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BioEdge: Ms Surrogate Mother of 2002 passes away at 37 | BioEdge | Sunday, June 11, 2017 |

BioEdge: Ms Surrogate Mother of 2002 passes away at 37

| BioEdge | Sunday, June 11, 2017 |



Ms Surrogate Mother of 2002 passes away at 37
     
Michael Meehan, Brooke Verity, Thomas Dysarz
For a brief moment in 2002, 23-year-old Kentucky woman Brooke Verity Cochran was probably the world’s most famous surrogate mother. She had just given birth to quadruplets to a gay couple.

The four children, who now live in California, turn 15 next month. But their biological mother won’t be celebrating with them. She died suddenly in November of chronic drug abuse at the ripe old age of 37. The Lexington Herald-Leader has been following the story for years and has just published a sketch of her life. It is a sad story and it helps to explain why so few women who graduate from Harvard take up a career in surrogacy.

When Brooke was 4, her parents divorced. After a year with her mother, she moved in with her father. She became pregnant at 17, had a son, married the father, had twins, and then divorced.

A couple of years later, her hairdresser, Thomas Dysarz, and his partner, Michael Meehan, asked her if she would be interested in becoming a surrogate mother. She signed a contract in which she surrendered her parental rights and agreed to foetal reduction, if necessary.

After IVF with Meehan’s sperm, Brooke became pregnant with five babies. She and Meehan agreed to “reduce” one of them. Dysarz disagreed. Four babies were born prematurely on July 26, 2002.

And from there Brooke’s life started to go downhill.

She suffered from post-natal depression. Dysarz broke up with Meehan, alleging abuse. Meehan got custody of the quadruplets and Dysarz was denied visitation rights. Meehan moved back to California to escape Dysarz.

As for the children’s mother, she just wanted to be “Aunt Brooke” to them and felt miserable that she had been shut out of their lives.

Brooke had another surrogate child for Dysarz afterwards. After a while, he became ill and moved interstate, abandoning the child. She had full custody. In 2007 she married Scott Cochran, a maths teacher at a community college, who spent brief spells in jail for sexual misdemeanours in 2014 and 2016. The marriage was strained and Brooke was grieving over the quadruplets. Perhaps this explains why the mother of eight became another victim of America’s opioid epidemic.

Even after her death, the dominos are still falling. Dysarz and Cochran are locked in a custody battle over the son Brooke bore for him.

How about some longitudinal studies of the lives of surrogate mothers?

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Bioedge

Sunday, June 11, 2017

We may have over-egged today’s newsletter with stories about surrogacy, but they all appeared this week with a common theme: what about the mothers? The accepted wisdom is that most mothers are well compensated and give up the child happily.
Not always.
Take the case in England of a surrogate mother who has just been jailed for 22 weeks for stalking a judge and a court welfare officer. The terrified family court judge had awarded the child she bore to the commissioning gay couple even though Lian Harris had changed her mind and wanted to keep it.
Ms Harris snapped.
Over a year she harassed the judge, protested outside the house of politicians and lawyers, unfurled a banner on Westminister Cathedral saying “Family courts do evil”, attempted to fasten herself to the second-floor balcony of the social worker’s home, and tried to organised harassment on Facebook, amongst other stunts.
Not a happy camper.
Ms Harris is said to be an exceptional case. But how do we know? Where are the longitudinal studies to prove that surrogate mothers live happily ever after once they surrender the child they carried for nine months?


Michael Cook
Editor
BioEdge

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