INDIANAPOLIS Earlier this month, the Marion County Sheriff’s office mistakenly released a man who was connected to a fatal shooting in Minnesota and now FOX59/CBS4 has learned that another inmate was mistakenly released eight days before that. Toriano Hellams, 41, was originally booked into the jail on Nov. 14, 2022, on numerous felony charges […]
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Duke University’s Department of Theater Studies has joined the growing list of theaters opening their doors and welcoming audiences back to the seats for live performances.
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Last month, I wrote about the case of Dr. Kim McMorries, a somehow-still-practicing Texas physician who repeatedly used his own sperm with his fertility patients without their consent. Decades later, the truth came out, thanks to consumer DNA testing kits. The DNA kits, which have become popular Christmas presents, delivered the unpleasant surprise news to many of McMorries’ patients and their now-adult children.
McMorries is now embroiled in a legal battle with the Texas Medical Board, and, like a gruesome car crash, it’s hard to look away.
Last time I discussed this case, I mentioned that McMorries had decided that there was no better defense than a good offense, and went ahead and himself sued the Texas Medical Board, arguing that the Board was prevented by a state statute of limitations from bringing an action against him. The statute in question provides that the Texas Medical Board may not “consider or act on a complaint involving care provided more than seven
March 17, 2021 at 11:25 AM
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At-home DNA testing kits, like 23andMe and AncestryDNA.com, have uncovered an unnerving number of doctors who, unknown to their patients, substituted their
own sperm for the promised donor sperm or spouse’s sperm. Many of the doctors who have been caught are deceased or retired. Some have been close enough to retirement that they immediately retired once their inappropriate conduct was discovered. But there’s one guy who refuses to accept the gravity of his actions: Dr. Kim McMorries of Nacogdoches, Texas.
McMorries has, shockingly, continued to practice medicine in obstetrics, gynecology, and infertility, no less since the news broke several years ago about his insemination activities with a number of his patients. One of the resulting offspring, Eve Wiley, tells the made-for-TV-movie story of discovering that she was donor-conceived as a teenager. Her mother helped her contact the sperm bank from which Wiley’s parents chose Donor