Pubdate: 103197 Source:Orange County Register Section: metro, page 7 Contact: William F. Buckley, Jr. We need a way to identify those with HIV Chautauqua County, N.Y., thought itself unlikely for the kind of thing that hit it. "This is the last place the police would think of investigating," one student reported to James Barron of The New York Times. But they did, and we know now that one 20yearold (Nushawn Williams) apparently infected directly through heterosexual sex 28 women many of them more properly designated as girls and may have infected indirectly (people who had sex with any of the 28) 53 persons. Billy the Kid killed only 21 people in the course of his legendary career. Now here is the nodal point of the story. The county health commissioner, Dr. Robert Berke, on learning of the profusion of victims, broke precedent and identified the criminal. He did so on the grounds that there was no other way to find out where he was and to learn whether he was still infecting other people. It turns out that Williams is in jail, on Rikers Island, ready to be sentenced for selling crack cocaine to an undercover cop. Prosecutors are cranking up other cases to charge him with after his sentence on the dope count. He will be charged with assault on those women who contracted HIV, and with reckless endangerment on those who had sex with him but didn't contract the disease. The charge is that he acted with depraved indifference whenever he had unprotected sex with the young women. At first sight we have just another story of man's bestiality to man: Williams knew that he was infected when he gave in to his satyriasis. So much for one more human horror story. But the second sight is the more arresting. At first sight we have just another story of man's bestiality to man: Williams knew that he was infected when he gave in to his satyriasis. So much for one more human horror story. But the second sight is the more arresting. Authorities knew in August 1996 that Williams was infected and did what about it? Nothing. Because that is what the law requires. The problem is this. The justice moralists take the position that to contract HIV isn't a crime, and it is hard to quarrel with the judgment: The 13yearold who had sex and contracted HIV from Williams can hardly be thought to have had criminal intent. But having been identified as diseased, Williams went out so to speak, scotfree to infect others. The delicate question has to do with the relationship between justice and prudence. The Williams case is not isolated. In East St. Louis, Ill., a man was diagnosed with the virus in 1992 but continued sexual contact with dozens of casual girlfriends who didn't know his infection. We know that Williams was derelict. But was Berke derelict, or required to be derelict, by a law that appears to take insufficient account of the perils of allowing loaded pistols to leave the laboratory without some effort to warn casual passersby? Ten years ago, in an open discussion with Alan Dershowitz touching on the nature of the problem, I suggested the possibility of a discreet tattoo on those identified with AIDS. I withdrew the suggestion because it was greeted with such universal shock as might have been appropriate to the security consultant recommending barbed wire for Auschwitz. There is a middle way: Over 12 years ago, health commissioners recommended publicizing the names of men and women who have tested HIV positive. There are drawbacks to the idea. For one, the passionate young man or young woman ready to make the embrace that will prove fatal isn't likely to call an information lifeline to ascertain whether Williams, Nushawn, is safe to sleep with. For another, it is unpleasant to think of public identification of those who have the virus many of whom (53 in and about Chautauqua County, N.Y.) got it innocently, if that is the right word for casual sex with someone one doesn't think of as infected. These are quite urgent questions. There are about 40 bills in Congress right now that seek to augment the right to privacy. Some of these laws are motivated by the knowledge that Social Security numbers are easily available through the Internet, others by annoyance that new post office addresses can be exploited by commercial interest, still others by the shock of Princess Diana pursued by the paparazzi. The concern for privacy is a holy concern. But to indulge it at the expense of all other concerns is unbalanced. It is easy to say that the 28 girls who had sex with Williams were misbehaving. But it's not easy to say that the price of misbehaving should be death from AIDS. The middle way suggests the need for some identification of the virus carrier, something other than a tattoo.