What kind of contact? How long? Even if you got your groceries delivered, how would you get them if you aren’t allowed in a common area? No details at all.

    This feels dystopian to me because the judgement seems to imply that if you are unlucky enough to have a better immune system than your deceased neighbor who was sick with the same strain of virus, that you’re fully liable for their death. IDK

    • @cmeio
      link
      English
      563 days ago

      To give a bit nore details: She ignored her quarantine mandate, didn’t wear a mask and chatted him up in the stairwell. Because she was convinced she doesn’t have Covid even though she was diagnosed.

      • @Crashumbc
        link
        English
        73 days ago

        Sounds like typhoid Mary

    • Drusas
      link
      fedilink
      313 days ago

      She also has a previous conviction for intentionally spreading the virus.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    373 days ago

    So, unless you die of it, there are no repercussions to someone blatantly coughing at your face, again and again, despite protests.

    I don’t feel sorry for anyone doing that.

    • @foggy
      link
      English
      323 days ago

      Coughing deliberately in someones face can be battery in many states with a good lawyer.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      23 days ago

      Well, no repercussions from the government. But the government is not the only entity capable of creating repercussions.

    • ms.lane
      link
      English
      03 days ago

      Seems there are no real repercussions at all.

      800 euro and 4 weeks at home?

  • @Feathercrown
    link
    English
    1
    edit-2
    3 days ago

    Literally how do you even get access to a syringe of covid-19

    Edit: Oh, “infecting”…

  • @kerrypacker
    link
    English
    -23 days ago

    Almost absolute certainty? So not?