A Kansas man who donated sperm to a lesbian couple so they could have a
child said on Wednesday he is shocked the state is now trying to make him pay
child support. William Marotta, 46, donated sperm to Jennifer Schreiner and
Angela Bauer under a written agreement that he would not be considered the
father of the child nor liable for child support. A daughter, now 3, was born
to Schreiner.
But in October, the state of Kansas filed a petition seeking to have
Marotta declared the father of the child and financially responsible for her
after the couple encountered money difficulties. Marotta will ask the court in
a hearing January 8 to dismiss the claim, which centers on a state law that the
sperm must be donated through a licensed physician in order for the father to
be free of any later financial obligations. Marotta gave a container of semen
to the couple, who found him on Craigslist, instead of donating through a
doctor or clinic.
The case is seen as having repercussions for other sperm donors. Sperm
banks routinely provide sperm to people who want to conceive a child on the
understanding that the donors are not responsible for the children. Kansas is
seeking child support from Marotta, including about $6,000 in medical expenses
related to the child's birth, according to its petition. "This was totally
unexpected," Marotta said in a phone interview. "The very first thing
that went through my mind was that no good deed goes unpunished."
The case has attracted national attention. Shannon Minter, legal
director for the National Center for Lesbian Rights, said Wednesday "it is
unfortunate and unfair" that Kansas is seeking money from a sperm donor. "It
certainly might have a negative effect on other men's willingness to help
couples who need a donor, which would be harmful to everyone," Minter
said. "I also think it undermines everyone's respect for the law when you
see it operate so arbitrarily."
Kansas officials are required under the law to determine the father of a
child when someone seeks state benefits, said Angela de Rocha, spokeswoman for
the Department for Children and Families. The couple was compelled to provide
that information, which led to investigation of the sperm donation.
Marotta should be declared the father and subject to financial claims
because he donated the sperm directly to the women and not through a physician,
as required by Kansas law, the state's petition states. Marotta said he's had
virtually no contact with the child, but that he and Schreiner have remained
cordial. He said she was pressured by the state to provide his name as the
sperm donor. "To me, ethics need to override rules," he said. Lawyers
for Marotta argue that he had no parental rights because of his agreement with the
couple and cannot be held financially responsible. They cite a 2007 case in
which the Kansas Supreme Court ruled against a sperm donor seeking parental
rights because he did not have any such agreement with the mother, lawyers for
Marotta said. "So now, we are flipping the argument around," Marotta
attorney Ben Swinnen said Wednesday.
If the father had no legal parental rights in the 2007 case, Marotta
should be declared to have no parental obligations in the current case, Swinnen
said. Marotta, a race car mechanic, responded to an ad on Craigslist from
someone offering to pay $50 for sperm donations, but he made the donation for
free. Marotta said he and his wife have no children of their own but have
fostered a daughter. Marotta said he was simply trying to help a couple wanting
a child.
Source: Yahoo News
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