Crystal Kelley, a surrogate who entered into an agreement to have a Connecticut coupleââ¬â¢s baby for them last year, found herself embroiled in a bitter battle when an ultrasound found fetal abnormalities, and the couple asked her to have an abortion, a CNN report revealed this week.
It all began in August of 2011, when Crystal, who has two children of her own, began working with a surrogacy agency; she agreed to work with a couple who wanted but could not have a fourth child. She would be a gestational carrier, meaning she would have no genetic connection to the baby, but would carry a baby formed by a frozen embryo the couple had left from a previous round of in-vitro, and the fatherââ¬â¢s sperm. Her fee would be $22,000.
Just ten days later Crystal, then 29, conceived. But everyoneââ¬â¢s happiness turned to angst when a routine five-month ultrasound revealed many physical abnormalities, including a cleft palate and lip, a brain cyst and serious heart defects.
ââ¬ÅGiven the ultrasound findings, (the parents) feel that the interventions required to manage (the babyââ¬â¢s medical problems) are overwhelming for an infant, and that it is a more humane option to consider pregnancy termination,ââ¬Â members of the fetal medical staff at Hartford Hospital wrote to Kelleyââ¬â¢s midwife, according to CNN. The parents had already gone through three previous premature births that left two of their children with medical problems.
But Kelley, they added, disagreed, and was ââ¬Åadamantlyââ¬Â opposed to aborting.
When Kelley would not agree to abort, according to CNN, she says the couple offered her $10,000 to reconsider. Kelley refused, instead asking for $15,000; the couple would not pay that much, and Kelley said she had changed her mind anyway.
The coupleââ¬â¢s attorney reminded Kelley that her contract with them stipulated she would have an abortion in the case of ââ¬Åsevere fetus abnormality.ââ¬Â But such an agreement is not legally binding, Ferrara told Shine. ââ¬ÅShe still has the constitutional right that any woman has, to make decisions about her own body.ââ¬Â
Eventually, Kelley learned she and her children could relocate to Michigan, a state where the birth mother, and not the genetic parents, is considered the legal guardian. She chose this option, and gave birth to the baby there. Baby S was born with a panoply of issues, including holoprosencephaly, which means the brain fails to completely divide into distinct hemispheres, and heterotaxy, which means many of her internal organs are in the wrong places. She also has a misshapen ear and many complex heart problems.
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Topic question:
Did this surrogate have the right to refuse to abort? Why or why not?