Atlanta sperm bank is getting sued for presenting a mentally ill felon as a healthy donor
Atlanta sperm bank is getting sued for presenting a mentally ill felon as a healthy donor

Atlanta sperm bank is getting sued for presenting a mentally ill felon as a healthy donor

Three families are suing in Canada alleging that the donor’s sperm was used for at least 36 children in the U.S., Britain and Canada. What kind of sperm bank are they running?

According to the lawsuit, prospective clients were told that Donor 9623 was a gifted musician with an IQ of 160 who was pursuing a PhD in neuroscience engineering.

Families learned the donor’s real identity in 2014, after Xytex, inadvertently and in a breach of confidentiality, included his email address in an email to them.

They discovered that Donor was James Christian Aggeles of Georgia. He was diagnosed as having schizophrenia, narcissistic personality disorder, drug-induced psychotic disorder and significant grandiose delusions. Aggeles committed a residential burglary in 2005 and spent eight months in jail. He dropped out of college and just last year graduated with a bachelor’s degree.

They allege that Xytex and Outreach Health continued to promote and sell the donor’s sperm even after the sperm bank had been informed he was nothing like the man advertised on his online profile.

One of the parents involved in the lawsuit is Angie Collins. She has sympathy for the donor.

“My heart goes out to him,” said Collins in an interview with CBC’s “As It Happens” earlier this week. “This can’t be easy to deal with. [It was a] poor choice, though, to knowingly donate sperm when you contain genetic material for debilitating illnesses, but he wasn’t healthy at the time that he was making these decisions.”

In the US, sperm donors are paid for their services. But in Canada, the Assisted Human Reproduction Act — passed in 2004 — makes it illegal to pay donors. That’s one explanation for why Canada is so dependent on its neighbor to the south for sperm.

Xytex’s President Kevin M. O’Brien posted this open letter on the company website. In it he disputes the claim that the company misrepresented the donor:

“In this case, the donor underwent a standard medical exam and provided extensive personal and health information. He reported a good health history and stated in his application that he had no physical or medical impairments,” O’Brien states. This information was passed on to the couple, who were clearly informed the representations were reported by the donor and were not verified by Xytex.”

An earlier lawsuit launched by Collins and Hanson was dismissed by a Georgia court because it was interpreted to be a claim for wrongful birth, which is not recognized under that state’s law. An appeal was dismissed for procedural issues.

Agencies/Canadajournal




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