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Who Owns Pre-Embryos?

An anonymous reader writes: Scientifically and legally, frozen embryos are not the same as a living child. Nevertheless, they can inspire legal battles that resemble custody disputes. This article follows a case between a couple who had been dating for five months when the woman received a cancer diagnosis. Before beginning chemotherapy, she and her boyfriend of five months decided to harvest and set aside some fertilized eggs, just in case. (If the treatment saved her but destroyed her ability to have kids, and the couple stayed together and decided they wanted kids, the pre-embryos would preserve that option.) She survived, but their relationship didn't. With no explicit contract in place, the disposition/custody of the pre-embryos is now hotly contested. "[R]eading over the case, one gets the sense that there's a fundamental lack of language to describe what's at stake. There may be an emerging field of law and legal precedent, but the terms at hand don't adequately capture the nature of the dispute."

23 of 374 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Both own half. by goose-incarnated · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Each 'contributor' owns 50%. No decision regarding the subject pre-embryo may be be made without a majority. Case closed.

    So, what? You want to divide it in two and give each party one half? The problem you are missing is that one party may want to dispose of the pre-embryo while the other party may want to (eventually) birth and raise it. Those are mutually exclusive options.

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  2. Freezing Fertilized Eggs? by Frigga's+Ring · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I guess I'm confused as to why they chose to froze her fertilized eggs instead of the eggs alone. Is there a scientific reason for choosing to freeze a fertilized egg over a non-fertilized egg? Since she was only with her boyfriend for five months and she was the one going through chemo, they should have had no reason to think his sperm would need to be preserved. I won't judge them though as I can imagine a cancer diagnosis can impact judgement, but I'm curious if one option was better than the other.

    1. Re: Freezing Fertilized Eggs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Frozen embryos survive thawing much better than frozen eggs. Also does anyone know why we are calling these pre-embryos? Pre-embryos would be sperm and egg cells.

    2. Re: Freezing Fertilized Eggs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      Also does anyone know why we are calling these pre-embryos? Pre-embryos would be sperm and egg cells.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proembryo#Preembryo_in_context_of_human_development

  3. I'll take this one and its simple by EmperorOfCanada · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Instead of the law trying to pick a winner on this one just make the law that the disposition of the embryos must be contracted before the service can be provided. Then have a very steep fine for any clinic that doesn't obtain and properly store that contract. Then mandate that there is a maintained copy of a "suggested" set of common contracts that are continually updated to reflect any edge cases that end up in the courts such as one of the partners become mentally incompetent etc.

    This way some morality police lawmakers can't step in and turn this in to an abortion/anti-abortion debate where the actual consumer of these services then lose.

  4. Re:Both own half. by DarkOx · · Score: 4, Interesting

    If a majority decision can't be reached than the status-quo basically gets maintained, the things sits frozen.

    Just like if you die intestate and have two children and no spouse. Lets say you owned your house strait out for the sake of simplicity. Essentially both kids will have to reach an agreement on how to to dispose the property.

    If they can't it will be pretty easy for either heir to ask the court require the thing simply be maintained, taxes paid etc out of the estates other funds, while a judge decides how to parcel out the estate fairly and what should be done. Same thing would probably happen here.

    More interesting questions exist though. Lets say you and wife have some embryo's frozen as part of some assisted fertility process. It does not work, but their are left overs. You later get divorced, presently childless. She decides to try again and the implantation is successful. Can she come back for child support? Are you a dead beat dad if you want nothing to do with it?

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  5. Re:Just my take by paiute · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The woman apparently has said that she will not be demanding any support or anything more from the father.

    Except that her agreeing to this now means nothing if circumstances change. If she falls on hard times in the future, the state may then go after the father for child support no matter what the couple agreed to previously.

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  6. Re:The male gave consent... by Major+Blud · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "He cannot force her to give them up any more than he could force her to abort the fetus or give the child up for adoption"

    So can she not force him to pay child support if it's her decision to keep them?

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  7. Re:Both own half. by Rei · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Embryos seem just ripe for moral debates. Here's another one I've been thinking about recently.

    The current most realistic way for humans to get to another star system is via a generation ship; it's the only way out there that doesn't require some sort of revolution in other technologies, such as long-term cryogenic hibernation or relativistic travel. Minimizing mass is of course absolutely critical. The most practical implementation would be to have a crew of three young, short-statured women with a family history of good fertility, a large embryo bank onboard, and appropriate facilities for implantation, with the embryos chosen for implantation in-transit also being female and from family histories of short stature and good fertility. One would try to maintain it so that there's always at least (but ideally not much more than) three people at or younger than a reasonably fertile age, so that there's a few chances to compensate should one woman prove infertile, die, or not wish to take part in furthering the population of the generation ship. Upbringing would be handled by the older generation, with the main focus of education being on medicine and repair skills. If a successful colony could be established on the other end then could a broader range of embryos be used to increase the genetic diversity, including males and people of larger stature and higher caloric consumption.

    Now, best would be to start out with a staggered age for the initial crew of the generation ship and keep a staggered age throughout the transit. But here we start to get a problem. No ethics review board is going to approve the decision to, say, lock a six year old girl on a tiny, highly risky spacecraft for the rest of her life and give her a future responsibility to bear other peoples' children and then die in space. She's too young to give informed consent to such a monumental decision. Even if she were to travel with her mother, most ethics review panels would find that morally equivalent to a mother locking her child in a bunker for the rest of her life and refuse it. An infant is even worse - she couldn't even give uninformed consent, let alone informed. But the solution of only starting out the crew with informed consenting adults only postpones the issue. For each child they carry en-route is born without a choice in the matter, into a small, highly dangerous, probably uncomfortable craft with few to no peers, limited opportunities for enrichment, and no ability to leave the situation except death. Is that morally any better than sending young, non-consenting children to begin with?

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  8. Re:Close to owning by Frigga's+Ring · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Should sperm not be seen as part of a man's body then? And what if the situation was reversed? What if the man began a new relationship with a woman who couldn't have children. Should the man then be given rights to have the eggs he fertilized with girlfriend 1 transferred to girlfriend 2's uterus?

  9. Its about child support by Karmashock · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If she keeps those eggs on ice for ages and then randomly decides to defrost them and germinate a few in her magic garden... then the guy is responsible child support.

    No really.

    Child support laws basically assume that birth control and the last 100 years of medical science didn't happen. The concept of them is that if she got pregnant in any fashion by your porn star energy drink... then you've apparently consented to be a daddy.

    You go on a one night stand with a girl at a bar... use a condom... she says she's on the pill... she calls you six months 9 months later to tell you that you're a father... Congrats, you're playing child support.

    Here some lackwit is going to say I'm not being a chivalrous gentleman. That's because chivalry is dead. Look, responsibilities and rights go hand in hand. When men were responsible for everything they had all the rights. And women didn't have any options. If they got knocked up they couldn't really do anything about it. And the culture of the time put great significance on being "chaste". If she already had some other dude's baby then it was a lot harder for her to get a husband which was a serious problem.

    Today none of that applies but the child support laws don't care.

    There was a dude that was literally drugged, woke up tied to a bed with a girl on top of him, he ejaculated in her because men really don't have any control over that if you're bouncing on top of them, he told the police about it immediately, the police did nothing, she got pregnant, gave birth, filed for child support, and the courts made him pay for her rape baby.

    Yep.

    So, the issue with those eggs set aside is child support. If she signs something to the effect that he's not on the hook for any of the child support... I'd see no reason for him to care one way or the other.

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    1. Re:Its about child support by Karmashock · · Score: 5, Insightful

      http://www.rolereboot.org/sex-...

      It isn't a fantasy... it is just rarely reported. Men don't run to the cops when they get coerced or forced into sex. At least usually not.

      The reasons for this are many but it is still rape. And the fact of the matter is that under the law, if she gets pregnant, he's as responsible for the child as if it were not rape.

      That's about as fucked up as forcing a woman to marry a man that rapes her. It is the same situation with reversed gender roles.

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  10. Re:Very tricky issue indeed. by jythie · · Score: 3, Informative

    The problem there is that one can not sign away parental responsibility by contract. The state does not allow it since the it is the child's interest that the court puts priority on, thus even if the parents reach an agreement between each other the state steps in and forces support for the benefit of the child who could not consent to the agreement.

  11. Re:Both own half. by itzly · · Score: 4, Funny

    May I suggest a ratio of 10 women, selected for their sexual characteristics which will have to be of a highly stimulating nature, for every man ?

  12. Re:The male gave consent... by gstoddart · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That's like saying you can rape your wife because, at one point, she gave consent. It's completely idiotic.

    Sorry, but by the time they've split up, he has withdrawn consent, and if she wishes to have a child he has the right to say "not with my sperm you don't". What's that, you now can't have children unless they're mine? Too damned bad.

    This is very different from forcing her to abort a fetus, because it's outside of her body and frozen -- which means it's a tissue sample until someone goes to fairly extraordinary lengths to put it back.

    I don't think this is nearly as cut and dry as people think. You can't just say "it's her egg, and he's already knocked her up" ... because she isn't pregnant, and this isn't about what she can do with her own body.

    Is her ex legally required to have a child with her now that they've split up? Because it's not like in most cases you knock up your ex long after the breakup.

    Suddenly a tissue sample in cold storage comes down to "can she force him to have a child with her now"? Because since it's not in her body, it's not like that is the deciding factor.

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  13. Pre-embryo by DrYak · · Score: 3, Informative

    Who Owns Pre-Embryos?

    From a scientist: What the fuck is a pre-embryo.

    Wikipedia is your friend.

    Basically:
    - Bunch of cells, still disorganised (apparently, you wait until for the primitive streak to call it proper "embryo". I didn't remember that from my lectures)
    - They float around, they haven't implanted into an uterus yet. (That I vaguely remember from my medical studies).

    (Well, of course, they were fertilized *in vitro*. It would be hard to find an uterus to implant onto at the bottom of a test tube).

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  14. Re:Both own half. by goose-incarnated · · Score: 4, Interesting

    As with any business contract, party B would be free to buy party A out of their half of the contract. Presumably, this would absolve party A of owing any sort of child support later down the road.

    Don't overcomplicate things. That's a good part of why our legal system is so corrupt.

    You can't contract out of child support, much like you can't contract into slavery. You can write the contract, sure, but no court will enforce it. The only way to (currently) do so is to donate sperm to a state-endorsed sperm bank. If you simply just donate sperm you will still be on the hook for child support - this has already been tested in courts.

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  15. Child support by mi · · Score: 5, Interesting

    You later get divorced, presently childless. She decides to try again and the implantation is successful. Can she come back for child support?

    Yes, she can and she will. At least, you produced the sperm while still her husband and would-be father of her children.

    If a sperm-donor can be hit for child-support, you would have not a chance. And not just in Kansas, Illinois too only makes exceptions for sperm donated "through medical channels involving a doctor".

    It may work the other way too — a donor may get parental rights after an artificial insemination.

    Presumably, with the rights comes a child support obligation as well — the two better be inseparable.

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  16. Re:Both own half. by I'm+New+Around+Here · · Score: 4, Funny

    You haven't lived in a house full of women, have you?

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  17. Re:Both own half. by sonicmerlin · · Score: 3, Insightful

    When it comes to abortion no one seems to care about the father's opinion or feelings on the matter even though without him there'd be no fetus. It's all about a "woman's choice" while utterly ignoring the other side of the equation. Western society in general seems to value females more than males. So I'm guessing this will end up the same way.

  18. Re:Very tricky issue indeed. by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 3, Insightful

    the state steps in and forces support for the benefit of the child

    Humans respond to incentives. What the State actually accomplishes is encouraging mothers to get rid of the father because she'll get his money anyway (in the vast majority of the cases) without having to deal with him. While this outcome is predictable, empirical evidence has borne it out too. Broken households don't benefit the child, in the vast majority of cases (the empirical evidence bears this out too).

    Besides, parents are the holders-in-trust of the child's rights, not the State. The State is a legal fiction and as such cannot hold any natural rights, so it's a non-sequitor. Yeah, they can send the boys in blue to enforce any arbitrary rule, but that's not sound moral reasoning.

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  19. Actually not really a problem by skeib · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I've just been through this process and signed the appropriate contracts (in Norway).

    When freezing embryos here, both parents sign an agreement that the embryos will be frozen for a maximum of five years, and that the explicit consent of both persons needs to be given before they are removed from the freezer, either for destruction or implantation. After five years they are destroyed anyway.

    Problem solved.

  20. Re:Close to owning by wvmarle · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you'd say "until actual incubation of the egg in the woman's body" I'd agree. When the fertilised egg is implanted in her, either the natural way or via IVF or other artificial method, it's hers to decide whether to keep it or have it aborted or whatever. Do keep in mind that the implantation is not necessarily in the egg donor's body.

    When fertilisation takes place outside of her body, as long as the egg/embryo remains outside of her body, both partners should be equally involved in what happens next. That's just sensible. If you claim the egg cell is the mother's and the mother's only, this should equally apply to the sperms being the man's and the man's only. Logic extension of this means that the combination of the two, a fertilised egg, belongs to both.

    The moment the egg is implanted in a woman's body, things change: the woman who has the egg in her body should then be called the owner. Even if she's not the egg donor. I believe this part is already pretty well established when it comes to surrogate motherhood.