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  • June 21, 2017 - Jerusalem, Israel - Hundreds of Jewish Israelis of Yemenite descent protest against what they consider an organized operation to snatch children in the 1950's involving health workers and government officials and an ongoing government cover up. In Israel's first years hundreds of babies went missing. Their parents, mostly Jewish immigrants from Yemen, were told their children had died but suspicions linger that they were sold to childless families both in Israel and abroad. Recently published eyewitness accounts suggest organ harvests may have been conducted for medical research. (Credit Image: © Nir Alon via ZUMA Wire)
    20170621_zap_a126_001.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_023.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_020.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_019.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_026.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_024.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_025.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_021.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_028.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_022.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_027.jpg
  • This is the baby boy thought to be the smallest in the world to have been successfully treated. The tiny tot - who weighed just 268g at birth - has been released from hospital in Japan. He was born by emergency C-section in August at 24 weeks, and was so small he could fit into a pair of cupped hands. But after five months of treatment, he now weighs 3.23kg is feeding normally, and has now been discharged from hospital. Dr Takeshi Arimitsu of Tokyo's Keio University Hospital said: “I want people to know that babies can return home vigorous even if they are born small." "I can only say I'm happy that he has grown this big because honestly, I wasn't sure he could survive," the boy's mother said, according to the hospital. The infant was nurtured in intensive care until he was released last week, two months after his due date. The previous record-holder was a boy born in Germany, weighing just 274g. Must credit Keio University Hospital/MEGA. 28 Feb 2019 Pictured: The baby shortly after birth. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA370914_001.jpg
  • This is the baby boy thought to be the smallest in the world to have been successfully treated. The tiny tot - who weighed just 268g at birth - has been released from hospital in Japan. He was born by emergency C-section in August at 24 weeks, and was so small he could fit into a pair of cupped hands. But after five months of treatment, he now weighs 3.23kg is feeding normally, and has now been discharged from hospital. Dr Takeshi Arimitsu of Tokyo's Keio University Hospital said: “I want people to know that babies can return home vigorous even if they are born small." "I can only say I'm happy that he has grown this big because honestly, I wasn't sure he could survive," the boy's mother said, according to the hospital. The infant was nurtured in intensive care until he was released last week, two months after his due date. The previous record-holder was a boy born in Germany, weighing just 274g. Must credit Keio University Hospital/MEGA. 28 Feb 2019 Pictured: Being held by parents - aged five days. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA370914_002.jpg
  • This is the baby boy thought to be the smallest in the world to have been successfully treated. The tiny tot - who weighed just 268g at birth - has been released from hospital in Japan. He was born by emergency C-section in August at 24 weeks, and was so small he could fit into a pair of cupped hands. But after five months of treatment, he now weighs 3.23kg is feeding normally, and has now been discharged from hospital. Dr Takeshi Arimitsu of Tokyo's Keio University Hospital said: “I want people to know that babies can return home vigorous even if they are born small." "I can only say I'm happy that he has grown this big because honestly, I wasn't sure he could survive," the boy's mother said, according to the hospital. The infant was nurtured in intensive care until he was released last week, two months after his due date. The previous record-holder was a boy born in Germany, weighing just 274g. Must credit Keio University Hospital/MEGA. 28 Feb 2019 Pictured: In hospital before discharge in February. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA370914_004.jpg
  • This is the baby boy thought to be the smallest in the world to have been successfully treated. The tiny tot - who weighed just 268g at birth - has been released from hospital in Japan. He was born by emergency C-section in August at 24 weeks, and was so small he could fit into a pair of cupped hands. But after five months of treatment, he now weighs 3.23kg is feeding normally, and has now been discharged from hospital. Dr Takeshi Arimitsu of Tokyo's Keio University Hospital said: “I want people to know that babies can return home vigorous even if they are born small." "I can only say I'm happy that he has grown this big because honestly, I wasn't sure he could survive," the boy's mother said, according to the hospital. The infant was nurtured in intensive care until he was released last week, two months after his due date. The previous record-holder was a boy born in Germany, weighing just 274g. Must credit Keio University Hospital/MEGA. 28 Feb 2019 Pictured: In hospital before discharge in February. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA370914_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_005.jpg
  • November 4, 2018 - Thessaloniki, Greece - Women raise their hands as they breast feed their babies during the 9th Annual Public Breastfeeding event. Hundreds of mothers breast fed their babies in the 9th public breastfeeding event, at the northern Greek city of Thessaloniki, in order to draw attention to the health benefits of breastfeeding for mothers and children as well, and to encourage public breastfeeding. (Credit Image: © Giannis Papanikos/ZUMA Wire)
    20181104_zap_p191_001.jpg
  • April 28, 2019 - New York, New York, United States - A young girl seen sitting on her father's shoulder during the march..Annual 81st March of Dimes, a march for Babies to support healthy for moms and strong babies. The march was along Lexington Avenue in New York City. (Credit Image: © Ryan Rahman/SOPA Images via ZUMA Wire)
    20190428_zaa_s197_098.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A mother gave birth to someone else’s babies after an IVF mix-up, a new lawsuit claims. The woman and her husband, from Queens, New York, are suing CHA Fertility Centre, in Los Angeles, after giving birth to children who didn't share their ethnicity. The clinic is run by Dr. Joshua Berger and co-owner Simon Hong. The Asian couple, who are referred to as Y.Z. and A.P. in court documents, married in 2012 and tried relentlessly--both naturally and with medical assistance--to get pregnant. After countless disappointment, the couple visited CHA Fertility Center with the hopes of becoming parents. In January 2018, Dr. Berger and Mr Hong met with the couple and walked them through months-long medicine, vitamin tests, and several procedures to yield eight embryos. In total, the couple says they spent $100,000 on the entire process. In September, the pair were excited after learning female embryos were successfully planted and they were pregnant with twins. Their joy, however, was short-lived when the ultrasound revealed they were instead having twin boys. Dr. Berger dismissed the sonogram and tried to calm their concerns by revealing when his wife was pregnant they were originally having a boy but gave birth to a girl. Y.Z. and A.P's nerves were calmed for a moment, and on March 30, 2019, A.P. delivered the children via C-section and was met with an unspeakable mix-up. The babies were indeed boys but did not share their Asian ethnicity. Even worse, the boys weren't related to one another. Y.Z and A.P. unknowingly were surrogate parents and had to give the children up to their respective parents who were also clients of CHA Fertility Center. The couple was so embarrassed and heartbroken they haven't told their family or close friends. For Y.Z and A.P, the experience has left them with "permanent emotional injuries from which they will not recover," the suit says.The amount they are suing for is also undisclosed. 07 Jul 2019 Pictured: Dr. Joshua Berger. Photo cre
    MEGA461133_012.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A mother gave birth to someone else’s babies after an IVF mix-up, a new lawsuit claims. The woman and her husband, from Queens, New York, are suing CHA Fertility Centre, in Los Angeles, after giving birth to children who didn't share their ethnicity. The clinic is run by Dr. Joshua Berger and co-owner Simon Hong. The Asian couple, who are referred to as Y.Z. and A.P. in court documents, married in 2012 and tried relentlessly--both naturally and with medical assistance--to get pregnant. After countless disappointment, the couple visited CHA Fertility Center with the hopes of becoming parents. In January 2018, Dr. Berger and Mr Hong met with the couple and walked them through months-long medicine, vitamin tests, and several procedures to yield eight embryos. In total, the couple says they spent $100,000 on the entire process. In September, the pair were excited after learning female embryos were successfully planted and they were pregnant with twins. Their joy, however, was short-lived when the ultrasound revealed they were instead having twin boys. Dr. Berger dismissed the sonogram and tried to calm their concerns by revealing when his wife was pregnant they were originally having a boy but gave birth to a girl. Y.Z. and A.P's nerves were calmed for a moment, and on March 30, 2019, A.P. delivered the children via C-section and was met with an unspeakable mix-up. The babies were indeed boys but did not share their Asian ethnicity. Even worse, the boys weren't related to one another. Y.Z and A.P. unknowingly were surrogate parents and had to give the children up to their respective parents who were also clients of CHA Fertility Center. The couple was so embarrassed and heartbroken they haven't told their family or close friends. For Y.Z and A.P, the experience has left them with "permanent emotional injuries from which they will not recover," the suit says.The amount they are suing for is also undisclosed. 07 Jul 2019 Pictured: CHA Fertility Center. Photo
    MEGA461133_008.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A mother gave birth to someone else’s babies after an IVF mix-up, a new lawsuit claims. The woman and her husband, from Queens, New York, are suing CHA Fertility Centre, in Los Angeles, after giving birth to children who didn't share their ethnicity. The clinic is run by Dr. Joshua Berger and co-owner Simon Hong. The Asian couple, who are referred to as Y.Z. and A.P. in court documents, married in 2012 and tried relentlessly--both naturally and with medical assistance--to get pregnant. After countless disappointment, the couple visited CHA Fertility Center with the hopes of becoming parents. In January 2018, Dr. Berger and Mr Hong met with the couple and walked them through months-long medicine, vitamin tests, and several procedures to yield eight embryos. In total, the couple says they spent $100,000 on the entire process. In September, the pair were excited after learning female embryos were successfully planted and they were pregnant with twins. Their joy, however, was short-lived when the ultrasound revealed they were instead having twin boys. Dr. Berger dismissed the sonogram and tried to calm their concerns by revealing when his wife was pregnant they were originally having a boy but gave birth to a girl. Y.Z. and A.P's nerves were calmed for a moment, and on March 30, 2019, A.P. delivered the children via C-section and was met with an unspeakable mix-up. The babies were indeed boys but did not share their Asian ethnicity. Even worse, the boys weren't related to one another. Y.Z and A.P. unknowingly were surrogate parents and had to give the children up to their respective parents who were also clients of CHA Fertility Center. The couple was so embarrassed and heartbroken they haven't told their family or close friends. For Y.Z and A.P, the experience has left them with "permanent emotional injuries from which they will not recover," the suit says.The amount they are suing for is also undisclosed. 07 Jul 2019 Pictured: Dr. Joshua Berger. Photo cre
    MEGA461133_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A mother gave birth to someone else’s babies after an IVF mix-up, a new lawsuit claims. The woman and her husband, from Queens, New York, are suing CHA Fertility Centre, in Los Angeles, after giving birth to children who didn't share their ethnicity. The clinic is run by Dr. Joshua Berger and co-owner Simon Hong. The Asian couple, who are referred to as Y.Z. and A.P. in court documents, married in 2012 and tried relentlessly--both naturally and with medical assistance--to get pregnant. After countless disappointment, the couple visited CHA Fertility Center with the hopes of becoming parents. In January 2018, Dr. Berger and Mr Hong met with the couple and walked them through months-long medicine, vitamin tests, and several procedures to yield eight embryos. In total, the couple says they spent $100,000 on the entire process. In September, the pair were excited after learning female embryos were successfully planted and they were pregnant with twins. Their joy, however, was short-lived when the ultrasound revealed they were instead having twin boys. Dr. Berger dismissed the sonogram and tried to calm their concerns by revealing when his wife was pregnant they were originally having a boy but gave birth to a girl. Y.Z. and A.P's nerves were calmed for a moment, and on March 30, 2019, A.P. delivered the children via C-section and was met with an unspeakable mix-up. The babies were indeed boys but did not share their Asian ethnicity. Even worse, the boys weren't related to one another. Y.Z and A.P. unknowingly were surrogate parents and had to give the children up to their respective parents who were also clients of CHA Fertility Center. The couple was so embarrassed and heartbroken they haven't told their family or close friends. For Y.Z and A.P, the experience has left them with "permanent emotional injuries from which they will not recover," the suit says.The amount they are suing for is also undisclosed. 07 Jul 2019 Pictured: CHA Fertility Center. Photo
    MEGA461133_018.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A mother gave birth to someone else’s babies after an IVF mix-up, a new lawsuit claims. The woman and her husband, from Queens, New York, are suing CHA Fertility Centre, in Los Angeles, after giving birth to children who didn't share their ethnicity. The clinic is run by Dr. Joshua Berger and co-owner Simon Hong. The Asian couple, who are referred to as Y.Z. and A.P. in court documents, married in 2012 and tried relentlessly--both naturally and with medical assistance--to get pregnant. After countless disappointment, the couple visited CHA Fertility Center with the hopes of becoming parents. In January 2018, Dr. Berger and Mr Hong met with the couple and walked them through months-long medicine, vitamin tests, and several procedures to yield eight embryos. In total, the couple says they spent $100,000 on the entire process. In September, the pair were excited after learning female embryos were successfully planted and they were pregnant with twins. Their joy, however, was short-lived when the ultrasound revealed they were instead having twin boys. Dr. Berger dismissed the sonogram and tried to calm their concerns by revealing when his wife was pregnant they were originally having a boy but gave birth to a girl. Y.Z. and A.P's nerves were calmed for a moment, and on March 30, 2019, A.P. delivered the children via C-section and was met with an unspeakable mix-up. The babies were indeed boys but did not share their Asian ethnicity. Even worse, the boys weren't related to one another. Y.Z and A.P. unknowingly were surrogate parents and had to give the children up to their respective parents who were also clients of CHA Fertility Center. The couple was so embarrassed and heartbroken they haven't told their family or close friends. For Y.Z and A.P, the experience has left them with "permanent emotional injuries from which they will not recover," the suit says.The amount they are suing for is also undisclosed. 07 Jul 2019 Pictured: CHA Fertility Center. Photo
    MEGA461133_017.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A mother gave birth to someone else’s babies after an IVF mix-up, a new lawsuit claims. The woman and her husband, from Queens, New York, are suing CHA Fertility Centre, in Los Angeles, after giving birth to children who didn't share their ethnicity. The clinic is run by Dr. Joshua Berger and co-owner Simon Hong. The Asian couple, who are referred to as Y.Z. and A.P. in court documents, married in 2012 and tried relentlessly--both naturally and with medical assistance--to get pregnant. After countless disappointment, the couple visited CHA Fertility Center with the hopes of becoming parents. In January 2018, Dr. Berger and Mr Hong met with the couple and walked them through months-long medicine, vitamin tests, and several procedures to yield eight embryos. In total, the couple says they spent $100,000 on the entire process. In September, the pair were excited after learning female embryos were successfully planted and they were pregnant with twins. Their joy, however, was short-lived when the ultrasound revealed they were instead having twin boys. Dr. Berger dismissed the sonogram and tried to calm their concerns by revealing when his wife was pregnant they were originally having a boy but gave birth to a girl. Y.Z. and A.P's nerves were calmed for a moment, and on March 30, 2019, A.P. delivered the children via C-section and was met with an unspeakable mix-up. The babies were indeed boys but did not share their Asian ethnicity. Even worse, the boys weren't related to one another. Y.Z and A.P. unknowingly were surrogate parents and had to give the children up to their respective parents who were also clients of CHA Fertility Center. The couple was so embarrassed and heartbroken they haven't told their family or close friends. For Y.Z and A.P, the experience has left them with "permanent emotional injuries from which they will not recover," the suit says.The amount they are suing for is also undisclosed. 07 Jul 2019 Pictured: Dr. Joshua Berger. Photo cre
    MEGA461133_016.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A mother gave birth to someone else’s babies after an IVF mix-up, a new lawsuit claims. The woman and her husband, from Queens, New York, are suing CHA Fertility Centre, in Los Angeles, after giving birth to children who didn't share their ethnicity. The clinic is run by Dr. Joshua Berger and co-owner Simon Hong. The Asian couple, who are referred to as Y.Z. and A.P. in court documents, married in 2012 and tried relentlessly--both naturally and with medical assistance--to get pregnant. After countless disappointment, the couple visited CHA Fertility Center with the hopes of becoming parents. In January 2018, Dr. Berger and Mr Hong met with the couple and walked them through months-long medicine, vitamin tests, and several procedures to yield eight embryos. In total, the couple says they spent $100,000 on the entire process. In September, the pair were excited after learning female embryos were successfully planted and they were pregnant with twins. Their joy, however, was short-lived when the ultrasound revealed they were instead having twin boys. Dr. Berger dismissed the sonogram and tried to calm their concerns by revealing when his wife was pregnant they were originally having a boy but gave birth to a girl. Y.Z. and A.P's nerves were calmed for a moment, and on March 30, 2019, A.P. delivered the children via C-section and was met with an unspeakable mix-up. The babies were indeed boys but did not share their Asian ethnicity. Even worse, the boys weren't related to one another. Y.Z and A.P. unknowingly were surrogate parents and had to give the children up to their respective parents who were also clients of CHA Fertility Center. The couple was so embarrassed and heartbroken they haven't told their family or close friends. For Y.Z and A.P, the experience has left them with "permanent emotional injuries from which they will not recover," the suit says.The amount they are suing for is also undisclosed. 07 Jul 2019 Pictured: CHA Fertility Center. Photo
    MEGA461133_015.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A mother gave birth to someone else’s babies after an IVF mix-up, a new lawsuit claims. The woman and her husband, from Queens, New York, are suing CHA Fertility Centre, in Los Angeles, after giving birth to children who didn't share their ethnicity. The clinic is run by Dr. Joshua Berger and co-owner Simon Hong. The Asian couple, who are referred to as Y.Z. and A.P. in court documents, married in 2012 and tried relentlessly--both naturally and with medical assistance--to get pregnant. After countless disappointment, the couple visited CHA Fertility Center with the hopes of becoming parents. In January 2018, Dr. Berger and Mr Hong met with the couple and walked them through months-long medicine, vitamin tests, and several procedures to yield eight embryos. In total, the couple says they spent $100,000 on the entire process. In September, the pair were excited after learning female embryos were successfully planted and they were pregnant with twins. Their joy, however, was short-lived when the ultrasound revealed they were instead having twin boys. Dr. Berger dismissed the sonogram and tried to calm their concerns by revealing when his wife was pregnant they were originally having a boy but gave birth to a girl. Y.Z. and A.P's nerves were calmed for a moment, and on March 30, 2019, A.P. delivered the children via C-section and was met with an unspeakable mix-up. The babies were indeed boys but did not share their Asian ethnicity. Even worse, the boys weren't related to one another. Y.Z and A.P. unknowingly were surrogate parents and had to give the children up to their respective parents who were also clients of CHA Fertility Center. The couple was so embarrassed and heartbroken they haven't told their family or close friends. For Y.Z and A.P, the experience has left them with "permanent emotional injuries from which they will not recover," the suit says.The amount they are suing for is also undisclosed. 07 Jul 2019 Pictured: CHA Fertility Center. Photo
    MEGA461133_014.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A mother gave birth to someone else’s babies after an IVF mix-up, a new lawsuit claims. The woman and her husband, from Queens, New York, are suing CHA Fertility Centre, in Los Angeles, after giving birth to children who didn't share their ethnicity. The clinic is run by Dr. Joshua Berger and co-owner Simon Hong. The Asian couple, who are referred to as Y.Z. and A.P. in court documents, married in 2012 and tried relentlessly--both naturally and with medical assistance--to get pregnant. After countless disappointment, the couple visited CHA Fertility Center with the hopes of becoming parents. In January 2018, Dr. Berger and Mr Hong met with the couple and walked them through months-long medicine, vitamin tests, and several procedures to yield eight embryos. In total, the couple says they spent $100,000 on the entire process. In September, the pair were excited after learning female embryos were successfully planted and they were pregnant with twins. Their joy, however, was short-lived when the ultrasound revealed they were instead having twin boys. Dr. Berger dismissed the sonogram and tried to calm their concerns by revealing when his wife was pregnant they were originally having a boy but gave birth to a girl. Y.Z. and A.P's nerves were calmed for a moment, and on March 30, 2019, A.P. delivered the children via C-section and was met with an unspeakable mix-up. The babies were indeed boys but did not share their Asian ethnicity. Even worse, the boys weren't related to one another. Y.Z and A.P. unknowingly were surrogate parents and had to give the children up to their respective parents who were also clients of CHA Fertility Center. The couple was so embarrassed and heartbroken they haven't told their family or close friends. For Y.Z and A.P, the experience has left them with "permanent emotional injuries from which they will not recover," the suit says.The amount they are suing for is also undisclosed. 07 Jul 2019 Pictured: CHA Fertility Center. Photo
    MEGA461133_013.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A mother gave birth to someone else’s babies after an IVF mix-up, a new lawsuit claims. The woman and her husband, from Queens, New York, are suing CHA Fertility Centre, in Los Angeles, after giving birth to children who didn't share their ethnicity. The clinic is run by Dr. Joshua Berger and co-owner Simon Hong. The Asian couple, who are referred to as Y.Z. and A.P. in court documents, married in 2012 and tried relentlessly--both naturally and with medical assistance--to get pregnant. After countless disappointment, the couple visited CHA Fertility Center with the hopes of becoming parents. In January 2018, Dr. Berger and Mr Hong met with the couple and walked them through months-long medicine, vitamin tests, and several procedures to yield eight embryos. In total, the couple says they spent $100,000 on the entire process. In September, the pair were excited after learning female embryos were successfully planted and they were pregnant with twins. Their joy, however, was short-lived when the ultrasound revealed they were instead having twin boys. Dr. Berger dismissed the sonogram and tried to calm their concerns by revealing when his wife was pregnant they were originally having a boy but gave birth to a girl. Y.Z. and A.P's nerves were calmed for a moment, and on March 30, 2019, A.P. delivered the children via C-section and was met with an unspeakable mix-up. The babies were indeed boys but did not share their Asian ethnicity. Even worse, the boys weren't related to one another. Y.Z and A.P. unknowingly were surrogate parents and had to give the children up to their respective parents who were also clients of CHA Fertility Center. The couple was so embarrassed and heartbroken they haven't told their family or close friends. For Y.Z and A.P, the experience has left them with "permanent emotional injuries from which they will not recover," the suit says.The amount they are suing for is also undisclosed. 07 Jul 2019 Pictured: CHA Fertility Center. Photo
    MEGA461133_009.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A mother gave birth to someone else’s babies after an IVF mix-up, a new lawsuit claims. The woman and her husband, from Queens, New York, are suing CHA Fertility Centre, in Los Angeles, after giving birth to children who didn't share their ethnicity. The clinic is run by Dr. Joshua Berger and co-owner Simon Hong. The Asian couple, who are referred to as Y.Z. and A.P. in court documents, married in 2012 and tried relentlessly--both naturally and with medical assistance--to get pregnant. After countless disappointment, the couple visited CHA Fertility Center with the hopes of becoming parents. In January 2018, Dr. Berger and Mr Hong met with the couple and walked them through months-long medicine, vitamin tests, and several procedures to yield eight embryos. In total, the couple says they spent $100,000 on the entire process. In September, the pair were excited after learning female embryos were successfully planted and they were pregnant with twins. Their joy, however, was short-lived when the ultrasound revealed they were instead having twin boys. Dr. Berger dismissed the sonogram and tried to calm their concerns by revealing when his wife was pregnant they were originally having a boy but gave birth to a girl. Y.Z. and A.P's nerves were calmed for a moment, and on March 30, 2019, A.P. delivered the children via C-section and was met with an unspeakable mix-up. The babies were indeed boys but did not share their Asian ethnicity. Even worse, the boys weren't related to one another. Y.Z and A.P. unknowingly were surrogate parents and had to give the children up to their respective parents who were also clients of CHA Fertility Center. The couple was so embarrassed and heartbroken they haven't told their family or close friends. For Y.Z and A.P, the experience has left them with "permanent emotional injuries from which they will not recover," the suit says.The amount they are suing for is also undisclosed. 07 Jul 2019 Pictured: CHA Fertility Center. Photo
    MEGA461133_010.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A mother gave birth to someone else’s babies after an IVF mix-up, a new lawsuit claims. The woman and her husband, from Queens, New York, are suing CHA Fertility Centre, in Los Angeles, after giving birth to children who didn't share their ethnicity. The clinic is run by Dr. Joshua Berger and co-owner Simon Hong. The Asian couple, who are referred to as Y.Z. and A.P. in court documents, married in 2012 and tried relentlessly--both naturally and with medical assistance--to get pregnant. After countless disappointment, the couple visited CHA Fertility Center with the hopes of becoming parents. In January 2018, Dr. Berger and Mr Hong met with the couple and walked them through months-long medicine, vitamin tests, and several procedures to yield eight embryos. In total, the couple says they spent $100,000 on the entire process. In September, the pair were excited after learning female embryos were successfully planted and they were pregnant with twins. Their joy, however, was short-lived when the ultrasound revealed they were instead having twin boys. Dr. Berger dismissed the sonogram and tried to calm their concerns by revealing when his wife was pregnant they were originally having a boy but gave birth to a girl. Y.Z. and A.P's nerves were calmed for a moment, and on March 30, 2019, A.P. delivered the children via C-section and was met with an unspeakable mix-up. The babies were indeed boys but did not share their Asian ethnicity. Even worse, the boys weren't related to one another. Y.Z and A.P. unknowingly were surrogate parents and had to give the children up to their respective parents who were also clients of CHA Fertility Center. The couple was so embarrassed and heartbroken they haven't told their family or close friends. For Y.Z and A.P, the experience has left them with "permanent emotional injuries from which they will not recover," the suit says.The amount they are suing for is also undisclosed. 07 Jul 2019 Pictured: Dr. Joshua Berger. Photo cre
    MEGA461133_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A mother gave birth to someone else’s babies after an IVF mix-up, a new lawsuit claims. The woman and her husband, from Queens, New York, are suing CHA Fertility Centre, in Los Angeles, after giving birth to children who didn't share their ethnicity. The clinic is run by Dr. Joshua Berger and co-owner Simon Hong. The Asian couple, who are referred to as Y.Z. and A.P. in court documents, married in 2012 and tried relentlessly--both naturally and with medical assistance--to get pregnant. After countless disappointment, the couple visited CHA Fertility Center with the hopes of becoming parents. In January 2018, Dr. Berger and Mr Hong met with the couple and walked them through months-long medicine, vitamin tests, and several procedures to yield eight embryos. In total, the couple says they spent $100,000 on the entire process. In September, the pair were excited after learning female embryos were successfully planted and they were pregnant with twins. Their joy, however, was short-lived when the ultrasound revealed they were instead having twin boys. Dr. Berger dismissed the sonogram and tried to calm their concerns by revealing when his wife was pregnant they were originally having a boy but gave birth to a girl. Y.Z. and A.P's nerves were calmed for a moment, and on March 30, 2019, A.P. delivered the children via C-section and was met with an unspeakable mix-up. The babies were indeed boys but did not share their Asian ethnicity. Even worse, the boys weren't related to one another. Y.Z and A.P. unknowingly were surrogate parents and had to give the children up to their respective parents who were also clients of CHA Fertility Center. The couple was so embarrassed and heartbroken they haven't told their family or close friends. For Y.Z and A.P, the experience has left them with "permanent emotional injuries from which they will not recover," the suit says.The amount they are suing for is also undisclosed. 07 Jul 2019 Pictured: Dr. Joshua Berger. Photo cre
    MEGA461133_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A mother gave birth to someone else’s babies after an IVF mix-up, a new lawsuit claims. The woman and her husband, from Queens, New York, are suing CHA Fertility Centre, in Los Angeles, after giving birth to children who didn't share their ethnicity. The clinic is run by Dr. Joshua Berger and co-owner Simon Hong. The Asian couple, who are referred to as Y.Z. and A.P. in court documents, married in 2012 and tried relentlessly--both naturally and with medical assistance--to get pregnant. After countless disappointment, the couple visited CHA Fertility Center with the hopes of becoming parents. In January 2018, Dr. Berger and Mr Hong met with the couple and walked them through months-long medicine, vitamin tests, and several procedures to yield eight embryos. In total, the couple says they spent $100,000 on the entire process. In September, the pair were excited after learning female embryos were successfully planted and they were pregnant with twins. Their joy, however, was short-lived when the ultrasound revealed they were instead having twin boys. Dr. Berger dismissed the sonogram and tried to calm their concerns by revealing when his wife was pregnant they were originally having a boy but gave birth to a girl. Y.Z. and A.P's nerves were calmed for a moment, and on March 30, 2019, A.P. delivered the children via C-section and was met with an unspeakable mix-up. The babies were indeed boys but did not share their Asian ethnicity. Even worse, the boys weren't related to one another. Y.Z and A.P. unknowingly were surrogate parents and had to give the children up to their respective parents who were also clients of CHA Fertility Center. The couple was so embarrassed and heartbroken they haven't told their family or close friends. For Y.Z and A.P, the experience has left them with "permanent emotional injuries from which they will not recover," the suit says.The amount they are suing for is also undisclosed. 07 Jul 2019 Pictured: Dr. Joshua Berger. Photo cre
    MEGA461133_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A mother gave birth to someone else’s babies after an IVF mix-up, a new lawsuit claims. The woman and her husband, from Queens, New York, are suing CHA Fertility Centre, in Los Angeles, after giving birth to children who didn't share their ethnicity. The clinic is run by Dr. Joshua Berger and co-owner Simon Hong. The Asian couple, who are referred to as Y.Z. and A.P. in court documents, married in 2012 and tried relentlessly--both naturally and with medical assistance--to get pregnant. After countless disappointment, the couple visited CHA Fertility Center with the hopes of becoming parents. In January 2018, Dr. Berger and Mr Hong met with the couple and walked them through months-long medicine, vitamin tests, and several procedures to yield eight embryos. In total, the couple says they spent $100,000 on the entire process. In September, the pair were excited after learning female embryos were successfully planted and they were pregnant with twins. Their joy, however, was short-lived when the ultrasound revealed they were instead having twin boys. Dr. Berger dismissed the sonogram and tried to calm their concerns by revealing when his wife was pregnant they were originally having a boy but gave birth to a girl. Y.Z. and A.P's nerves were calmed for a moment, and on March 30, 2019, A.P. delivered the children via C-section and was met with an unspeakable mix-up. The babies were indeed boys but did not share their Asian ethnicity. Even worse, the boys weren't related to one another. Y.Z and A.P. unknowingly were surrogate parents and had to give the children up to their respective parents who were also clients of CHA Fertility Center. The couple was so embarrassed and heartbroken they haven't told their family or close friends. For Y.Z and A.P, the experience has left them with "permanent emotional injuries from which they will not recover," the suit says.The amount they are suing for is also undisclosed. 07 Jul 2019 Pictured: Dr. Joshua Berger. Photo cre
    MEGA461133_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A mother gave birth to someone else’s babies after an IVF mix-up, a new lawsuit claims. The woman and her husband, from Queens, New York, are suing CHA Fertility Centre, in Los Angeles, after giving birth to children who didn't share their ethnicity. The clinic is run by Dr. Joshua Berger and co-owner Simon Hong. The Asian couple, who are referred to as Y.Z. and A.P. in court documents, married in 2012 and tried relentlessly--both naturally and with medical assistance--to get pregnant. After countless disappointment, the couple visited CHA Fertility Center with the hopes of becoming parents. In January 2018, Dr. Berger and Mr Hong met with the couple and walked them through months-long medicine, vitamin tests, and several procedures to yield eight embryos. In total, the couple says they spent $100,000 on the entire process. In September, the pair were excited after learning female embryos were successfully planted and they were pregnant with twins. Their joy, however, was short-lived when the ultrasound revealed they were instead having twin boys. Dr. Berger dismissed the sonogram and tried to calm their concerns by revealing when his wife was pregnant they were originally having a boy but gave birth to a girl. Y.Z. and A.P's nerves were calmed for a moment, and on March 30, 2019, A.P. delivered the children via C-section and was met with an unspeakable mix-up. The babies were indeed boys but did not share their Asian ethnicity. Even worse, the boys weren't related to one another. Y.Z and A.P. unknowingly were surrogate parents and had to give the children up to their respective parents who were also clients of CHA Fertility Center. The couple was so embarrassed and heartbroken they haven't told their family or close friends. For Y.Z and A.P, the experience has left them with "permanent emotional injuries from which they will not recover," the suit says.The amount they are suing for is also undisclosed. 07 Jul 2019 Pictured: Dr. Joshua Berger. Photo cre
    MEGA461133_001.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A mother gave birth to someone else’s babies after an IVF mix-up, a new lawsuit claims. The woman and her husband, from Queens, New York, are suing CHA Fertility Centre, in Los Angeles, after giving birth to children who didn't share their ethnicity. The clinic is run by Dr. Joshua Berger and co-owner Simon Hong. The Asian couple, who are referred to as Y.Z. and A.P. in court documents, married in 2012 and tried relentlessly--both naturally and with medical assistance--to get pregnant. After countless disappointment, the couple visited CHA Fertility Center with the hopes of becoming parents. In January 2018, Dr. Berger and Mr Hong met with the couple and walked them through months-long medicine, vitamin tests, and several procedures to yield eight embryos. In total, the couple says they spent $100,000 on the entire process. In September, the pair were excited after learning female embryos were successfully planted and they were pregnant with twins. Their joy, however, was short-lived when the ultrasound revealed they were instead having twin boys. Dr. Berger dismissed the sonogram and tried to calm their concerns by revealing when his wife was pregnant they were originally having a boy but gave birth to a girl. Y.Z. and A.P's nerves were calmed for a moment, and on March 30, 2019, A.P. delivered the children via C-section and was met with an unspeakable mix-up. The babies were indeed boys but did not share their Asian ethnicity. Even worse, the boys weren't related to one another. Y.Z and A.P. unknowingly were surrogate parents and had to give the children up to their respective parents who were also clients of CHA Fertility Center. The couple was so embarrassed and heartbroken they haven't told their family or close friends. For Y.Z and A.P, the experience has left them with "permanent emotional injuries from which they will not recover," the suit says.The amount they are suing for is also undisclosed. 07 Jul 2019 Pictured: CHA Fertility Center. Photo
    MEGA461133_011.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A mother gave birth to someone else’s babies after an IVF mix-up, a new lawsuit claims. The woman and her husband, from Queens, New York, are suing CHA Fertility Centre, in Los Angeles, after giving birth to children who didn't share their ethnicity. The clinic is run by Dr. Joshua Berger and co-owner Simon Hong. The Asian couple, who are referred to as Y.Z. and A.P. in court documents, married in 2012 and tried relentlessly--both naturally and with medical assistance--to get pregnant. After countless disappointment, the couple visited CHA Fertility Center with the hopes of becoming parents. In January 2018, Dr. Berger and Mr Hong met with the couple and walked them through months-long medicine, vitamin tests, and several procedures to yield eight embryos. In total, the couple says they spent $100,000 on the entire process. In September, the pair were excited after learning female embryos were successfully planted and they were pregnant with twins. Their joy, however, was short-lived when the ultrasound revealed they were instead having twin boys. Dr. Berger dismissed the sonogram and tried to calm their concerns by revealing when his wife was pregnant they were originally having a boy but gave birth to a girl. Y.Z. and A.P's nerves were calmed for a moment, and on March 30, 2019, A.P. delivered the children via C-section and was met with an unspeakable mix-up. The babies were indeed boys but did not share their Asian ethnicity. Even worse, the boys weren't related to one another. Y.Z and A.P. unknowingly were surrogate parents and had to give the children up to their respective parents who were also clients of CHA Fertility Center. The couple was so embarrassed and heartbroken they haven't told their family or close friends. For Y.Z and A.P, the experience has left them with "permanent emotional injuries from which they will not recover," the suit says.The amount they are suing for is also undisclosed. 07 Jul 2019 Pictured: Dr. Joshua Berger. Photo cre
    MEGA461133_007.jpg
  • Residents are furious after being some were made to evacuate at 3am with disabled children, babies, elderly and infirm after Camden Council orders 800 households to evacuate 'immediately' amid tower block cladding safety fears following. Camden Council said 800 households in the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate were to be moved into temporary accommodation because the blocks were covered in similar cladding to the material used in the Grenfell Tower fire. 24 Jun 2017 Pictured: gvs at the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA44454_002.jpg
  • Residents are furious after being some were made to evacuate at 3am with disabled children, babies, elderly and infirm after Camden Council orders 800 households to evacuate 'immediately' amid tower block cladding safety fears following. Camden Council said 800 households in the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate were to be moved into temporary accommodation because the blocks were covered in similar cladding to the material used in the Grenfell Tower fire. 24 Jun 2017 Pictured: gvs at the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA44454_009.jpg
  • Residents are furious after being some were made to evacuate at 3am with disabled children, babies, elderly and infirm after Camden Council orders 800 households to evacuate 'immediately' amid tower block cladding safety fears following. Camden Council said 800 households in the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate were to be moved into temporary accommodation because the blocks were covered in similar cladding to the material used in the Grenfell Tower fire. 24 Jun 2017 Pictured: gvs at the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA44454_019.jpg
  • Residents are furious after being some were made to evacuate at 3am with disabled children, babies, elderly and infirm after Camden Council orders 800 households to evacuate 'immediately' amid tower block cladding safety fears following. Camden Council said 800 households in the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate were to be moved into temporary accommodation because the blocks were covered in similar cladding to the material used in the Grenfell Tower fire. 24 Jun 2017 Pictured: gvs at the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA44454_018.jpg
  • Residents are furious after being some were made to evacuate at 3am with disabled children, babies, elderly and infirm after Camden Council orders 800 households to evacuate 'immediately' amid tower block cladding safety fears following. Camden Council said 800 households in the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate were to be moved into temporary accommodation because the blocks were covered in similar cladding to the material used in the Grenfell Tower fire. 24 Jun 2017 Pictured: gvs at the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA44454_021.jpg
  • Residents are furious after being some were made to evacuate at 3am with disabled children, babies, elderly and infirm after Camden Council orders 800 households to evacuate 'immediately' amid tower block cladding safety fears following. Camden Council said 800 households in the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate were to be moved into temporary accommodation because the blocks were covered in similar cladding to the material used in the Grenfell Tower fire. 24 Jun 2017 Pictured: gvs at the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA44454_029.jpg
  • Residents are furious after being some were made to evacuate at 3am with disabled children, babies, elderly and infirm after Camden Council orders 800 households to evacuate 'immediately' amid tower block cladding safety fears following. Camden Council said 800 households in the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate were to be moved into temporary accommodation because the blocks were covered in similar cladding to the material used in the Grenfell Tower fire. 24 Jun 2017 Pictured: gvs at the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA44454_001.jpg
  • Embargoed to 0001 Wednesday June 21 Undated file photo of a woman eight months into her pregnancy. Problems monitoring the heart rates of babies during labour are contributing to brain damage and stillbirths, according to a new report.
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  • Residents are furious after being some were made to evacuate at 3am with disabled children, babies, elderly and infirm after Camden Council orders 800 households to evacuate 'immediately' amid tower block cladding safety fears following. Camden Council said 800 households in the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate were to be moved into temporary accommodation because the blocks were covered in similar cladding to the material used in the Grenfell Tower fire. 24 Jun 2017 Pictured: gvs at the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA44454_004.jpg
  • Residents are furious after being some were made to evacuate at 3am with disabled children, babies, elderly and infirm after Camden Council orders 800 households to evacuate 'immediately' amid tower block cladding safety fears following. Camden Council said 800 households in the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate were to be moved into temporary accommodation because the blocks were covered in similar cladding to the material used in the Grenfell Tower fire. 24 Jun 2017 Pictured: gvs at the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA44454_003.jpg
  • Residents are furious after being some were made to evacuate at 3am with disabled children, babies, elderly and infirm after Camden Council orders 800 households to evacuate 'immediately' amid tower block cladding safety fears following. Camden Council said 800 households in the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate were to be moved into temporary accommodation because the blocks were covered in similar cladding to the material used in the Grenfell Tower fire. 24 Jun 2017 Pictured: gvs at the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA44454_005.jpg
  • Residents are furious after being some were made to evacuate at 3am with disabled children, babies, elderly and infirm after Camden Council orders 800 households to evacuate 'immediately' amid tower block cladding safety fears following. Camden Council said 800 households in the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate were to be moved into temporary accommodation because the blocks were covered in similar cladding to the material used in the Grenfell Tower fire. 24 Jun 2017 Pictured: gvs at the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA44454_007.jpg
  • Residents are furious after being some were made to evacuate at 3am with disabled children, babies, elderly and infirm after Camden Council orders 800 households to evacuate 'immediately' amid tower block cladding safety fears following. Camden Council said 800 households in the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate were to be moved into temporary accommodation because the blocks were covered in similar cladding to the material used in the Grenfell Tower fire. 24 Jun 2017 Pictured: gvs at the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA44454_008.jpg
  • Residents are furious after being some were made to evacuate at 3am with disabled children, babies, elderly and infirm after Camden Council orders 800 households to evacuate 'immediately' amid tower block cladding safety fears following. Camden Council said 800 households in the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate were to be moved into temporary accommodation because the blocks were covered in similar cladding to the material used in the Grenfell Tower fire. 24 Jun 2017 Pictured: gvs at the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA44454_010.jpg
  • Residents are furious after being some were made to evacuate at 3am with disabled children, babies, elderly and infirm after Camden Council orders 800 households to evacuate 'immediately' amid tower block cladding safety fears following. Camden Council said 800 households in the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate were to be moved into temporary accommodation because the blocks were covered in similar cladding to the material used in the Grenfell Tower fire. 24 Jun 2017 Pictured: gvs at the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA44454_012.jpg
  • Residents are furious after being some were made to evacuate at 3am with disabled children, babies, elderly and infirm after Camden Council orders 800 households to evacuate 'immediately' amid tower block cladding safety fears following. Camden Council said 800 households in the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate were to be moved into temporary accommodation because the blocks were covered in similar cladding to the material used in the Grenfell Tower fire. 24 Jun 2017 Pictured: gvs at the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA44454_011.jpg
  • Residents are furious after being some were made to evacuate at 3am with disabled children, babies, elderly and infirm after Camden Council orders 800 households to evacuate 'immediately' amid tower block cladding safety fears following. Camden Council said 800 households in the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate were to be moved into temporary accommodation because the blocks were covered in similar cladding to the material used in the Grenfell Tower fire. 24 Jun 2017 Pictured: gvs at the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA44454_014.jpg
  • Residents are furious after being some were made to evacuate at 3am with disabled children, babies, elderly and infirm after Camden Council orders 800 households to evacuate 'immediately' amid tower block cladding safety fears following. Camden Council said 800 households in the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate were to be moved into temporary accommodation because the blocks were covered in similar cladding to the material used in the Grenfell Tower fire. 24 Jun 2017 Pictured: gvs at the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA44454_015.jpg
  • Residents are furious after being some were made to evacuate at 3am with disabled children, babies, elderly and infirm after Camden Council orders 800 households to evacuate 'immediately' amid tower block cladding safety fears following. Camden Council said 800 households in the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate were to be moved into temporary accommodation because the blocks were covered in similar cladding to the material used in the Grenfell Tower fire. 24 Jun 2017 Pictured: gvs at the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA44454_017.jpg
  • Residents are furious after being some were made to evacuate at 3am with disabled children, babies, elderly and infirm after Camden Council orders 800 households to evacuate 'immediately' amid tower block cladding safety fears following. Camden Council said 800 households in the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate were to be moved into temporary accommodation because the blocks were covered in similar cladding to the material used in the Grenfell Tower fire. 24 Jun 2017 Pictured: gvs at the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA44454_016.jpg
  • Residents are furious after being some were made to evacuate at 3am with disabled children, babies, elderly and infirm after Camden Council orders 800 households to evacuate 'immediately' amid tower block cladding safety fears following. Camden Council said 800 households in the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate were to be moved into temporary accommodation because the blocks were covered in similar cladding to the material used in the Grenfell Tower fire. 24 Jun 2017 Pictured: gvs at the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA44454_020.jpg
  • Residents are furious after being some were made to evacuate at 3am with disabled children, babies, elderly and infirm after Camden Council orders 800 households to evacuate 'immediately' amid tower block cladding safety fears following. Camden Council said 800 households in the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate were to be moved into temporary accommodation because the blocks were covered in similar cladding to the material used in the Grenfell Tower fire. 24 Jun 2017 Pictured: gvs at the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA44454_022.jpg
  • Residents are furious after being some were made to evacuate at 3am with disabled children, babies, elderly and infirm after Camden Council orders 800 households to evacuate 'immediately' amid tower block cladding safety fears following. Camden Council said 800 households in the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate were to be moved into temporary accommodation because the blocks were covered in similar cladding to the material used in the Grenfell Tower fire. 24 Jun 2017 Pictured: gvs at the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA44454_024.jpg
  • Residents are furious after being some were made to evacuate at 3am with disabled children, babies, elderly and infirm after Camden Council orders 800 households to evacuate 'immediately' amid tower block cladding safety fears following. Camden Council said 800 households in the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate were to be moved into temporary accommodation because the blocks were covered in similar cladding to the material used in the Grenfell Tower fire. 24 Jun 2017 Pictured: gvs at the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA44454_026.jpg
  • Residents are furious after being some were made to evacuate at 3am with disabled children, babies, elderly and infirm after Camden Council orders 800 households to evacuate 'immediately' amid tower block cladding safety fears following. Camden Council said 800 households in the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate were to be moved into temporary accommodation because the blocks were covered in similar cladding to the material used in the Grenfell Tower fire. 24 Jun 2017 Pictured: gvs at the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA44454_027.jpg
  • Residents are furious after being some were made to evacuate at 3am with disabled children, babies, elderly and infirm after Camden Council orders 800 households to evacuate 'immediately' amid tower block cladding safety fears following. Camden Council said 800 households in the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate were to be moved into temporary accommodation because the blocks were covered in similar cladding to the material used in the Grenfell Tower fire. 24 Jun 2017 Pictured: gvs at the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA44454_028.jpg
  • Residents are furious after being some were made to evacuate at 3am with disabled children, babies, elderly and infirm after Camden Council orders 800 households to evacuate 'immediately' amid tower block cladding safety fears following. Camden Council said 800 households in the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate were to be moved into temporary accommodation because the blocks were covered in similar cladding to the material used in the Grenfell Tower fire. 24 Jun 2017 Pictured: gvs at the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA44454_030.jpg
  • Undated file photo of a woman eight months into her pregnancy. Problems monitoring the heart rates of babies during labour are contributing to brain damage and stillbirths, according to a new report.
    RTI31768811.jpg
  • May 3, 2017 - Valdetorres Del Jarama, Madrid, Spain - ''Procesión del santísimo Cristo de los Ultrajes'' (Procession of the most holy Christ of the outrages) in Valdetorres del Jarama, Madrid. This procession is celebrated in the celebrations of Valdetorres and is made in honor to its patron ''The Christ of the Outrages''. The procession consists in carrying the image of the Christ, by several people, through several streets of the town. There are stops where babies are raised to the image as a sign of protection and sanctification. At the end of the procession, rockets are fired. (Credit Image: © JesúS Calonge/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170503_zaa_p133_380.jpg
  • Residents are furious after being some were made to evacuate at 3am with disabled children, babies, elderly and infirm after Camden Council orders 800 households to evacuate 'immediately' amid tower block cladding safety fears following. Camden Council said 800 households in the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate were to be moved into temporary accommodation because the blocks were covered in similar cladding to the material used in the Grenfell Tower fire. 24 Jun 2017 Pictured: gvs at the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA44454_006.jpg
  • Residents are furious after being some were made to evacuate at 3am with disabled children, babies, elderly and infirm after Camden Council orders 800 households to evacuate 'immediately' amid tower block cladding safety fears following. Camden Council said 800 households in the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate were to be moved into temporary accommodation because the blocks were covered in similar cladding to the material used in the Grenfell Tower fire. 24 Jun 2017 Pictured: gvs at the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA44454_013.jpg
  • Residents are furious after being some were made to evacuate at 3am with disabled children, babies, elderly and infirm after Camden Council orders 800 households to evacuate 'immediately' amid tower block cladding safety fears following. Camden Council said 800 households in the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate were to be moved into temporary accommodation because the blocks were covered in similar cladding to the material used in the Grenfell Tower fire. 24 Jun 2017 Pictured: gvs at the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA44454_023.jpg
  • Residents are furious after being some were made to evacuate at 3am with disabled children, babies, elderly and infirm after Camden Council orders 800 households to evacuate 'immediately' amid tower block cladding safety fears following. Camden Council said 800 households in the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate were to be moved into temporary accommodation because the blocks were covered in similar cladding to the material used in the Grenfell Tower fire. 24 Jun 2017 Pictured: gvs at the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA44454_025.jpg
  • Residents are furious after being some were made to evacuate at 3am with disabled children, babies, elderly and infirm after Camden Council orders 800 households to evacuate 'immediately' amid tower block cladding safety fears following. Camden Council said 800 households in the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate were to be moved into temporary accommodation because the blocks were covered in similar cladding to the material used in the Grenfell Tower fire. 24 Jun 2017 Pictured: gvs at the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA44454_032.jpg
  • Residents are furious after being some were made to evacuate at 3am with disabled children, babies, elderly and infirm after Camden Council orders 800 households to evacuate 'immediately' amid tower block cladding safety fears following. Camden Council said 800 households in the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate were to be moved into temporary accommodation because the blocks were covered in similar cladding to the material used in the Grenfell Tower fire. 24 Jun 2017 Pictured: gvs at the Swiss Cottage Chalcots estate. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA44454_031.jpg
  • This is the moment Oscar-winning actor Joaquin Phoenix saved a cow and its calf from a slaughterhouse. The Joker star was pictured with the animal in his arms, two days after he made a speech at the Academy Awards criticising the meat industry. He rescued Liberty and Indigo from a California abattoir when he teamed up with animal rights' group, Los Angeles Animal Save. Joaquin named the mother Liberty and her daughter Indigo. The cow gave birth in the holding area of Manning Beef in Pico Rivera, California. They are the fifth bovine mother and child rescued from Manning Beef by the grassroots group that holds peaceful vigils at area slaughterhouses. He said: "I never thought I’d find friendship in a slaughterhouse, but meeting Anthony [president/CEO of Manning Beef] and opening my heart to his, I realize we might have more in common than we do differences. Without his act of kindness, Liberty and her baby calf, Indigo, would have met a terrible demise." "As a new mother myself, I immediately understood the profound bond between this mother cow and her calf, a bond all of us have with our babies,” said L.A. Animal Save founder Amy Jean Davis. Liberty and Indigo now live at Farm Sanctuary’s Acton location in northern LA County. Please credit Shaun Monson/LA Animal Save/MEGA. 21 Feb 2020 Pictured: Joaquin Phoenix rescues cow and calf. Photo credit: Shaun Monson/LA Animal Save/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA614871_008.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: The Sperminator strikes again — this time donating his seed to an 18-year-old who lives in an East Harlem shelter. Her daughter, due July 12, will make it number 50 for the serial sperm donor. Ari Nagel, the 43-year-old CUNY math professor who donates his sperm to women across the globe for free, has racked up serious spawn this past year: 15 babies since last Father’s Day, bringing the grand total to 48. One woman is due to give birth in early July, followed by Kaienja Garrick, who lives in the East River Family Center, a family shelter with a shared bathroom and kitchen. “I think it’s a nice shelter. It’s probably nicer than my apartment,” Nagel told The Post, adding that he didn’t know how old Garrick was when she reached out to him last August. “I never asked her age — I try to help whoever asks,” he said. “I think Kai is more mature than I was at her age after everything she has been through.” **NO NEW YORK DAILY NEWS, NO NEW YORK TIMES, NO NEWSDAY**. 11 Jun 2019 Pictured: Kaienja Garrick. Photo credit: Stefano Giovannini @stefpix2 IG / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA446318_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: The Sperminator strikes again — this time donating his seed to an 18-year-old who lives in an East Harlem shelter. Her daughter, due July 12, will make it number 50 for the serial sperm donor. Ari Nagel, the 43-year-old CUNY math professor who donates his sperm to women across the globe for free, has racked up serious spawn this past year: 15 babies since last Father’s Day, bringing the grand total to 48. One woman is due to give birth in early July, followed by Kaienja Garrick, who lives in the East River Family Center, a family shelter with a shared bathroom and kitchen. “I think it’s a nice shelter. It’s probably nicer than my apartment,” Nagel told The Post, adding that he didn’t know how old Garrick was when she reached out to him last August. “I never asked her age — I try to help whoever asks,” he said. “I think Kai is more mature than I was at her age after everything she has been through.” **NO NEW YORK DAILY NEWS, NO NEW YORK TIMES, NO NEWSDAY**. 11 Jun 2019 Pictured: Kaienja Garrick. Photo credit: Stefano Giovannini @stefpix2 IG / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA446318_012.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: The Sperminator strikes again — this time donating his seed to an 18-year-old who lives in an East Harlem shelter. Her daughter, due July 12, will make it number 50 for the serial sperm donor. Ari Nagel, the 43-year-old CUNY math professor who donates his sperm to women across the globe for free, has racked up serious spawn this past year: 15 babies since last Father’s Day, bringing the grand total to 48. One woman is due to give birth in early July, followed by Kaienja Garrick, who lives in the East River Family Center, a family shelter with a shared bathroom and kitchen. “I think it’s a nice shelter. It’s probably nicer than my apartment,” Nagel told The Post, adding that he didn’t know how old Garrick was when she reached out to him last August. “I never asked her age — I try to help whoever asks,” he said. “I think Kai is more mature than I was at her age after everything she has been through.” **NO NEW YORK DAILY NEWS, NO NEW YORK TIMES, NO NEWSDAY**. 11 Jun 2019 Pictured: Kaienja Garrick with girlfriend Dee Slobert. Photo credit: Stefano Giovannini @stefpix2 IG / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA446318_025.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: The Sperminator strikes again — this time donating his seed to an 18-year-old who lives in an East Harlem shelter. Her daughter, due July 12, will make it number 50 for the serial sperm donor. Ari Nagel, the 43-year-old CUNY math professor who donates his sperm to women across the globe for free, has racked up serious spawn this past year: 15 babies since last Father’s Day, bringing the grand total to 48. One woman is due to give birth in early July, followed by Kaienja Garrick, who lives in the East River Family Center, a family shelter with a shared bathroom and kitchen. “I think it’s a nice shelter. It’s probably nicer than my apartment,” Nagel told The Post, adding that he didn’t know how old Garrick was when she reached out to him last August. “I never asked her age — I try to help whoever asks,” he said. “I think Kai is more mature than I was at her age after everything she has been through.” **NO NEW YORK DAILY NEWS, NO NEW YORK TIMES, NO NEWSDAY**. 11 Jun 2019 Pictured: Kaienja Garrick. Photo credit: Stefano Giovannini @stefpix2 IG / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA446318_001.jpg
  • This is the moment Oscar-winning actor Joaquin Phoenix saved a cow and its calf from a slaughterhouse. The Joker star was pictured with the animal in his arms, two days after he made a speech at the Academy Awards criticising the meat industry. He rescued Liberty and Indigo from a California abattoir when he teamed up with animal rights' group, Los Angeles Animal Save. Joaquin named the mother Liberty and her daughter Indigo. The cow gave birth in the holding area of Manning Beef in Pico Rivera, California. They are the fifth bovine mother and child rescued from Manning Beef by the grassroots group that holds peaceful vigils at area slaughterhouses. He said: "I never thought I’d find friendship in a slaughterhouse, but meeting Anthony [president/CEO of Manning Beef] and opening my heart to his, I realize we might have more in common than we do differences. Without his act of kindness, Liberty and her baby calf, Indigo, would have met a terrible demise." "As a new mother myself, I immediately understood the profound bond between this mother cow and her calf, a bond all of us have with our babies,” said L.A. Animal Save founder Amy Jean Davis. Liberty and Indigo now live at Farm Sanctuary’s Acton location in northern LA County. Please credit Shaun Monson/LA Animal Save/MEGA. 21 Feb 2020 Pictured: Joaquin Phoenix rescues cow and calf. Photo credit: Shaun Monson/LA Animal Save/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA614871_002.jpg
  • This is the moment Oscar-winning actor Joaquin Phoenix saved a cow and its calf from a slaughterhouse. The Joker star was pictured with the animal in his arms, two days after he made a speech at the Academy Awards criticising the meat industry. He rescued Liberty and Indigo from a California abattoir when he teamed up with animal rights' group, Los Angeles Animal Save. Joaquin named the mother Liberty and her daughter Indigo. The cow gave birth in the holding area of Manning Beef in Pico Rivera, California. They are the fifth bovine mother and child rescued from Manning Beef by the grassroots group that holds peaceful vigils at area slaughterhouses. He said: "I never thought I’d find friendship in a slaughterhouse, but meeting Anthony [president/CEO of Manning Beef] and opening my heart to his, I realize we might have more in common than we do differences. Without his act of kindness, Liberty and her baby calf, Indigo, would have met a terrible demise." "As a new mother myself, I immediately understood the profound bond between this mother cow and her calf, a bond all of us have with our babies,” said L.A. Animal Save founder Amy Jean Davis. Liberty and Indigo now live at Farm Sanctuary’s Acton location in northern LA County. Please credit Shaun Monson/LA Animal Save/MEGA. 21 Feb 2020 Pictured: Joaquin Phoenix rescues cow and calf. Photo credit: Shaun Monson/LA Animal Save/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA614871_003.jpg
  • This is the moment Oscar-winning actor Joaquin Phoenix saved a cow and its calf from a slaughterhouse. The Joker star was pictured with the animal in his arms, two days after he made a speech at the Academy Awards criticising the meat industry. He rescued Liberty and Indigo from a California abattoir when he teamed up with animal rights' group, Los Angeles Animal Save. Joaquin named the mother Liberty and her daughter Indigo. The cow gave birth in the holding area of Manning Beef in Pico Rivera, California. They are the fifth bovine mother and child rescued from Manning Beef by the grassroots group that holds peaceful vigils at area slaughterhouses. He said: "I never thought I’d find friendship in a slaughterhouse, but meeting Anthony [president/CEO of Manning Beef] and opening my heart to his, I realize we might have more in common than we do differences. Without his act of kindness, Liberty and her baby calf, Indigo, would have met a terrible demise." "As a new mother myself, I immediately understood the profound bond between this mother cow and her calf, a bond all of us have with our babies,” said L.A. Animal Save founder Amy Jean Davis. Liberty and Indigo now live at Farm Sanctuary’s Acton location in northern LA County. Please credit Shaun Monson/LA Animal Save/MEGA. 21 Feb 2020 Pictured: Joaquin Phoenix rescues cow and calf. Photo credit: Shaun Monson/LA Animal Save/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA614871_009.jpg
  • This is the moment Oscar-winning actor Joaquin Phoenix saved a cow and its calf from a slaughterhouse. The Joker star was pictured with the animal in his arms, two days after he made a speech at the Academy Awards criticising the meat industry. He rescued Liberty and Indigo from a California abattoir when he teamed up with animal rights' group, Los Angeles Animal Save. Joaquin named the mother Liberty and her daughter Indigo. The cow gave birth in the holding area of Manning Beef in Pico Rivera, California. They are the fifth bovine mother and child rescued from Manning Beef by the grassroots group that holds peaceful vigils at area slaughterhouses. He said: "I never thought I’d find friendship in a slaughterhouse, but meeting Anthony [president/CEO of Manning Beef] and opening my heart to his, I realize we might have more in common than we do differences. Without his act of kindness, Liberty and her baby calf, Indigo, would have met a terrible demise." "As a new mother myself, I immediately understood the profound bond between this mother cow and her calf, a bond all of us have with our babies,” said L.A. Animal Save founder Amy Jean Davis. Liberty and Indigo now live at Farm Sanctuary’s Acton location in northern LA County. Please credit Shaun Monson/LA Animal Save/MEGA. 21 Feb 2020 Pictured: Joaquin Phoenix rescues cow and calf. Photo credit: Shaun Monson/LA Animal Save/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA614871_005.jpg
  • This is the moment Oscar-winning actor Joaquin Phoenix saved a cow and its calf from a slaughterhouse. The Joker star was pictured with the animal in his arms, two days after he made a speech at the Academy Awards criticising the meat industry. He rescued Liberty and Indigo from a California abattoir when he teamed up with animal rights' group, Los Angeles Animal Save. Joaquin named the mother Liberty and her daughter Indigo. The cow gave birth in the holding area of Manning Beef in Pico Rivera, California. They are the fifth bovine mother and child rescued from Manning Beef by the grassroots group that holds peaceful vigils at area slaughterhouses. He said: "I never thought I’d find friendship in a slaughterhouse, but meeting Anthony [president/CEO of Manning Beef] and opening my heart to his, I realize we might have more in common than we do differences. Without his act of kindness, Liberty and her baby calf, Indigo, would have met a terrible demise." "As a new mother myself, I immediately understood the profound bond between this mother cow and her calf, a bond all of us have with our babies,” said L.A. Animal Save founder Amy Jean Davis. Liberty and Indigo now live at Farm Sanctuary’s Acton location in northern LA County. Please credit Shaun Monson/LA Animal Save/MEGA. 21 Feb 2020 Pictured: Joaquin Phoenix rescues cow and calf. Photo credit: Shaun Monson/LA Animal Save/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA614871_011.jpg
  • This is the moment Oscar-winning actor Joaquin Phoenix saved a cow and its calf from a slaughterhouse. The Joker star was pictured with the animal in his arms, two days after he made a speech at the Academy Awards criticising the meat industry. He rescued Liberty and Indigo from a California abattoir when he teamed up with animal rights' group, Los Angeles Animal Save. Joaquin named the mother Liberty and her daughter Indigo. The cow gave birth in the holding area of Manning Beef in Pico Rivera, California. They are the fifth bovine mother and child rescued from Manning Beef by the grassroots group that holds peaceful vigils at area slaughterhouses. He said: "I never thought I’d find friendship in a slaughterhouse, but meeting Anthony [president/CEO of Manning Beef] and opening my heart to his, I realize we might have more in common than we do differences. Without his act of kindness, Liberty and her baby calf, Indigo, would have met a terrible demise." "As a new mother myself, I immediately understood the profound bond between this mother cow and her calf, a bond all of us have with our babies,” said L.A. Animal Save founder Amy Jean Davis. Liberty and Indigo now live at Farm Sanctuary’s Acton location in northern LA County. Please credit Shaun Monson/LA Animal Save/MEGA. 21 Feb 2020 Pictured: Joaquin Phoenix rescues cow and calf. Photo credit: Shaun Monson/LA Animal Save/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA614871_010.jpg
  • This is the moment Oscar-winning actor Joaquin Phoenix saved a cow and its calf from a slaughterhouse. The Joker star was pictured with the animal in his arms, two days after he made a speech at the Academy Awards criticising the meat industry. He rescued Liberty and Indigo from a California abattoir when he teamed up with animal rights' group, Los Angeles Animal Save. Joaquin named the mother Liberty and her daughter Indigo. The cow gave birth in the holding area of Manning Beef in Pico Rivera, California. They are the fifth bovine mother and child rescued from Manning Beef by the grassroots group that holds peaceful vigils at area slaughterhouses. He said: "I never thought I’d find friendship in a slaughterhouse, but meeting Anthony [president/CEO of Manning Beef] and opening my heart to his, I realize we might have more in common than we do differences. Without his act of kindness, Liberty and her baby calf, Indigo, would have met a terrible demise." "As a new mother myself, I immediately understood the profound bond between this mother cow and her calf, a bond all of us have with our babies,” said L.A. Animal Save founder Amy Jean Davis. Liberty and Indigo now live at Farm Sanctuary’s Acton location in northern LA County. Please credit Shaun Monson/LA Animal Save/MEGA. 21 Feb 2020 Pictured: Joaquin Phoenix rescues cow and calf. Photo credit: Shaun Monson/LA Animal Save/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA614871_006.jpg
  • This is the moment Oscar-winning actor Joaquin Phoenix saved a cow and its calf from a slaughterhouse. The Joker star was pictured with the animal in his arms, two days after he made a speech at the Academy Awards criticising the meat industry. He rescued Liberty and Indigo from a California abattoir when he teamed up with animal rights' group, Los Angeles Animal Save. Joaquin named the mother Liberty and her daughter Indigo. The cow gave birth in the holding area of Manning Beef in Pico Rivera, California. They are the fifth bovine mother and child rescued from Manning Beef by the grassroots group that holds peaceful vigils at area slaughterhouses. He said: "I never thought I’d find friendship in a slaughterhouse, but meeting Anthony [president/CEO of Manning Beef] and opening my heart to his, I realize we might have more in common than we do differences. Without his act of kindness, Liberty and her baby calf, Indigo, would have met a terrible demise." "As a new mother myself, I immediately understood the profound bond between this mother cow and her calf, a bond all of us have with our babies,” said L.A. Animal Save founder Amy Jean Davis. Liberty and Indigo now live at Farm Sanctuary’s Acton location in northern LA County. Please credit Shaun Monson/LA Animal Save/MEGA. 21 Feb 2020 Pictured: Joaquin Phoenix rescues cow and calf. Photo credit: Shaun Monson/LA Animal Save/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA614871_004.jpg
  • This is the moment Oscar-winning actor Joaquin Phoenix saved a cow and its calf from a slaughterhouse. The Joker star was pictured with the animal in his arms, two days after he made a speech at the Academy Awards criticising the meat industry. He rescued Liberty and Indigo from a California abattoir when he teamed up with animal rights' group, Los Angeles Animal Save. Joaquin named the mother Liberty and her daughter Indigo. The cow gave birth in the holding area of Manning Beef in Pico Rivera, California. They are the fifth bovine mother and child rescued from Manning Beef by the grassroots group that holds peaceful vigils at area slaughterhouses. He said: "I never thought I’d find friendship in a slaughterhouse, but meeting Anthony [president/CEO of Manning Beef] and opening my heart to his, I realize we might have more in common than we do differences. Without his act of kindness, Liberty and her baby calf, Indigo, would have met a terrible demise." "As a new mother myself, I immediately understood the profound bond between this mother cow and her calf, a bond all of us have with our babies,” said L.A. Animal Save founder Amy Jean Davis. Liberty and Indigo now live at Farm Sanctuary’s Acton location in northern LA County. Please credit Shaun Monson/LA Animal Save/MEGA. 21 Feb 2020 Pictured: "Run to the rescue with love and peace will follow" quote by River Phoenix. Photo credit: Shaun Monson/LA Animal Save/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA614871_012.jpg
  • This is the moment Oscar-winning actor Joaquin Phoenix saved a cow and its calf from a slaughterhouse. The Joker star was pictured with the animal in his arms, two days after he made a speech at the Academy Awards criticising the meat industry. He rescued Liberty and Indigo from a California abattoir when he teamed up with animal rights' group, Los Angeles Animal Save. Joaquin named the mother Liberty and her daughter Indigo. The cow gave birth in the holding area of Manning Beef in Pico Rivera, California. They are the fifth bovine mother and child rescued from Manning Beef by the grassroots group that holds peaceful vigils at area slaughterhouses. He said: "I never thought I’d find friendship in a slaughterhouse, but meeting Anthony [president/CEO of Manning Beef] and opening my heart to his, I realize we might have more in common than we do differences. Without his act of kindness, Liberty and her baby calf, Indigo, would have met a terrible demise." "As a new mother myself, I immediately understood the profound bond between this mother cow and her calf, a bond all of us have with our babies,” said L.A. Animal Save founder Amy Jean Davis. Liberty and Indigo now live at Farm Sanctuary’s Acton location in northern LA County. Please credit Shaun Monson/LA Animal Save/MEGA. 21 Feb 2020 Pictured: Joaquin Phoenix rescues cow and calf. Photo credit: Shaun Monson/LA Animal Save/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA614871_007.jpg
  • This is the moment Oscar-winning actor Joaquin Phoenix saved a cow and its calf from a slaughterhouse. The Joker star was pictured with the animal in his arms, two days after he made a speech at the Academy Awards criticising the meat industry. He rescued Liberty and Indigo from a California abattoir when he teamed up with animal rights' group, Los Angeles Animal Save. Joaquin named the mother Liberty and her daughter Indigo. The cow gave birth in the holding area of Manning Beef in Pico Rivera, California. They are the fifth bovine mother and child rescued from Manning Beef by the grassroots group that holds peaceful vigils at area slaughterhouses. He said: "I never thought I’d find friendship in a slaughterhouse, but meeting Anthony [president/CEO of Manning Beef] and opening my heart to his, I realize we might have more in common than we do differences. Without his act of kindness, Liberty and her baby calf, Indigo, would have met a terrible demise." "As a new mother myself, I immediately understood the profound bond between this mother cow and her calf, a bond all of us have with our babies,” said L.A. Animal Save founder Amy Jean Davis. Liberty and Indigo now live at Farm Sanctuary’s Acton location in northern LA County. Please credit Shaun Monson/LA Animal Save/MEGA. 21 Feb 2020 Pictured: Joaquin Phoenix rescues cow and calf. Photo credit: Shaun Monson/LA Animal Save/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA614871_001.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: The Sperminator strikes again — this time donating his seed to an 18-year-old who lives in an East Harlem shelter. Her daughter, due July 12, will make it number 50 for the serial sperm donor. Ari Nagel, the 43-year-old CUNY math professor who donates his sperm to women across the globe for free, has racked up serious spawn this past year: 15 babies since last Father’s Day, bringing the grand total to 48. One woman is due to give birth in early July, followed by Kaienja Garrick, who lives in the East River Family Center, a family shelter with a shared bathroom and kitchen. “I think it’s a nice shelter. It’s probably nicer than my apartment,” Nagel told The Post, adding that he didn’t know how old Garrick was when she reached out to him last August. “I never asked her age — I try to help whoever asks,” he said. “I think Kai is more mature than I was at her age after everything she has been through.” **NO NEW YORK DAILY NEWS, NO NEW YORK TIMES, NO NEWSDAY**. 11 Jun 2019 Pictured: Kaienja Garrick. Photo credit: Stefano Giovannini @stefpix2 IG / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA446318_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: The Sperminator strikes again — this time donating his seed to an 18-year-old who lives in an East Harlem shelter. Her daughter, due July 12, will make it number 50 for the serial sperm donor. Ari Nagel, the 43-year-old CUNY math professor who donates his sperm to women across the globe for free, has racked up serious spawn this past year: 15 babies since last Father’s Day, bringing the grand total to 48. One woman is due to give birth in early July, followed by Kaienja Garrick, who lives in the East River Family Center, a family shelter with a shared bathroom and kitchen. “I think it’s a nice shelter. It’s probably nicer than my apartment,” Nagel told The Post, adding that he didn’t know how old Garrick was when she reached out to him last August. “I never asked her age — I try to help whoever asks,” he said. “I think Kai is more mature than I was at her age after everything she has been through.” **NO NEW YORK DAILY NEWS, NO NEW YORK TIMES, NO NEWSDAY**. 11 Jun 2019 Pictured: Kaienja Garrick. Photo credit: Stefano Giovannini @stefpix2 IG / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA446318_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: The Sperminator strikes again — this time donating his seed to an 18-year-old who lives in an East Harlem shelter. Her daughter, due July 12, will make it number 50 for the serial sperm donor. Ari Nagel, the 43-year-old CUNY math professor who donates his sperm to women across the globe for free, has racked up serious spawn this past year: 15 babies since last Father’s Day, bringing the grand total to 48. One woman is due to give birth in early July, followed by Kaienja Garrick, who lives in the East River Family Center, a family shelter with a shared bathroom and kitchen. “I think it’s a nice shelter. It’s probably nicer than my apartment,” Nagel told The Post, adding that he didn’t know how old Garrick was when she reached out to him last August. “I never asked her age — I try to help whoever asks,” he said. “I think Kai is more mature than I was at her age after everything she has been through.” **NO NEW YORK DAILY NEWS, NO NEW YORK TIMES, NO NEWSDAY**. 11 Jun 2019 Pictured: Kaienja Garrick. Photo credit: Stefano Giovannini @stefpix2 IG / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA446318_011.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: The Sperminator strikes again — this time donating his seed to an 18-year-old who lives in an East Harlem shelter. Her daughter, due July 12, will make it number 50 for the serial sperm donor. Ari Nagel, the 43-year-old CUNY math professor who donates his sperm to women across the globe for free, has racked up serious spawn this past year: 15 babies since last Father’s Day, bringing the grand total to 48. One woman is due to give birth in early July, followed by Kaienja Garrick, who lives in the East River Family Center, a family shelter with a shared bathroom and kitchen. “I think it’s a nice shelter. It’s probably nicer than my apartment,” Nagel told The Post, adding that he didn’t know how old Garrick was when she reached out to him last August. “I never asked her age — I try to help whoever asks,” he said. “I think Kai is more mature than I was at her age after everything she has been through.” **NO NEW YORK DAILY NEWS, NO NEW YORK TIMES, NO NEWSDAY**. 11 Jun 2019 Pictured: Kaienja Garrick. Photo credit: Stefano Giovannini @stefpix2 IG / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA446318_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: The Sperminator strikes again — this time donating his seed to an 18-year-old who lives in an East Harlem shelter. Her daughter, due July 12, will make it number 50 for the serial sperm donor. Ari Nagel, the 43-year-old CUNY math professor who donates his sperm to women across the globe for free, has racked up serious spawn this past year: 15 babies since last Father’s Day, bringing the grand total to 48. One woman is due to give birth in early July, followed by Kaienja Garrick, who lives in the East River Family Center, a family shelter with a shared bathroom and kitchen. “I think it’s a nice shelter. It’s probably nicer than my apartment,” Nagel told The Post, adding that he didn’t know how old Garrick was when she reached out to him last August. “I never asked her age — I try to help whoever asks,” he said. “I think Kai is more mature than I was at her age after everything she has been through.” **NO NEW YORK DAILY NEWS, NO NEW YORK TIMES, NO NEWSDAY**. 11 Jun 2019 Pictured: Kaienja Garrick. Photo credit: Stefano Giovannini @stefpix2 IG / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA446318_008.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: The Sperminator strikes again — this time donating his seed to an 18-year-old who lives in an East Harlem shelter. Her daughter, due July 12, will make it number 50 for the serial sperm donor. Ari Nagel, the 43-year-old CUNY math professor who donates his sperm to women across the globe for free, has racked up serious spawn this past year: 15 babies since last Father’s Day, bringing the grand total to 48. One woman is due to give birth in early July, followed by Kaienja Garrick, who lives in the East River Family Center, a family shelter with a shared bathroom and kitchen. “I think it’s a nice shelter. It’s probably nicer than my apartment,” Nagel told The Post, adding that he didn’t know how old Garrick was when she reached out to him last August. “I never asked her age — I try to help whoever asks,” he said. “I think Kai is more mature than I was at her age after everything she has been through.” **NO NEW YORK DAILY NEWS, NO NEW YORK TIMES, NO NEWSDAY**. 11 Jun 2019 Pictured: Kaienja Garrick. Photo credit: Stefano Giovannini @stefpix2 IG / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA446318_009.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: The Sperminator strikes again — this time donating his seed to an 18-year-old who lives in an East Harlem shelter. Her daughter, due July 12, will make it number 50 for the serial sperm donor. Ari Nagel, the 43-year-old CUNY math professor who donates his sperm to women across the globe for free, has racked up serious spawn this past year: 15 babies since last Father’s Day, bringing the grand total to 48. One woman is due to give birth in early July, followed by Kaienja Garrick, who lives in the East River Family Center, a family shelter with a shared bathroom and kitchen. “I think it’s a nice shelter. It’s probably nicer than my apartment,” Nagel told The Post, adding that he didn’t know how old Garrick was when she reached out to him last August. “I never asked her age — I try to help whoever asks,” he said. “I think Kai is more mature than I was at her age after everything she has been through.” **NO NEW YORK DAILY NEWS, NO NEW YORK TIMES, NO NEWSDAY**. 11 Jun 2019 Pictured: Kaienja Garrick. Photo credit: Stefano Giovannini @stefpix2 IG / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA446318_010.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: The Sperminator strikes again — this time donating his seed to an 18-year-old who lives in an East Harlem shelter. Her daughter, due July 12, will make it number 50 for the serial sperm donor. Ari Nagel, the 43-year-old CUNY math professor who donates his sperm to women across the globe for free, has racked up serious spawn this past year: 15 babies since last Father’s Day, bringing the grand total to 48. One woman is due to give birth in early July, followed by Kaienja Garrick, who lives in the East River Family Center, a family shelter with a shared bathroom and kitchen. “I think it’s a nice shelter. It’s probably nicer than my apartment,” Nagel told The Post, adding that he didn’t know how old Garrick was when she reached out to him last August. “I never asked her age — I try to help whoever asks,” he said. “I think Kai is more mature than I was at her age after everything she has been through.” **NO NEW YORK DAILY NEWS, NO NEW YORK TIMES, NO NEWSDAY**. 11 Jun 2019 Pictured: Kaienja Garrick. Photo credit: Stefano Giovannini @stefpix2 IG / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA446318_013.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: The Sperminator strikes again — this time donating his seed to an 18-year-old who lives in an East Harlem shelter. Her daughter, due July 12, will make it number 50 for the serial sperm donor. Ari Nagel, the 43-year-old CUNY math professor who donates his sperm to women across the globe for free, has racked up serious spawn this past year: 15 babies since last Father’s Day, bringing the grand total to 48. One woman is due to give birth in early July, followed by Kaienja Garrick, who lives in the East River Family Center, a family shelter with a shared bathroom and kitchen. “I think it’s a nice shelter. It’s probably nicer than my apartment,” Nagel told The Post, adding that he didn’t know how old Garrick was when she reached out to him last August. “I never asked her age — I try to help whoever asks,” he said. “I think Kai is more mature than I was at her age after everything she has been through.” **NO NEW YORK DAILY NEWS, NO NEW YORK TIMES, NO NEWSDAY**. 11 Jun 2019 Pictured: Kaienja Garrick. Photo credit: Stefano Giovannini @stefpix2 IG / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA446318_007.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: The Sperminator strikes again — this time donating his seed to an 18-year-old who lives in an East Harlem shelter. Her daughter, due July 12, will make it number 50 for the serial sperm donor. Ari Nagel, the 43-year-old CUNY math professor who donates his sperm to women across the globe for free, has racked up serious spawn this past year: 15 babies since last Father’s Day, bringing the grand total to 48. One woman is due to give birth in early July, followed by Kaienja Garrick, who lives in the East River Family Center, a family shelter with a shared bathroom and kitchen. “I think it’s a nice shelter. It’s probably nicer than my apartment,” Nagel told The Post, adding that he didn’t know how old Garrick was when she reached out to him last August. “I never asked her age — I try to help whoever asks,” he said. “I think Kai is more mature than I was at her age after everything she has been through.” **NO NEW YORK DAILY NEWS, NO NEW YORK TIMES, NO NEWSDAY**. 11 Jun 2019 Pictured: Kaienja Garrick. Photo credit: Stefano Giovannini @stefpix2 IG / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA446318_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: The Sperminator strikes again — this time donating his seed to an 18-year-old who lives in an East Harlem shelter. Her daughter, due July 12, will make it number 50 for the serial sperm donor. Ari Nagel, the 43-year-old CUNY math professor who donates his sperm to women across the globe for free, has racked up serious spawn this past year: 15 babies since last Father’s Day, bringing the grand total to 48. One woman is due to give birth in early July, followed by Kaienja Garrick, who lives in the East River Family Center, a family shelter with a shared bathroom and kitchen. “I think it’s a nice shelter. It’s probably nicer than my apartment,” Nagel told The Post, adding that he didn’t know how old Garrick was when she reached out to him last August. “I never asked her age — I try to help whoever asks,” he said. “I think Kai is more mature than I was at her age after everything she has been through.” **NO NEW YORK DAILY NEWS, NO NEW YORK TIMES, NO NEWSDAY**. 11 Jun 2019 Pictured: Kaienja Garrick. Photo credit: Stefano Giovannini @stefpix2 IG / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA446318_021.jpg
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