Alabama Judge Refuses To Approve Adoption Of Lesbian Couple Who Fought Gay Marriage Ban

ontopmag.com, February 26, 2015

Less than two weeks after a lesbian couple won the right to have their marriage recognized in Alabama, Mobile County’s probate judge has refused to process the couple’s adoption petition.

Cari Searcy and Kimberly McKeand, together over 15 years, exchanged vows in California in 2008.

In 2005, McKeand gave birth to the couple’s son, K.S.

In 2012, Mobile County Probate Judge Don Davis denied Searcy’s request to adopt K.S., citing the state’s law that only married couples may adopt their partner’s children. Davis determined that Searcy was not a “spouse” of McKeand because Alabama does not recognize their out-of-state marriage.

The women challenged the state’s marriage ban and won. U.S. District Judge Callie “Ginny” Granade declared unconstitutional an Alabama law and constitutional amendment limiting marriage to heterosexual couples. Her ruling took effect on Monday, February 9 after the Supreme Court refused to block its implementation.

Davis refused to comply with the ruling until Granade ordered him to begin issuing marriage licenses to gay couples.

According to AL.com, Davis has indicated that he will not process the women’s adoption petition until the Supreme Court rules in a case challenging marriage bans in four states.

A lawyer for the couple called Davis’ decision “disappointing.”

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Thailand bans commercial surrogacy

TheGuardian.com – February 24, 2015

Thailand’s parliament has passed legislation banning commercial surrogacy, putting a halt on foreign couples seeking to have children through Thai surrogate mothers.

The issue of surrogacy was in the spotlight in Australia last year after a Western Australian couple were accused of leaving a twin boy, known as Baby Gammy, with his surrogate mother after they discovered he had Down syndrome.

The legislation passed by Thailand’s national legislative assembly on Thursday closed loopholes in the country’s public health laws that enabled commercial surrogacy to thrive.

The new law bans all foreign and same-sex couples from seeking surrogacy services in the country.

Only married heterosexuals with at least one Thai partner are allowed to use surrogates. There are no fees allowed for the service and the surrogate mothers must be Thai and over 25 years old.

The surrogate mothers are also required to be relatives of either the husband or wife.

The legislation also includes a ban on advertising and promotions, and shuts down surrogate agents and unregistered clinics.

The Baby Gammy case made headlines in August 2014 when Thai surrogate Pattaramon Chanbua alleged West Australian couple Wendy and David Farnell had abandoned Gammy and returned to Western Australia with his healthy twin sister, Pipah.

Farnell, a convicted child sex offender, retained custody of Pipah late last year after an investigation by the WA Department for Child Protection.

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Men Having Babies San Francisco Surrogacy Conference & Expo

By Jenae, allthingssurrogacy.com – February 16, 2015

Recently,  I had the opportunity to attend the Men Having Babies Surrogacy Conference and Expo in San Francisco, CA. I had heard of the Men Having Babies organization before, but until this recent event had not had a chance to attend one of the conferences. So, with three local SurroSisters in tow, we headed into the city for a day to focus on one of our favorite topics….Surrogacy!

My purpose for attending the MHB Conference, was an opportunity to see what the seminar was all about, the type of information they were sharing, resources they’re promoting, and to connect with other surrogacy professionals in attendance. Education is important to me and being the surrogacy advocate that I am, I couldn’t wait for the days activities!

We started the day by arriving at the LGBT Center early to attend the surrogacy professionals breakfast upstairs. It was such a treat to be able to meet so many wonderful organizations, agencies and fertility clinics! I am always up for meeting new agencies, clinics, and organizations as it gives me the chance to find out what they have to offer you all as surrogates and parents to be!

Armed with my camera in hand, and my SurroSisters taking notes, we made our way from the 4th floor (where the professionals and sponsors were set up as the Expo) down to the 2nd floor Rainbow Room where the seminars were being held. The room was close to packed as we entered, with a line of men still at the door checking in for the day’s event.

How great is that to see a room full of at least 200 men eager for knowledge and understanding of how the surrogacy process works?! All those men we shared a room with that day were there with the same goal in mind, to start their family. It was such a great vibe!

Ron Poole-Dayan and Anthony Brown, Esq., both of Men Having Babies, and Judy Appel of Our Family Coalition started things off with a warm welcome and introduction. After introductions and review of the agenda, they quickly went to business. They began with explaining the Surrogacy process (something they’re both familiar with as both Ron and Anthony had their children through surrogacy), information on egg donation, FAQ’s, agency information; as well as what it means to go “independent”. I feel that they did a great job explaining the process and appreciated that they left time for members in the audience to ask questions.

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N.J. gay couple’s custody battle with sperm donor could set precedent

South Jersey Times – February 9, 2015 by Andy Polhamus

A lesbian couple from Salem County are locked in a custody battle over their son after a sperm donor sued them for parenting time.

The outcome of their case, according to their attorney and a Rutgers law professor, might change the status of reproductive rights for couples around New Jersey who conceive by artificial means.

Sheena and Tiara Yates of Pennsville had a son who was conceived by at-home artificial insemination — known colloquially as alternative insemination — in June 2013 under the counsel of a physician. The couple already had a toddler, also conceived by artificial insemination from a different donor, and had drawn up contracts in which both men relinquished their legal paternity.

It looked for a while as though everything had gone smoothly. In the same five-month span between December 2013 and April 2014, however, both sperm donors came forward and filed for visiting rights with each child.

State law addressing artificial insemination and domestic issues, as the Yateses discovered, says that only when the insemination process is carried out under the direct supervision of a physician, can the non-biological parent be legally considered the natural parent of the child. The law also protects the donor from having any “rights or duties stemming from the conception of the child.”

The Yates family lost the first custody case, and that donor now has visitation time with the older child — a court ruling the couple decided not to dispute. The same thing happened with the second suit in September after a Salem County Superior Court judge ruled in favor of the donor, Shawn Sorrell. His parenting time begins with a few hours each weekend in addition to paying $83 a week in child support.

“Emotionally it’s very hard for us,” said Sheena Yates. “All we want is a family, and we can’t have kids without an outside party. It’s a lot for us to have to deal with. It’s not just hard on us, it’s hard on the kids, too.”

The Yateses asked that their children’s names not be revealed to protect their privacy.

The couple’s son is now a year old, and according to Sheena, had not met his biological father until visitation began. Sorrell, of Wilmington, Delaware, is representing himself in the case. He could not be reached for comment.

As they file their appeal with the Superior Court of New Jersey’s appellate division, the Yateses not only argue that the precise location of the procedure should be irrelevant, but also hope one major factor will influence an appellate court’s decision about custody over their younger child. They had no legal recognition of their relationship when their first child was born, but have been in a civil union since 2011 and got married in May 2014.

“The question now is whether the presumption of marriage is stronger than the artificial insemination statute,” said Kimberly Mutcherson, a professor of law at Rutgers-Camden. “You’re battling out two different parts of the statutory scheme and figuring out which one would prevail.”

Without the marriage aspect, she added, the case would be fairly cut and dry.

“It’s a core mistake people make. The court says if you go to a physician and do it their way, [donors] don’t have a legal connection to the child,” Mutcherson said. “When you don’t have that anymore, you have two people on equal footing. At that point it’s just a custody proceeding.”

John Keating, the Glassboro-based attorney representing the Yateses, said he hopes the question of marital status will strengthen their case.

“We think it’s important the appellate division make a decision. Our purpose here is for other couples not to go through this. They set out to start a family together, and they did what they thought was the right thing,” he said. “They entered into contracts with sperm donors, they consulted a physician and are now in a position of raising two children with two sperm donors instead of being two parents and their children. Now there are four parents raising these children.”

Sheena said she hopes bringing attention to her case will help other couples avoid similar problems in the future.

“It’s not just us,” she said. “It’s thousands of others who could go through it, too, and it affects people’s lives every day.”

Keating also argues that their consultation of a physician should hold up in court, despite the fact that the procedure was carried out at home. Furthermore, he said, the court’s interpretation that artificial insemination must be carried out only by a doctor puts lower-income people, gay or straight, at a disadvantage. Fertility clinics carry a hefty price tag, and sperm banks aren’t cheap.

“We don’t think this is an anti-LGBT decision,” Keating said, but noted that even initial fees at most sperm banks tally about $1,000. “But we do think it disparately impacts LGBT couples, and disproportionately impacts lower-income people.”

Mutcherson agreed.

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AG recommends recognizing same-sex parents in Israel

ynetnews.com, February 9, 2015 by Aviel Magnezi

Israel takes step towards granting parental rights to same-sex parents, as AG says state should give recognize partner of biological parent, instead of forcing them to legally adopt child.

Attorney General Yehuda Weinstein submitted a precedent-setting request to the family court on Sunday, recommending that the same-sex partner of a biological birth mother be regarded as a legal parent.

The recommendation pertains to same-sex parents of a child born through sperm donation. Currently, the non-biological partner was forced to adopt their partner’s biological child in order to be listed as a legal parent.

In 2003, the Supreme Court ruled that the partner of a biological parent can be registered as the child’s parent in the civil registry, following a US court ruling that ordered to allow the names of a same-sex couple on birth certificates.

 

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Defenders examine business side of surrogacy, donors

By Myra Arthur, KSAT.com – February 5, 2015

SAN ANTONIO – The compensation paid to surrogates and donors who help otherwise childless couples conceive is often not set by state or federal law.

Instead, it is left to fertility clinics and surrogacy agencies to determine.

Geography and cost of living influence the pay a surrogate can receive, while the American Society of Reproductive Medicine sets guidelines for how much money a donor should receive.

“I’m often their final hope, their final resource,” said Cori Smelker, who runs Surrogate Angels of San Antonio.

Smelker has given birth to six children as a surrogate and five children of her own.

“A first-time surrogate could get as little at $15,000 or possibly as much as $25,000 to $30,000, depending on the agency and what she’s asking for and the couple she’s carrying for,” she said.

Surrogacy agencies will likely pay more for multiple births or lost wages if the surrogate is employed and must go on bed-rest.

A sperm-donor can make, on average, $4,000 over six months, according to www.beaspermdonor.com.

Compensation for egg-donation can also vary, according to Dr. Summer James, reproductive endocrinology & infertility specialist at Texas Fertility Center.

“Per ASRM guidelines, somewhere around $5,000 to $10,000,” James said. “We tend to offer egg-donors between $5,000 and $6,000 in our program.”

Most clinics self-govern, James said, by following the guidelines of the ASRM, which also sets guidelines on who can donate and how donors should be screened and selected.

The FDA has its own regulations.

ASRM recommends a woman not donate eggs more than six times.

James says violating ASRM guidelines doesn’t always come with a penalty, but such were the circumstances in the infamous “Octomom” case.

Dr. Randal Robinson, reproductive endocrinologist and infertility specialist at UT Medicine San Antonio, agrees that the majority of fertility clinics follow the same guidelines.

“I think that’s the thing we always have the concern about is to make sure we’re not inducing people that really don’t have that altruistic spirit,” Robinson said. “I think that, if anything, clinics are probably more conservative and follow the rules to an ever greater degree because of the concern that if something unusual happened, what negative publicity that would provide to the specialty and the clinic itself.”

The majority of donors contribute eggs anonymously, Robinson added.

“I really feel like its regulated well. It’s working medically. It’s working legally,” James said.

Those within the fertility field believe it is unlikely one could make a living off of the compensation surrogates or donors receive.

“The compensation is really going to be for time off work, for discomfort, for the surgical procedure she will have to undergo to have eggs removed,” said James.

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European Court of Human Rights Decision Re: Italian Couple’s Surrogacy Arrangement

January 27, 2015 – From the Press release of the European Court of Human Rights Re: Paradiso and Campanelli v. Italy

In today’s Chamber judgment1 in the case of Paradiso and Campanelli v. Italy (application no. 25358/12) the European Court of Human Rights held, by a majority, that there had been:

a violation of Article 8 (right to respect for private and family life) of the European Convention on Human Rights.

The case concerned the placement in social-service care of a nine-month-old child who had been born in Russia following a gestational surrogacy contract entered into by a couple; it subsequently transpired that they had no biological relationship with the child.

The Court found in particular that the public-policy considerations underlying Italian authorities’ decisions – finding that the applicants had attempted to circumvent the prohibition in Italy on using surrogacy arrangements and the rules governing international adoption – could not take precedence over the best interests of the child, in spite of the absence of any biological relationship and the short period during which the applicants had cared for him. Reiterating that the removal of a child from the family setting was an extreme measure that could be justified only in the event of immediate danger to that child, the Court considered that, in the present case, the conditions justifying a removal had not been met.

However, the Court’s conclusions were not to be understood as obliging the Italian State to return the child to the applicants, as he had undoubtedly developed emotional ties with the foster family with whom he had been living since 2013.

Principal facts

The applicants, Ms Donatina Paradiso and Mr Giovanni Campanelli, are Italian nationals who were born in 1967 and 1955 respectively and live in Colletorto (Italy). They are husband and wife.

After unsuccessfully attempting to use in vitro fertilisation Ms Paradiso and Mr Campanelli opted for a gestational surrogacy arrangement to become parents. For that purpose they entered into an agreement with the company Rosjurconsulting in Russia. A surrogate mother was found and given in vitro fertilisation and a baby was born on 27 February 2011 in Moscow. In accordance with Russian law, Ms Paradiso and Mr Campanelli were registered as the baby’s parents, without any indication that the child had been born through a surrogacy arrangement.

In April 2011 the Italian Consulate in Moscow delivered documents allowing the child to leave for Italy. A few days after their arrival in Italy, Mr Campanelli unsuccessfully asked the municipal authority of Colletorto to register the birth. The Italian Consulate in Moscow informed the Campobasso Minors Court, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Collerorto municipality that the file on the child’s birth contained false information.

On 5 May 2011 Ms Paradiso and Mr Campanelli were charged with “misrepresentation of civil status”, and violation of the adoption legislation, in that they had brought the child to Italy in breach of Italian and international law and without complying with the authorisation to adoption obtained by them in December 2006, which ruled out the adoption of such a young child. On the same date the public prosecutor at the Campobasso Minors Court requested the opening of proceedings to free the child for adoption, since, for the purposes of Italian law, he had been abandoned.

In August 2011 a DNA test revealed that Mr Campanelli was not the child’s biological father. Gametes from other sources must have been used in the course of the fertilisation procedure. In consequence, the minors court decided on 20 October 2011 that the child should be removed immediately from the applicants and placed under guardianship, on the ground that there was no biological relationship between them and that there existed doubts as to the applicants’ child-raising and emotional capacities, the conduct of Ms Paradiso and Mr Campanelli having been contrary to the law. The baby was placed in a children’s home, without Ms Paradiso and Mr Campanelli being informed of his location or allowed any contact, then in January 2013 the baby was entrusted to foster parents. In addition, he was left without a formal identity.

In April 2013 the refusal to register the Russian birth certificate was confirmed on the ground that its registration would be contrary to public policy, given that the certificate was inaccurate, there being no biological relationship between the child and the applicants. The latter unsuccessfully submitted that they had acted in good faith, and claimed to have been unaware that Mr Campanelli’s seminal fluid had not been used in the Russian clinic.

In April 2013 the child received a new identity, and it was indicated in the new birth certificate that he had been born to unknown parents. On 5 June 2013 the minors court declared that the applicants no longer had the capacity to act in the adoption procedure initiated by them, given that they were neither the parents nor relatives of the child.

Complaints, procedure and composition of the Court

Relying on Article 8 (right to respect for private and family life), the applicants complained, in particular, about the child’s removal from them, and about the refusal to acknowledge the parent- child relationship established abroad by registering the child’s birth certificate in Italy.

The application was lodged with the European Court of Human Rights on 27 April 2012. Judgment was given by a Chamber of seven judges, composed as follows:

Işıl Karakaş (Turkey), President, Guido Raimondi (Italy), András Sajó (Hungary), Nebojša Vučinić (Montenegro), Helen Keller (Switzerland), Egidijus Kūris (Lithuania), Robert Spano (Iceland), and also Stanley Naismith, Section Registrar. Decision of the Court

Article 8

The Court dismissed at the outset the applicants’ complaint submitted in the child’s name, finding that they did not have standing to act on his behalf. It also dismissed, for failure to exhaust domestic remedies, the complaint submitted by Ms Paradiso and Mr Campanelli alleging that it was impossible to have the child’s birth certificate registered in Italy, as the applicants had not appealed on points of law.

With regard to the complaint concerning the child’s removal and placement under guardianship, the Court, noting the existence of a de facto family life between the couple and the child, held that Article 8 was applicable in this case and declared this complaint admissible. Although Ms Paradiso and Mr Campanelli had spent only six months with the baby, that period had covered important stages in his young life and they had behaved as parents towards him during that period.

As to the merits of the case, the Court considered, firstly, that the measures to remove the child and place him under guardianship amounted to interference in the applicants’ private life and had been in accordance with the law. Indeed, the domestic courts’ application of Italian law in concluding that the child had been abandoned had not been arbitrary, and the measures taken had been based on provisions of domestic law. In addition, the contested measures pursued the legitimate aim of “prevention of disorder”, in so far as the applicants’ conduct had been contrary to the law.

Secondly, in assessing the necessity of this interference in a democratic society, the Court was required to examine whether the application of the national law had struck a fair balance between the public interest and the applicants’ private interests, namely respect for their private and family life. In so doing, it had to have regard to the essential principle according to which, whenever the situation of a child was in issue, the best interests of that child were paramount.

On the issue of whether these interests had been taken into account by the Italian authorities, the Court noted that they had decided to remove the child in order to put an end to an unlawful situation. They had considered that by contacting a Russian agency and then bringing back to Italy a child whom they passed off as their son Ms Paradiso and Mr Campanelli had attempted to circumvent the prohibition in Italy on using surrogacy arrangements and the rules governing international adoption. According to the Italian authorities, that situation resulted from a narcissistic desire or from a wish to resolve problems in their relationship, which cast doubt on their child- raising and emotional capacities.

However, the reference to public order could not be considered as giving carte blanche for any measure, as the State had to take into consideration the best interests of the child, irrespective of the parental relationship, genetic or otherwise. The Court reiterated that the removal of a child from the family setting was an extreme measure, which could be justified only in the event of immediate danger to the child. The threshold set in its case-law in this respect was very high2.

Admittedly, the minors court had taken into account the undoubted harm in removing the child, but had considered, given the short period spent with the applicants and his young age, that he would bounce back from this difficulty. For its part, the Court considered that, although the situation before the Italian courts was a sensitive one, the conditions justifying removal had not been met. The argument that, with time, the child would have developed closer ties with his intended parents, making a possible subsequent separation even more problematic, was not sufficient to justify his removal. Moreover, Ms Paradiso and Mr Campanelli, who had been assessed as fit to adopt in December 2006, when they received the authorisation to adopt, were then held to be incapable of bringing up and loving the child on the sole ground that they had circumvented the adoption legislation, without any expert report being ordered by the courts. In addition, the child had not received his new identity until April 2013, which meant that he had had no official existence for more than two years. Yet it was necessary to ensure that a child was not disadvantaged on account

of the fact that he or she was born to a surrogate mother, beginning with citizenship or identity, which were of crucial importance3.

In consequence, the Court was not persuaded that the authorities had relied on appropriate evidence in deciding to place the child in the care of the social services. Thus, they had failed to strike a fair balance between the interests at stake, in violation of Article 8. This finding of a violation was not to be understood as obliging the Italian State to return the child to the applicants, given that he had undoubtedly developed emotional ties with the foster family with whom he had been living since 2013.

Just satisfaction (Article 41)

The Court held that Italy was to pay the applicants 20,000 euros (EUR) in respect of non-pecuniary damage and EUR 10,000 in respect of costs and expenses.

Separate opinion

Judges Raimondi and Spano expressed a joint partly dissenting opinion, which is annexed to the judgment.

Lesbian couple wins right to have names on children’s birth certificates

By LAURA KEBEDE Richmond Times-Dispatch Richmond.com – January 25, 2015

When Maria Hayman delivered her twins, Merida and Finn, on June 13, 2013, at St. Francis Medical Center, there was no doubt in her mind as to who the other parent was.

Her wife, Joani Hayman, had contributed eggs that were placed in Maria after being fertilized with sperm from a donor who had revoked his parental rights.

But Joani’s name was not allowed on the children’s birth certificates because egg donors do not have parental rights, according to the Code of Virginia.

But after an 18-month game of wait-and-see as the issue of gay marriage was being settled in Virginia, Richmond Judge Designate T.J. Markow last month ordered the Office of Vital Records in the Virginia Department of Health to amend the birth certificates to show Maria and Joani as the “only parents of the children.”

The Haymans initially contemplated pursuing a custody order, or what their attorney, Colleen Quinn, says was called “LGBT two-parent protocol” in Virginia by lawyers familiar with same-sex couple cases.

Click here to read the entire article.

New Ruling: IRS Can Tax Payments To Egg Donors As Income

by Tony Nitti – Forbes Contributor – January 22, 2015

Among the many injustices life dishes out on a daily basis is the fact that many women who are actively trying to become pregnant cannot do so, while every teenager with more hormones and free time than common sense seemingly can’t keep from getting pregnant.

It’s a struggle I witnessed personally when my older sister tried unsuccessfully for years to conceive a child, her painful emotional battle reaching its nadir when an apathetic doctor explained to her that, “some women just aren’t meant to have children.”

Fourteen years and three beautiful girls later, my sister got the last laugh. But the process was far from easy, which is the reality for many women. And this is precisely why the fertility industry has become a billion dollar business.

There are no shortage of available alternatives for women struggling to get pregnant; unfortunately, they are typically intrusive and expensive. One option, which is the thrust of our discussion here, is “egg donation,” whereby a female donor is supplied with hormones that increase her egg production. The eggs are then removed, fertilized in a laboratory, and ultimately implanted in the intended recipient.

The term “egg donation” is a bit of a misnomer, however, because rarely is the egg “donated” in the traditional, altruistic sense. Rather, the donor is typically compensated, and compensated well. This, as you might imagine, has led to a rather big tax conundrum: do the amounts received by the donor in exchange for her eggs constitute taxable income?

The issue has been a huge topic of conversation on egg donor message boards (yes, there is such a thing) and in the fertility industry at large. And for good reason: because until today, there was no answer. Hours ago, however, that all changed, when the Tax Court concluded that amounts received by a donor represented taxable compensation income.

Click here to rear the entire article.

UK proposes rules for embryos made from 3 people

By Maria Checng – December 17, 2014

LONDON (AP) — New rules proposed in Britain would make it the first country to allow embryos to be made from the DNA of three people in order to prevent mothers from passing on potentially fatal genetic diseases to their babies.

In a statement issued on Wednesday, the department of health said it had taken “extensive advice” on the safety and efficacy of the proposed techniques from the scientific community.

“(This) will give women who carry severe mitochondrial disease the opportunity to have children without passing on devastating genetic disorders,” Dr. Sally Davies, the U.K.’s chief medical officer, said in a statement.

Experts say that if approved by parliament, these new methods would likely be used in about a dozen British women every year who are known to have faulty mitochondria — the energy-producing structures outside a cell’s nucleus. Defects in the mitochondria’s genetic code can result in diseases such as muscular dystrophy, heart problems and mental retardation.

The techniques involve removing the nucleus DNA from the egg of a prospective mother and inserting it into a donor egg, where the nucleus DNA has been removed. That can be done either before or after fertilization.

The resulting embryo would end up with the nucleus DNA from its parents but the mitochondrial DNA from the donor. Scientists say the DNA from the donor egg amounts to less than 1 percent of the resulting embryo’s genes. But the change will be passed onto future generations, a major genetic modification that many ethicists have been reluctant to endorse.

Critics say the new techniques are unnecessary and that women who have mitochondrial disorders could use other alternatives, such as egg donation, to have children.

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