General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: Epic win for a three year old little boy who narrowly misses being lost to adoption! [View all]pnwmom
(110,254 posts)Most OB's don't want to see healthy new patients until a pregnancy is about 6 weeks along, because there is a very high incidence of pregnancy loss before then. The tests, on the other hand, let you find out almost instantly. The only reason for her to go to a doctor that early was because he thought she was deceiving him about the pregnancy test. (He said so in another interview.) Can you blame her for not wanting to immediately go just to prove to him she wasn't a liar?
In March, the agency told him that she had started the adoption process, six months before the baby was born. Why didn't he do something about it then? Offer to help support the mother financially (one of the measures some states use to decide paternal responsibility)? Put himself on Missouri's "Putative Father Registry," (that would put the agency and potential adoptive parents on notice about his claim on the baby)? Get a lawyer?
Nobody knows exactly when the adoptive parents were told, but they seem the most blameless in this case. They adopted a baby from an agency who was supposed to be free for adoption. This shouldn't have happened and I wish the father had taken action back in March -- then the adoption would never have happened and everyone, including the baby, would have been better off.