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DNA test revealed that this woman's father was her parents' fertility doctor

Obstetrician accused of fraud and medical negligence 

Lindsey Bever
Wednesday 04 April 2018 15:01 BST
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(afp)

When Kelli Rowlette received the results from a DNA sample she had sent to a popular genealogy website, she assumed there had been a mistake.

The test showed that her DNA matched a sample from a doctor more than 500 miles away - and, although she had never heard of him, Ancestry.com predicted a parent-child relationship between the two.

At the time, Ms Rowlette was not aware that more than 36 years ago, her parents had struggled to conceive.

She did not know her mother had undergone artificial insemination, nor did she - or her parents - know her mother's fertility doctor had allegedly used his own sperm to get her pregnant with Rowlette.

The account comes from a lawsuit filed last week in US District Court in Idaho, which saw Ms Rowlette accuse Gerald E Mortimer, a now-retired obstetrician gynecologist in Idaho Falls, of fraud and medical negligence, among other things.

Dr Mortimer could not immediately be reached for comment, and it's not clear whether he has an attorney.

In the early 1980s, Ms Rowlette's parents, Howard Fowler and Sally Ashby, were married and living in Idaho Falls, not far from the Wyoming border.

The pair were having a hard time conceiving. Dr Mortimer, an OB/GYN, diagnosed Mr Fowler with a low sperm count and Ms Ashby with a tipped uterus, which see it tilt toward the spine, according to the lawsuit.

The doctor recommended that Ms Ashby undergo a procedure in which she would be inseminated with sperm from her husband and an anonymous donor who matched the couple's specifications, the lawsuit states. The couple requested a donor who was in college and taller than 6 feet with brown hair and blue eyes - and Dr Mortimer told them that he had found a donor matching their description, the suit says.

But the lawsuit claims that when he performed the procedure in summer 1980, he used his own sperm. He did not match the couple's specifications.

Ms Ashby became pregnant and, in May 1981, Dr Mortimer delivered his own child - never divulging the secret, according to the lawsuit.

He remained Ms Ashby's doctor for several years until the she and her husband moved to Washington state.

"Dr. Mortimer cried when Ms Ashby informed him they were moving," according to the lawsuit. "Dr Mortimer knew Kelli Rowlette was his biological daughter but did not disclose this to Ms Ashby or Mr Fowler."

It wasn't until last year that the decades-long secret started to unravel - when Ms Rowlette sent in a DNA sample and it told her something was off.

In July, Ms Rowlette, from Benton County, Washington, received the notification about the match from Ancestry.com. She told her mother, expressing her "disappointment in the unreliability of the service" -- and her mother recognised the doctor's name, according to the lawsuit.

"Ms Ashby contacted Mr Fowler, now her ex-husband, and relayed the information she obtained from Ancestry.com. Mr Fowler was also devastated by the news," the lawsuit states, explaining that the parents "painfully laboured" over whether they should tell their daughter.

But several months later, Ms Rowlette discovered the shocking truth on her own.

In August, she was helping to sort through her parents' old papers when she ran across her birth certificate. It had been signed by the doctor who delivered her - Gerald Mortimer, according to the lawsuit.

The lawsuit states that she was "horrified" and contacted her parents "in a panic to relay what she had found."

Following news of the lawsuit, a spokeswoman for Ancestry.com said in a statement that DNA testing "helps people make new and powerful discoveries about their family history and identity."

"We are committed to delivering the most accurate results, however with this, people may learn of unexpected connections," it read. "With Ancestry, customers maintain ownership and control over their DNA data. Anyone who takes a test can change their DNA matching settings at any time, meaning that if they opt out, their profile and relationship will not be visible to other customers."

Since the situation came to light, Ms Rowlette and her parents have been "suffering immeasurably," the lawsuit states.

The family is suing Dr Mortimer, his wife and Obstetrics and Gynecology Associates of Idaho Falls for medical negligence, fraud, battery, negligent infliction of emotional distress and breach of contract.

The Washington Post

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