Kan. case reveals risks with assisted reproduction

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - The case of a Kansas sperm donor being sued by the state for child support underscores a confusing patchwork of aging laws that govern assisted reproduction in the United States and often lead to litigation and frustration among would-be parents.
Complex questions about parental responsibility resurfaced late last year, as Kansas officials went after a Topeka man who answered a Craigslist ad from a lesbian couple seeking a sperm donor. Because no doctor was involved in the artificial insemination, the state sought to hold William Marotta financially responsible for the child when the women split up and one of them sought public assistance. A hearing is set for April.
Many states haven't updated their laws to address the evolution of family structures - such as same-sex families, single women conceiving with donated sperm or artificial inseminations performed without a doctor's involvement. At-home insemination kits are inexpensive, and obtaining sperm from a friend, or even a donor met over the Internet, allows women to avoid medical costs that generally aren't covered by insurance.
But experts say that as case law changes, families put themselves at risk by failing to seek legal advice.
The first wave of assisted reproduction laws were based on model legislation from 1973. These statutes typically call for, among other things, the involvement of a medical provider in order for a sperm donor to be freed of parental responsibility.
"They put a whole bunch of what they thought were reasonable restrictions on the process to encourage people to do it responsibly," said Steve Snyder, a Minnesota family law attorney and chairman of an assisted reproduction committee for the American Bar Association. But, he said, the problem is that if people "don't fall under the strict terms of the law, then the law doesn't protect you."
As a result, the doctor involvement requirement and other stipulations were dropped in 2000 when the model legislation, the Uniform Parentage Act, was updated. The new language has been enacted in nine states, including Alabama, Oklahoma and Texas. But Kansas' law, enacted in 1994, was based on the earlier model.
Kansas isn't alone in grappling with assisted reproduction issues. In Indiana, an appeals court ruled last week that a man who divorced his wife must pay child support for their son and daughter, even though the children were conceived by artificial insemination using sperm donated by another man. Still another case in Indiana involved a man who was ordered in 2010 to pay child support for only one of the two children resulting from his sperm donations.
"The only way to avoid these situations is to change the law to catch up with the technology and what people are actually doing in assisted reproduction," Snyder said.
Sperm donation and parental rights may sound like a relatively niche sector in the legal arena, but updating laws has been a challenge, and some like the rules just the way they are.
Kansas' state Senate Majority Leader Terry Bruce, a conservative Republican, said he doubts legislators will or should consider making changes.
"It tells everybody don't do stupid things on Craigslist. It's kind of common sense," he said." If you're going to create another life, even if it's a good intention, that's a heck of a responsibility, and it's one that precedes any sort of state action."
In the 2010 Indiana case, a woman who used a friend's sperm to conceive two children sought public assistance after she and her lesbian partner separated. County officials wanted to collect child support from the donor.
A state appeals court ultimately ruled that an agreement entered into before the first child's birth freed the donor from financial responsibility for that child. But the donor was found to be financially responsible for the second child, because the agreement didn't cover subsequent children.
"It is definitely evolving and these kinds of cases are really cutting edge," said Sean Lemieux, an Indianapolis attorney who also represented the sperm donor. "It is a risky thing and this is not the place to save your money upfront and get an office form off the Internet."
A high-profile California case, meanwhile, shows the consequences of going without a contract. Texas bodybuilder Ronnie Coleman, who donated sperm for his ex-girlfriend's artificial insemination, paid thousands of dollars in child support each month for nearly four years for two children until an appeals court ruled in March that he could stop.
Peter A. Lauzon, the Los Angeles attorney who represented the eight-time Mr. Olympia, said the legal issues surrounding artificial insemination create a "chilling effect."
"Who is going to want to donate sperm?" he asked. "No one."
Mikki Morrissette, a mother of two who didn't use a doctor for her artificial inseminations, once found herself asked to identify her sperm donor while seeking state-subsidized health insurance in Minnesota after moving there from New York City. She refused and was denied.
"I know a lot of other woman around the country who have used a known donor who have run into similar problems," said Morrissette, who was written five books, including "Choosing Single Motherhood: The Thinking Woman's Guide."
She said the same request isn't made of adoptive parents or when an anonymous donor is used: "It's not fair."
Complex questions about parental responsibility resurfaced late last year, as Kansas officials went after a Topeka man who answered a Craigslist ad from a lesbian couple seeking a sperm donor. Because no doctor was involved in the artificial insemination, the state sought to hold William Marotta financially responsible for the child when the women split up and one of them sought public assistance. A hearing is set for April.
Many states haven't updated their laws to address the evolution of family structures - such as same-sex families, single women conceiving with donated sperm or artificial inseminations performed without a doctor's involvement. At-home insemination kits are inexpensive, and obtaining sperm from a friend, or even a donor met over the Internet, allows women to avoid medical costs that generally aren't covered by insurance.
But experts say that as case law changes, families put themselves at risk by failing to seek legal advice.
The first wave of assisted reproduction laws were based on model legislation from 1973. These statutes typically call for, among other things, the involvement of a medical provider in order for a sperm donor to be freed of parental responsibility.
"They put a whole bunch of what they thought were reasonable restrictions on the process to encourage people to do it responsibly," said Steve Snyder, a Minnesota family law attorney and chairman of an assisted reproduction committee for the American Bar Association. But, he said, the problem is that if people "don't fall under the strict terms of the law, then the law doesn't protect you."
As a result, the doctor involvement requirement and other stipulations were dropped in 2000 when the model legislation, the Uniform Parentage Act, was updated. The new language has been enacted in nine states, including Alabama, Oklahoma and Texas. But Kansas' law, enacted in 1994, was based on the earlier model.
Kansas isn't alone in grappling with assisted reproduction issues. In Indiana, an appeals court ruled last week that a man who divorced his wife must pay child support for their son and daughter, even though the children were conceived by artificial insemination using sperm donated by another man. Still another case in Indiana involved a man who was ordered in 2010 to pay child support for only one of the two children resulting from his sperm donations.
"The only way to avoid these situations is to change the law to catch up with the technology and what people are actually doing in assisted reproduction," Snyder said.
Sperm donation and parental rights may sound like a relatively niche sector in the legal arena, but updating laws has been a challenge, and some like the rules just the way they are.
Kansas' state Senate Majority Leader Terry Bruce, a conservative Republican, said he doubts legislators will or should consider making changes.
"It tells everybody don't do stupid things on Craigslist. It's kind of common sense," he said." If you're going to create another life, even if it's a good intention, that's a heck of a responsibility, and it's one that precedes any sort of state action."
In the 2010 Indiana case, a woman who used a friend's sperm to conceive two children sought public assistance after she and her lesbian partner separated. County officials wanted to collect child support from the donor.
A state appeals court ultimately ruled that an agreement entered into before the first child's birth freed the donor from financial responsibility for that child. But the donor was found to be financially responsible for the second child, because the agreement didn't cover subsequent children.
"It is definitely evolving and these kinds of cases are really cutting edge," said Sean Lemieux, an Indianapolis attorney who also represented the sperm donor. "It is a risky thing and this is not the place to save your money upfront and get an office form off the Internet."
A high-profile California case, meanwhile, shows the consequences of going without a contract. Texas bodybuilder Ronnie Coleman, who donated sperm for his ex-girlfriend's artificial insemination, paid thousands of dollars in child support each month for nearly four years for two children until an appeals court ruled in March that he could stop.
Peter A. Lauzon, the Los Angeles attorney who represented the eight-time Mr. Olympia, said the legal issues surrounding artificial insemination create a "chilling effect."
"Who is going to want to donate sperm?" he asked. "No one."
Mikki Morrissette, a mother of two who didn't use a doctor for her artificial inseminations, once found herself asked to identify her sperm donor while seeking state-subsidized health insurance in Minnesota after moving there from New York City. She refused and was denied.
"I know a lot of other woman around the country who have used a known donor who have run into similar problems," said Morrissette, who was written five books, including "Choosing Single Motherhood: The Thinking Woman's Guide."
She said the same request isn't made of adoptive parents or when an anonymous donor is used: "It's not fair."
"Kan. case reveals risks with assisted reproduction"
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might make someone consider assisted suicide as a way out of this mess... Â
This going to be one messed up kid.
Should try the turkey baster method next time.
@Good guy bad thoughts  It sounds like that is what they did; in lieu of a physician.
So if the state wins and he is required to pay support, can he then sue for at least partial custody of the child should he choose?
 @Surveyor1 And imagine the things he could teach that child about man hating you know whats...hahaha that would be great....
 @Surveyor1 Seems fair.
The only thing I can see for the law to be this strict is the numerous one night standers and Shawn Kemp types who might come in after the fling and say, "it was sperm donation"? I haven't quite worked out all the legal posibilities, but without some kind of legal contract "before" the donation and a doctor or someone watching to make sure it was done without sex, how do you prove that you didn't have a sexual fling and actually had a medical sperm donation? That is the only way I can reason that the state would take this stance. I can see all the deadbeat dads coming forward and saying that I gave a "donation" and without the doctor part it is just the mom's word agains the dead beat dads. Just thinking this one out so please feel free to poke wholes in it...no pun intended!
@sometimesright He said. She said. the woman always wins.
The state of Indiana SHOULD be going after Mother #2 (the one who didn't apply for assistance). She is, after all, the other parent and that's what child support is for... the other parent taking care of their children, period.
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 @Tattooed_Angel I was thinking about that. The couple must have mutually agreed on the insemination and other costs associated with child raising. Whatever the case, they apparently didn't have the foresight to deal with the breakup and how it would affect them, financially. Â
 @MyTacoma  @Tattooed_Angel As the article mentions, what the state SHOULD do doesn't match up with how their laws are currently written. The laws are outdated and need to be brought in line with reality.
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On the flip side, I think the law should require ALL sperm donors should insist on a written contract with the person/couple they're donating to, absolving them of all responsibility for and interest in the child (assuming they don't want to be responsible for the kid). Without that, the sperm donor leaves himself open to situations like this.
He looks like a wanna be Dos Equis guy..... "The most interesting man in the world".
Anyone who looks for a sperm donor on craigslist, is a fool. Just because Jennifer Aniston did it in one of her movies, doesn't make it a great idea. Seriously. How could you HONESTLY vett these people for familial genetic issues, etc. You couldn't. Frankly, if I was choosing a donor, the guy in that pic is not what I'd choose. Â Seriously.. CraigsList?? Explain that to your kid once they grow up. Â "Mommy put an ad on CraigsList, the place where you find insane roommates and anonymous hookups." Â Classy. Â If you can't afford to pay a professional to do the process, and pay a service to get a fully screened and legal donor, then you should not be having a kid.Â
 @DT If only so many people thought things through like you did here, we might not be dealing with such a severe overpopulation problem... :)
It's ironic how lawmakers will become involved in writing this legislation but are reluctant to change these laws when they become obsolete for the times. I like the remark about how they probably won't do anything about it or if they even should. Perhaps they never needed to be involved to begin with. I feel for these guys, trying to help someone out and then it comes back to smack them up along side the head.
 @jatok:Â
I think they were trying to hind behind a shield of some sort by requiring that a doctor be involved in the "act". Seems like the doctors were worried about losing out on $$$ so they bought themselves some legislation/legislators to insure they lept their profit margins.Â
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How does having a doctor involved -vs- DYI make any diffenernce at all in the end result, other than driving the cost way up & putting very large amounts of $$$ in the dpctpr's pocket/bank account.
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They (the authorities/state of Kansas) need to treat this the same as they would would an adopted child.  An adoptive parent would never be able to go after the bio-parents for child supportt, so why should the sperm donor be held responsible & held to a different standard simply because there was no doctor involved, especially when the parties sinvolved had drafted a contract between themselves?.
@LocalLady @jatok: I couldn't agree with you more. Money always seems to be the bottom line with everything anymore.
I will never look at a turkey baster the same way again...
And people wondered why Dorothy left Kansas...
 @OrcasThunder Fred Phelps' Westboro Baptist Church is still doing weird things in Topeka, Kansas.
 @MyTacoma The only difference between Westboro Baptist and every other conservative fundamentalist church in the nation is that Westboro puts their theology of hate on signs and parades it around for the world to see, where the others only speak of it among themselves.
 @Fooey Patooey!  @MyTacoma Hey now. I don't love fundy churches much myself, but seriously. You should try cutting back on the over-broad generalizations there. Not doing yourself any favors.
 @Fooey Patooey! coming from someone who is speaking it straight out loud, I find that a little ironic!