Charlie Sheen's HIV Positive Status May Get Him Sued by Exes [DETAILS]

By Star Connor s.connor@mstarsnews.com | Nov 17, 2015 05:04 PM EST

Charlie Sheen's HIV positive status may get him sued by his exes! According to People, Sheen could find himself in a lot of legal trouble because he kept his diagnosis secret for some time now.

"He has to be concerned about a fear of litigation from former sexual partners," Howard Bragman, a Hollywood publicist and crisis manager, revealed to the magazine this week. "You don't take that lightly."

On Tuesday, Sheen sat down with Matt Lauer where he claimed that he told his past sexual partners that he had the virus. He claimed that he hasn't passed it on to any them.

Sheen seemed to already believe that some of his past girlfriends, and other sexual partners, would more than likely sue him after Tuesday's interview aired on Today.

"I would be predicting the future and assuming the worst. I can only based on what I've already experienced, what's already come down the pike and what I've been forced to deal with, I'm sure that's next," he admitted.

It appears that some women that have been with the actor are already starting the lawsuit process. According to The Shade Room, at least six women have found lawyers in Los Angeles within the last 24 hours, and want to sue the actor for "intentional infliction of emotional distress, fraud and sexual battery."

MStars News previously reported that Sheen's ex, Bree Olson claimed that she had been tested and revealed before Sheen's interview that she didn't have HIV. The former porn star also claimed that Sheen was a liar during an interview with Howard Stern.

Sheen never mentioned anything bout having the virus, she claimed. "'I'm clean,' she said he told her. 'I'm clean, I'm clean.'"

In California, the state would have to prove that the Two and a Half Men star tried to "use HIV as a weapon" against his former lovers to be sued, according to Scott Burris, director of Center for Health Law, Policy and Practice and a professor at Temple University's Beasley School of Law.

Burris revealed that he hasn't seen a case in which HIV was proven to be a weapon.

"California has one of the narrowest laws. It's unlikely that he intended to infect anybody," Burris told People. "But who knows where he had sex, and there are states with different laws, and in some of them, it's enough to expose someone to fluids. In fact, in some states you can be charged even if you used a condom."

MStars News wants to hear from our readers. Do you think Sheen's past sexual partners should try to sue him from keeping his status hidden for so long?

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