There is a very famous legal case dubbed “Dr. Feelgood”.
The guy would approach women in apartment parking lots, tell them they have a disease and he could “cure” them with sex, because he has been injected with the cure. He successfully convinced and had sex with multiple women, and he actually charged them $750 to boot.
As you might expect one of the charges was fraud...turns out men’s right to lie to women’s out being a doctor to get them into bed is constitutionally protected free speech.
I'm surprised. I would have expected the exchange of money to bring this little scheme out of free speech and into regulate-able commerical activity. It's no secret that people are legally allowed to lie about their profession for personal gain.
Do you have a source? The appeals doc says Daniel Boro wasn't charged with fraud. He got away with rape because the (male) judges disagreed on the nature of consent under lies.
California amended the law after the Boro case, showing there was no consitutional right to obtain sex via frauduent medical procedures.
The guy would approach women in apartment parking lots, tell them they have a disease and he could “cure” them with sex, because he has been injected with the cure. He successfully convinced and had sex with multiple women, and he actually charged them $750 to boot.
As you might expect one of the charges was fraud...turns out men’s right to lie to women’s out being a doctor to get them into bed is constitutionally protected free speech.