Woman finds out her Twins are born to different Dads after a DNA test
Woman finds out her Twins are born to different Dads after a DNA test
Hence the man she took to court as the father of her twins has been told to pay child support to only one twin after a judge found those twins have two different fathers.
The ruling came after a woman asked
for child support for her twins. However, according to court documents,
DNA testing determined the man originally cited as the children's father
was actually only the biological father of one of them.
Because of that, Passaic County
Superior Court Judge Sohail Mohammed ruled in family court on May 4 that
the unnamed defendant would have to pay child support for the twin he
fathered, and he dismissed the unnamed mother's claim for support of the
other child.
Dr. Brooke Rossi, an obstetrician
and gynecologist at University Hospitals McDonald's Women's Hospital in
Cleveland, said while rare, having twins from different fathers can
occur naturally.
The phenomenon can occur when a
woman produces two eggs during her fertility cycle instead of one, and
they can become fertilized and implant within a few days of the same
cycle.
"The sperm live in the genital tract
for two days," Rossi said. "It’s possible a woman can have sex with a
man on a Tuesday and have sex with a different man on Wednesday, and it
is possible for [her] to get pregnant," with twins.
The rare phenomenon is called
heteropaternal superfecundation in medical literature. An estimated one
in 13,000 paternity cases involves twins with different fathers,
according to a 1997 medical journal cited in the court ruling.
Rossi said because fertilization
would happen so close together, the fetuses would be the same
gestational age and would be expected to be born without any related
health complications.
In the New Jersey case, according to
the court documents, the mother of the twins said in court she had sex
with two different men around the time she conceived. However, she gave
just one name in her petition for child support.
While it's been a known phenomenon
since the 1970s, according to court documents, there have been just two
other reported legal cases of twins with different fathers in the U.S.
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