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Anni and Ashot Manukyan had been trying to conceive via IVF for months. But when their long-awaited baby came into the world, he did so into the arms of complete strangers, thousands of kilometres away.
This was not a surrogacy arrangement; the couple didn’t even know he existed. Instead, it was the result of a stunning clinical mistake.
According to a lawsuit filed by the couple, physicians at CHA, the Californian fertility clinic at which they were undoing treatment, had mistakenly implanted their embryo into another patient who visited the facility on the same day in August 2018.
The error didn’t become clear until March 31 this year when that patient, an unidentified New York woman, gave birth to twins of a different race — she and her partner are Asian-American, but the baby boys appeared to be Caucasian.
DNA testing revealed that not only are the twins not genetically related to the birth parents, they are not even related to each other. One matched with the Manukyans and the other with another unidentified couple.
Anni, too, had been implanted with an embryo back in August, but it remains unclear to whom it belonged. The procedure didn’t result in a pregnancy.
“I didn’t get to bond with my baby.”
In a video released by the Manukyans lawyers, Peiffer Wolf Carr & Kane, Anni describes the moment she was told someone else had given birth to her son.