A hairdresser accused of deliberately infecting his lovers with HIV allegedly sent a text to one saying: "I have HIV. LOL", a court has heard.

Daryll Rowe, 26, is accused of demanding unprotected sex with his partners, claiming to be free of the virus, or of tampering with the condom when they insisted he used one.

He later sent them mocking text messages telling them he was HIV positive and that they could be at risk, Lewes Crown Court heard.

His first alleged victim received a text saying: "Maybe you have the fever. I came inside you and I have HIV LOL. Oops!"

Rowe, who is originally from Edinburgh, is charged with infecting four men with the virus and of attempting to infect a further six between October 2015 and December 2016.

He was living and working in the Brighton area at the time of the first eight alleged offences, before fleeing to the North East while he was under investigation, where he allegedly tried to infect two more men.

Rowe met the first complainant on gay dating app Grindr in October 2015, telling him he had only just moved to the Brighton area and did not know anyone.

Describing their first sexual encounter in a car, the alleged victim said he was frightened of Rowe but believed him when he said he was free of the virus.

In his taped police interview, the complainant said: "He asked for sex and I gave him oral sex. He asked for more and I said no and he started to get angry.

"He wasn't threatening to punch me, he wasn't huffing and puffing, but he was saying: 'You need to if we're going to be together, I need someone who's spontaneous'.

"I was saying: 'I don't really want to do it. It's horrible to do it in a car in the middle of nowhere.'

"I was getting angry. It was horrible really - I just felt like I had to do it."

He later agreed to unprotected anal sex, but the two men stopped when a cyclist rode past the car. When the complainant refused to continue, Rowe told him: "You've wasted my evening, I can't believe this. You're wasting my time."

"It felt like an hour with him just going on and on. I felt very vulnerable. I didn't know anyone around (that area)," he said.

He said he believed Rowe was about to attack him. "I was thinking this is all going to happen and I'm going to have to go to work tomorrow and explain a black eye," he said.

"He was telling me: 'This would all be over if you had just done it when I said and we had just carried on."'

The complainant said he managed to get out of the situation by promising to meet Rowe a few days later.

"Then he did get out of the car and I cried all the way home," he said.

He said he was not initially concerned about the risk of HIV as Rowe had promised he was clear, "seemed" healthy, and they had intercourse for only a few minutes.

The complainant himself had last had a negative HIV test just days before having sex with Rowe, and had no other partners in between.

When he refused to meet Rowe again, he received a series of abusive text messages, including one saying: "You've got an ugly weird face."

He later received the text telling him Rowe was HIV positive. The alleged victim was diagnosed as positive in January 2016.

Rowe had been diagnosed with HIV while he was still living in Edinburgh in April 2015 after a sexual health clinic contacted him to tell him a former partner was infected.

Doctors found he was "coping well" with his diagnosis but were concerned when he refused vaccination for common illnesses HIV positive patients are susceptible to, such as pneumonia.

They were also worried when he refused antiretroviral drugs to slow the development of the virus and make him less contagious, jurors heard.

The court heard that the four men Rowe is accused of infecting with HIV all had very similar strains to the one Rowe was infected with, making it highly likely that he was the source of the virus.

After his diagnosis, the complainant received a message from Rowe asking him if he was infected yet.

The complainant replied: "All clear. Thanks."

Breaking down in tears, the alleged victim told the court: "I didn't want him to know what he had done to me. I didn't want him to feel like he had won."

Rowe then replied: "Give it a few months. Dormant."

The complainant responded: "I asked the nurse. She said if I don't have it now then I won't get it.

"How have you been? Were you scared when you found out? It was scary waiting for the results so I couldn't imagine actually having it, so I hope you're OK."

Rowe messaged back: "Not even been three months. Don't break out the party just yet. Loser. Ha ha."

The alleged victim was granted the right to give evidence from behind a curtain to spare him having to face Rowe in court.

The second complainant, an American man, also described Rowe as aggressive in demanding unprotected sex.

At one point the witness said he was forced to push Rowe off because he was attempting to have sex without a condom.

Rowe later boasted in a text that he had ripped the condom, the court heard.

In his taped police interview, the witness said: "He started getting weird and that's when all the abusive messages started to happen.

"Things like, 'I ripped the condom you stupid American', and that kind of thing.

"When I blocked him on Grindr and WhatsApp he started calling me constantly, constantly, constantly.

"Then I blocked him on my phone and I got a call that was No Caller ID and I answered and it was him.

"He said, 'You can't block me. I ripped the condom, I hope you get it. Burn'.

"I was like, 'Why would you say something like that?' He was laughing the whole time."

Another message read: "You're such a stupid American. Ha ha. I ripped the condom."

The complainant said: "It was like he was proud of saying it."

A few months later the alleged victim was diagnosed as HIV positive.

He said he started to become anxious because Rowe knew where he lived and he thought he might try and harm him.

He said Rowe never said he had HIV, but kept saying "I have 'it'. I hope you get it".

The complainant said Rowe had told him very little about himself, only that he was vegan and was from Edinburgh.

He said he went to police after a sexual health nurse said there had been similar reports of a Scottish man deliberately infecting his partners with HIV.

The trial, which is expected to last six weeks, continues.

Reporting by Press Association