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Embryos of divorced couples can be destroyed

Embryos of divorced couples can be destroyed
Posted at 4:18 PM, Nov 18, 2015
and last updated 2015-11-18 19:18:00-05

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A woman must abide by an agreement with her ex-husband to destroy five frozen embryos if they got a divorce, a California judge ruled Wednesday.

San Francisco Superior Court Judge Anne-Christine Massullo said in a tentative decision that the agreement trumps the woman's desire to now keep the embryos. The woman, Mimi Lee, had argued that the embryos represent her last chance to have children after cancer made it risky for her to get pregnant.

Her ex-husband, Stephen Findley, wanted to discard the embryos in accordance with the agreement he and Lee signed while married.

Massullo said California law is clear that couples must decide what to do with embryos they create in case of separation or divorce.

"Decisions about family and children often are difficult, and can be wrenching when they become disputes," the judge wrote. "The policy best suited to ensuring that these disputes are resolved in a clear-eyed manner ... is to give effect to the intentions of the parties at the time of the decision at issue."

While Lee might have a right to procreate in other circumstances, she doesn't have a right to procreate with Findley, the judge said.

A call to an attorney for Lee was not immediately returned.

The embryos were being held at the University of California, San Francisco, which in accordance with state law gave Lee and Findley a consent agreement before fertility treatments in which both said they would like the embryos thawed and discarded in case they divorced, according to court documents.