A woman saw a gynecologist for nine years, then discovered the unthinkable truth

A woman saw a gynecologist for nine years, then discovered the unthinkable truth

<p>A woman saw a gynecologist for nine years then discovered the unthinkable truth&period; After nine years of regular vaginal and breast examinations with her gynecologist Morgan Hellquist solely came to a distressing realization&period; The doctor whom she&rsquo&semi;d trusted with countless examinations was&comma; she suspected&comma; her biological father&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The first inkling came during an appointment this April&period; Hellquist alleges in a lawsuit filed this weekend&period; Hellquist had never known her biological father&comma; having been conceived via artificial insemination and born in September 1985&period; But she knew one thing&comma; according to the lawsuit&colon; the doctor Morris Wartman facilitated the artificial impregnation of her mother&comma; though she and her family believed it involved the sperm of a medical student&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>During the April appointment&comma; as Wartman conducted a vaginal ultrasound on Hellquist&comma; the doctor had allegedly asked Hellquist to take off her mask because she looked better without one&period; Wartman also invited his wife into the examination room to meet Hellquist so she could look at the woman&rsquo&semi;s features and discern a physical resemblance to Wartman&comma; the lawsuit alleges&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Then Wartman allegedly said&comma; « You&rsquo&semi;re a really good kid&comma; such a good kid&period; » That is when it dawned on Hellquist that Wartman&comma; a man she&rsquo&semi;d known since childhood and from whom she&rsquo&semi;d been receiving medical care for nearly a decade&comma; might be her biological father&period; She later discovered&comma; according to the lawsuit&comma; that the Rochester&comma; New York doctor may have fathered six other children she&rsquo&semi;d located over the course of several years starting in 2017&period; A DNA test a month later suggested that she was Wartman&rsquo&semi;s biological daughter&comma; the lawsuit says&period; Hellquist was in shock and disbelief that he would continue to treat her as her gynecologist if she were his biological daughter&comma; the lawsuit states&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Now Hellquist is suing Wartman&comma; alleging medical malpractice&comma; lack of informed consent&comma; battery&comma; fraud&comma; negligence&comma; and infliction of emotional distress&period; The complaint alleges that in 1985&comma; Wartman impregnated Hellquist&rsquo&semi;s mother&comma; Joanne Levy&comma; with his own sperm while telling her it was from a medical student&comma; and that Wartman nevertheless began to treat the daughter he helped create starting when she was 26&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Tales of doctors surreptitiously impregnating patients with their own sperm are not uncommon&period; Dozens accused Quincy Fortier&comma; a respected obstetrician&comma; of being their biological father&comma; saying he secretly inseminated their mothers as they were being treated at a hospital in Las Vegas&period; In July&comma; hundreds of plaintiffs in a class-action lawsuit reached a tentative settlement for 10&period;7 million dollars with an Ottawa-based fertility doctor whom they allege artificially inseminated women with the wrong sperm and in some cases his own&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In Hellquist&rsquo&semi;s case&comma; Wartman helped her mother with artificial insemination in the early 80s after Hellquist&rsquo&semi;s father&comma; Gary Levy&comma; was struck by a drunk driver and paralyzed from the waist down&comma; the lawsuit says&period; The Levys had two requirements&colon; the donor needed to have a clean medical history and a Northern European heritage matching that of the Levy family&period; Wartman told the family a medical student would donate the sperm&comma; according to the lawsuit&period; For about a year&comma; Joanne Levy tried and failed to conceive after multiple artificial insemination attempts&comma; but in 1985&comma; Levy became pregnant&period; In September that year&comma; Morgan was born&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>When the girl was eight years old&comma; the Levys told Morgan that Gary was not her biological father and that she was conceived artificially&comma; the lawsuit says&period; Morgan&rsquo&semi;s parents also told her about Wartman&comma; whom they praised as a talented doctor who delivered them the miracle of her birth&period; As Morgan matured&comma; married&comma; and had children&comma; she maintained an affinity for Wartman&comma; the lawsuit says&period; So when the 26-year-old Hellquist began to suffer irregular menstrual bleeding&comma; she sought help from Wartman&period; From 2012 until 2021&comma; he remained her doctor&comma; performing examinations and medical procedures that required Hellquist to be under conscious sedation&comma; according to the lawsuit&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Meanwhile&comma; Hellquist began a search for the medical student she believed was her biological father&period; An initial genetic test showed that she was half Jewish&comma; but she had no luck finding the medical student&period; Instead&comma; she learned she had two half-brothers&comma; both of whom were half Jewish&comma; donor-conceived&comma; and born in the mid-1980s&period; A year later&comma; Hellquist discovered two more half-siblings who were also donor-conceived&comma; half Jewish&comma; and born in the 80s&period; In the following years&comma; Hellquist found two more half-siblings with the same story&period; Hellquist feared that her father was a serial sperm donor and that there were other half-siblings who would continue to show up in her life&comma; according to the lawsuit&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>After each discovery&comma; Hellquist notified Wartman&comma; the lawsuit says&comma; and this past April 12th&comma; she found herself in Wartman&rsquo&semi;s private office when she came to suspect he was the serial sperm donor&period; Still&comma; she thought it was inconceivable that Wartman would knowingly treat his own biological daughter as a gynecology patient for almost a decade&comma; the lawsuit states&period; But a month later&comma; a DNA test confirmed it&comma; she said in the lawsuit&period; One of her half-brothers had been in touch with one of Wartman&rsquo&semi;s known daughters&comma; and the test found that there was a 99&period;99 percent chance they were siblings&period; That test&comma; Hellquist says in her lawsuit&comma; suggests Wartman is her father&period; If Hellquist had known this&comma; the lawsuit says&comma; she would never consent to being a patient in his gynecology practice&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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