I n a tank across town, suspended in liquid nitrogen at -320°F, float my leftover embryos, whose future is unknown to me.
"The unique nature of each human embryo means that an equal division cannot conveniently be made," writes a Virginia judge.
A Virginia judge this week ruled that embryos aren’t property in a lawsuit between two ex-spouses over their two IVF-produced ...
A judge in northern Virginia has dismissed the long-running case of a cancer survivor who sued her ex-husband for access to ...
A judge finds that Virginia law does not consider frozen embryos to be property that can be divided up in a partition lawsuit ...
Key Takeaways A Virginia judge ruled that frozen embryos are not property and cannot be divided like goods. The ...
A Virginia judge ruled that human embryos are not property, despite a court having previously ruled that embryos could be ...
Bugg goes on to suggest that there's no way that two embryos can be divided equally between two people because "the unique nature of each human embryo means that an equal division cannot ...
In 2019, Honeyhline Heidemann requested permission to use the two frozen embryos to have more children, something Jason Heidemann refused, saying it would violate his privacy and personal liberty ...
The former wife, Honeyhline Heidemann, sued Jason Heidemann over access to two embryos they froze during a 2015 cycle of in vitro fertilization but agreed to leave in storage during their divorce ...