Pubdate: Fri, 8 May 1998 Source: Denver Post (CO) Page: 1B Contact: http://www.denverpost.com Author: Ann Schrader Denver Post Medical/Science Writer Comment: Caption above photo: "If It Saves One Life" Caption beneath photo: Denver police arrest AIDS activist Paul Simons after he staged a needle exchange Thursday in Civic Center. NEEDLE EXCHANGE SPARKS ARREST Lawmakers Don't Support Intentions Frustrated by politcal obstacles to legalizing needle exchange programs in Colorado, an AIDS activist intentionally set himself up for arrest Thursday by swapping two clean needles for two contaminated ones. The morning arrest in Denver's Civic Center carries national significance because use of federal funds for needle exchanges recently has drawn the attention of Congress and the Clinton administration. Paul Simons, 38, was charged with two state counts of possession of drug paraphernalia. His attorney, David Harrison, said one is a class 2 petty offense punishable by a $100 fine and the other is a class 2 misdemeanor that carries a possible one-year jail sentence. His initial hearing in Denver District Court is set for May 21. Simons said he turned to an act of civil disobedience "because if it saves one life, just one, it will be worthwhile." About 600 Coloradoans have died after being infected with HIV by using contaminated needles or having been the partner or child of an intravenous drug user, Simons said. Numerous federally supported studies show that needle exchange programs can reduce the spread of HIV and other blood-borne diseases and don't increase drug use, he added. State drug paraphernalia laws make possession and distribution of clean syringes illegal. Simons, who in 1995 formed People Engaged in Education and Reduction Strategies, an HIV harm-reduction group, considered for three years whether to flaunt the state law. When a state House committee in March killed a bill that would have allowed communities to set up needle exchange programs, Simons decided to challenge the law. Cohorts contacted police Wednesday about Simons' plan to give an unidentified man with HIV clean needles in exchange for ones that he said had HIV- contaminated blood but no drug residue. "We need to protect the public health and safety," Simons said as Denver police handcuffed him and wrote out a court summons. "That law is unjust and we will take it to court to see if it is applicable to needle exchanges." State and local officials who have supported needle exchange programs empathized with Simons but disagreed with his tactic. "I do not believe in this instance and at this time that an act of civil disobedience is going to help any of us," said state Sen. Dottie Wham, R- Denver, who carried this session's needle-exchange proposal. Wham said she understands that some people "genuinely believe that this is the wrong way to go. I think a big part of that belief is based on a lack of understanding of what we tried to do" in setting up locally run, privately funded programs. Denver District Attorney Bill Ritter, who testified twice before legislative committees in favor of Wham's bill, said his duty is to enforce the laws despite believing that needle exchanges are a public health issue. "I've never been a cafeteria prosecutor," Ritter said. "The law is the law." Mayor Wellington Webb promoted a city ordinance, passed by the city council last fall, allowing the creation of up to three needle exchange programs if the state law were changed. He also supported Wham's bill. Webb was out of town Thursday but spokesman Andrew Hudson said, "We obviously are in support of needle exchanges, but we also are going to follow the law that requires us to cite people who are participating in needle exchanges at this point." "I don't think this is a good way to attract attention to the issue and may be problematic" for future attempts to change state law, said Patti Shwayder, state executive health director. Her department will work to educate lawmakers about the health benefits of needle exchanges. "Each year we come a lot closer" to amending the state law, Shwayder said, "but unfortunately, this time it got extremely political in terms of partisan politics." The issue also has become very heated on a national level. The Clinton administration recently decided against spending federal funds for needle exchanges at the same time saying such programs save lives. The U.S. House last week voted 287-140 to bar federal money for needle exchange programs. - ---