By SARAH HARRIS
When David* first held his little girl, he wasn’t overcome by paternal love and joy that so many other fathers often describe. He was 21. Too young, he says, to become a dad.
But more than that, he remembers feeling something was wrong; that the baby in his arms wasn’t his. As she grew to be a happy toddler that doubt became harder to wrestle with; her dark skin and brown almond-shaped eyes in stark contrast to David’s own blue-eyed, fair skinned complexion.
“She assured me I was the only one,” he recalls of Donna*, the woman with whom he’d shared a brief fling. “She said there was no way it could be anyone else’s.”
Despite his doubts, David didn’t shirk his responsibility; paying child support and sharing custody with his ex. “I just raised her as my own,” he tells me, his voice quiet.
The truth eventually came by text message.
“It said she wasn’t my daughter and I’d never see her again,” David says, shaking his head. “There was disbelief, anger, just the betrayal of it all…”
His daughter had just turned nine. A DNA test later confirmed that the girl wasn’t his.
Information obtained by Nine News reveals more than 100 women have been ordered by courts to pay back child support money under Section 143 of the Child Support (Assessment) Act 1989, which was toughened up in 2007.
Over the same six year period from 2007 to 2012, the courts cancelled 773 child support orders involving men shown by DNA not to be the father of the children.
A Section 143 order is applied only to cases where the mother either knowingly deceived the father, or where there was clear negligence in paternity checks.