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New Details Emerge In Utah Sperm-Swapping Scandal

Lauren F Friedman   

New Details Emerge In Utah Sperm-Swapping Scandal
Science1 min read

Sperm Bank Frozen Fertility Clinic

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New developments have emerged in a scary sperm-swapping story we told you about last week.

To recap: A woman discovered through an at-home DNA test and some detective work that in 1991, a fertility clinic worker, since deceased, had swapped his own sperm for her husband's.

The clinic, called Reproductive Medical Technologies, was owned by a now-dead University of Utah faculty member.

Though the University isn't officially associated with the now-closed clinic, they told us that they were offering free paternity testing to anyone who used the clinic while the worker, Thomas Ray Lippert, was employed there.

Since then more details have emerged about this sperm-swapping nightmare. Here is what we know now:

  • Paul Foy of the Associated Press reports that the University hotline has received 17 calls from people who are concerned that their sperm samples may have been tampered with as well.
  • The mother involved has revealed herself as San Antonio resident Pamela Branum on CBS affiliate KUTV.
  • She told The Salt Lake Tribune she isn't satisfied with the University's investigation, and thinks they have "been stonewalling this whole time." The University notes that because Lippert died in 1999 and the clinic's records were lost, they can't find any concrete answers. "We believe it is impossible to determine exactly what happened," a University spokeswoman told the AP.
  • A legal investigation seems unlikely. "State and federal prosecutors said they were unaware of the nearly year-old allegation and weren't certain it warranted an investigation," Foy added, noting that the FDA only started regulating fertility clinics years after had RMT shut down.
  • Annie Branum, Pamela Branum's 21-year-old who recently learned she was conceived from Lippert's sperm, is trying to make sense of it all. "My dad is not my biological father," she told KUTV. "Who am I?"

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