Gifts of DNA tests spur paternity surprises, lawsuits

Vanner Johnson’s wife, Donna, had purchased the take-home genetic testing kit 23andMe for fun. But when her husband received his family’s 23andMe results in August 2019, he noticed something odd. His 11-year-old son, Tim, wasn’t listed as his biological relative. The couple soon learned that the hospital where Donna had undergone in vitro fertilization, or IVF, 12 years earlier had most likely mixed up the sperm samples. Vanner wasn’t Tim’s biological dad.

“There were so many questions with no answers,” Donna said. “We had no idea who our son’s biological father was.” When the Johnsons finally tracked down Tim’s biological dad early last year, using a second DNA test and some strategic Googling, they learned that he had been another patient at the fertility clinic.

“It was actually almost comforting when we discovered it was another patient. It was like ‘at least it wasn’t the doctor,’” Donna said.

The Johnsons’ story is one of many paternity secrets that have come to light in recent years as the popularity of take-home genetic tests has exploded. In September and October, 23andMe’s website sales shot up by more than 47 percent, according to data from the analytics firm Bloomberg Second Measure. Some fertility lawyers said they tended to see more such cases after family members gave the tests as holiday gifts.

Vanner and Donna Johnson with their sons Vanner, left, and Tim. (Kim Raff for NBC News)
Vanner and Donna Johnson with their sons Vanner, left, and Tim. (Kim Raff for NBC News)

“I have seen a substantial increase in these cases over the past few years,” said Adam B. Wolf, a lawyer specializing in fertility fraud lawsuits. “Our clients typically call in February after receiving the results of the at-home DNA tests they receive for the holidays.”

Medical breach

In 2020, Beverly Willhelm, one of Wolf’s clients, sued her fertility doctor, Phillip M. Milgram, after she discovered that he had used his own sperm to impregnate her, rather than the sperm of an anonymous donor.

Like Vanner Johnson, Willhelm realized what had happened after her son took a 23andMe test. “Plaintiff’s son is the result of Defendant’s medical rape of Plaintiff,” the complaint reads. “Plaintiff is shocked and devastated by Defendant’s abuse of his power to violate her trust.”

Milgram’s lawyer, Curtis Greer, did not respond to phone and email requests for comment. The case is scheduled for jury trial April 29.

Most of the paternity discoveries that have made headlines in recent years follow a similar pattern.

“We’ve represented roughly two dozen women who went to their fertility doctor expecting to get sperm from someone they knew or an anonymous donor, only to learn later, either through 23andMe or Ancestry.com, that the doctor took the liberty of inserting his own sperm into his unsuspecting female patients without authorization or consent,” Wolf said. “It’s a serious invasion of bodily autonomy.”

In a statement, 23andMe communications director Andy Kill said: “With genetic testing readily available to consumers, we are increasingly hearing stories of families discovering and reuniting with newfound relatives, and of customers finding unexpected results in their reports. Although 23andMe was not designed specifically to help people confirm parentage or find biological parents, our DNA Relatives tool does help people find and connect with participating genetic relatives. This feature is completely optional, meaning customers must actively choose to participate and are informed up front that by using the tool, they may discover unexpected relationships.”

The company also said its customer care team is specifically trained to help customers who learn about unexpected family members through using the service.

Vanner Johnson hold his newborn son, Tim, as his brother, Vanner, looks on. (Courtesy Vanner Johnson)
Vanner Johnson hold his newborn son, Tim, as his brother, Vanner, looks on. (Courtesy Vanner Johnson)

Tracing paternity

In 2020, Tim Johnson did a second DNA test, this time through Ancestry.com. Through the test, he ultimately connected with Devin McNeil, a father of three living in Colorado, and called him. “We may have something in common through IVF,” he told McNeil. Vanner asked whether McNeil and his wife, Kelly, had undergone IVF through the University of Utah Center for Reproductive Medicine. He said yes. The couples realized that they had most likely been at the clinic on the same day in 2007.

“Every piece of information just unfolded, really, without question, the timing, the testing,” McNeil said. “So it wasn’t very long before it was hard to not believe it.”

Vanner and Tim Johnson and Devin McIntyre at their first meeting. (Courtesy Vanner Johnson)
Vanner and Tim Johnson and Devin McIntyre at their first meeting. (Courtesy Vanner Johnson)

The University of Utah Center for Reproductive Medicine did not respond to a request for comment.

Now the McNeils faced a similar quandary: what to tell their kids, ages 13, 8 and 6. Like the Johnsons, they opted for honesty.

“We had to explain to our younger kids, sometimes mom and dad need help having babies and they do that outside of the body,” Kelly said. “And we kind of explained IVF in layman’s terms. And that there was a mistake made in the lab, and a baby was made with another woman’s eggs.”

The McNeils did a DNA test to confirm that their son who was conceived through IVF was biologically related to McNeil. He was. The mix-up, it seemed, had happened on only one side. The McNeils' children were all biologically theirs.

In a statement sent by email, Ancestry spokesperson Katherine Wylie said: “AncestryDNA helps people gain a new level of understanding about their lives by combining advanced DNA science with the world’s largest online family history resource to estimate genetic ethnicity and helps users find new family connections.”

The Johnsons play cards at their home in Woods Cross, Utah. (Kim Raff for NBC News)
The Johnsons play cards at their home in Woods Cross, Utah. (Kim Raff for NBC News)

Anonymous donors

Even in cases in which the donor is truly anonymous and unknown to the woman getting pregnant, DNA kits can raise thorny ethical questions. Nara Milanich, a history professor at Barnard College who wrote “Paternity: The Elusive Quest for the Father,” said the ease of discovering one’s paternity could deter people from donating sperm.

“The commercialization of this technology has blown open these questions around the ethics of finding out paternity,” she said. “I’m not going to come down and say whether people should have an unfettered right to DNA knowledge or not. But I will say we haven’t had a public conversation that grapples with those questions. You can buy these tests anywhere and give them as Christmas presents, and that’s likely not going to change.”

The U.S. has been quick to embrace the new technology but slow to address the privacy issues behind it, Milanich said. That’s partly because take-home testing kits aren’t subject to the same regulations as medical tests, according to Wired. They don’t have to comply with the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, which would require them to keep their customers’ genetic data private.

According to its website, the Food and Drug Administration doesn’t regulate tests for “non-medical, general wellness, or low risk medical purposes.” While the FDA doesn’t warn consumers about the potential for error in the tests, it advises consumers to “use their judgment when ordering and interpreting their results from these tests” because genetic testing companies may produce varied results.

“In France, DNA testing is strictly limited. You’re only supposed to test DNA with a judge’s order,” Milanich said.

Things might be starting to change here. In October, California Gov. Gavin Newsom signed the Genetic Information Privacy Act, which requires direct-to-consumer DNA testing companies to give consumers information about how their data will be collected and used. Utah and Arizona have passed similar laws. They won’t change how easily people can have access to DNA data, but they could curb how DNA testing companies like 23andMe can use the data.

Alex Stack, a spokesperson for Newsom, referred NBC News to the California Department of Public Health, which said in a statement that the legislation would allow consumers to revoke their consent regarding the use of their genetic information and force companies to destroy consumers’ biological samples within 30 days of receiving such requests. The statement said the law is intended to allow consumers to “control their genetic data without fear of third parties exploiting it.”

Looking forward

In June, the Johnson and McNeil families decided to meet in person, at a park in Utah. Tim sent Devin McNeil a list of questions ahead of time: “How tall were you when you finished ninth grade? Were your baby teeth weak? Do you have an innie or an outie belly button?”

McNeil joked that he’d been worried about the questions before the meeting but quickly realized he “didn’t have to study.”

“Tim was most excited, I think, about learning that Devin was 6 feet 3, because I’m 5 feet 8, and we knew there’s no way he’s going to get any height from me,” Vanner said. “So now he’s got hope.”

The Vanner and McNeil families at their first meet-up. (Courtesy Vanner Johnson)
The Vanner and McNeil families at their first meet-up. (Courtesy Vanner Johnson)

While 23andMe includes a warning label with its results about DNA Relatives (“By participating in DNA Relatives, you might discover unexpected relationships. Though not common, these discoveries could affect you and your family.”), Donna Johnson said she never anticipated the results. “We were in a monogamous relationship. There was no question. So we went into it very naively,” she said.

Both families are preparing to sue the University of Utah Center for Reproductive Medicine.

In the meantime, they’re encouraging everyone who’s gone through IVF to get a DNA tests. That is, if they’re prepared for the results.