Skip to main content

Uncovered True Crime and holocaust stories

Inside the story and Struggle of Lydia Fairchild

Lydia Fairchild was pregnant with her third child when her husband left her with her two children.


In 2002, she applied for enhanced child support in Washington where a shocking discovery was made; a requested DNA test showed she was not the biological mother of her children. She was arrested for fraud, trying to use other people’s children to obtain financial benefits.

Images: Lydia Fairchild

As she was about to give birth to her third child, the judge ordered that an observer be present during the delivery. The new DNA test showed Fairchild was not the biological mother of her third child either. She had a rare case of Chimerism.

Chimerism occurs when two fertilized eggs fuse together in the womb, resulting in a single individual with two sets of DNA. In Lydia’s case, her children had inherited DNA from both their biological father and Lydia’s own twin sister, who had fused with Lydia in the womb.


Inside the story and Struggle of Lydia Fairchild

In 2002, after applying for government assistance in the state of Washington, Lydia Fairchild was told that her two children were not a genetic match with her and that therefore, biologically, she could not be their mother. Researchers later determined that the genetic mismatch was due to chimerism, a condition in which two genetically distinct cell lines are present in one body. The state accused Fairchild of fraud and filed a lawsuit against her. Following evidence from another case of chimerism documented in The New England Journal of Medicine in a woman named Karen Keegan, Fairchild was able to secure legal counsel and establish evidence of her biological maternity. A cervical swab eventually revealed Fairchild’s second distinct cell line, showing that she had not genetically matched her children because she was a chimera. Fairchild’s case was one of the first public accounts of chimerism and has been used as an example in subsequent discussions about the validity and reliability of DNA evidence in legal proceedings within the United States.

Chimeras are organisms that have two different sets of DNA, or the genetic material that contains instructions for the development and functioning of an organism, present in their bodies. Most organisms only have one set of DNA, which is present and identical in every cell throughout that organism’s body. An organism gets approximately half of its DNA from each of its parents’ gametes, or their sperm and egg cells, which carry DNA from parent to offspring. In human reproduction, one sperm typically fuses with one egg to create a fertilized egg that can develop into a fetus. However, sometimes the ovaries, which are organs in the female body that produce and store eggs, release more than one egg at a time, a phenomenon known as hyperovulation. In such cases, two different sperm can fertilize two separate eggs released during hyperovulation, creating two genetically distinct fertilized eggs that can develop into non-identical twins. However, in some cases, those two fertilized eggs may fuse together during an early stage of development, resulting in a chimera made of two genetically distinct cell lines. As a consequence, instead of having cells with identical DNA throughout their body, a chimera has different DNA present in different parts of their body so that the DNA in their blood, for example, may not be the same as the DNA in their saliva.

Human chimerism is rare but is typically marked by certain characteristics, such as two distinct red blood cell lineages or patchy skin pigmentation, though neither Fairchild nor Keegan exhibited those traits showing obvious signs of chimerism. In Keegan’s case, her two different sets of DNA were found in cells throughout her body. But in other chimeras, there is a dominant set of DNA in the body, with the other set only present in certain tissues. Fairchild matched that pattern, having one set of DNA throughout most of the cells in her body, and another distinct set of DNA in her cervical tissue. Documented cases of chimerism in humans like Fairchild and Keegan are rare, and the actual incidence rate is unknown. Some researchers speculate that chimerism in humans occurs as often as instances of fraternal, or non-identical, twins. The rate of fraternal twins has been steadily increasing due to rising use of assisted reproductive technologies and fertility treatments.

Prior to 2002, Fairchild had no indication that she might be a chimera. After separating from her children’s father, Fairchild applied for state assistance, a process that required both paternity and maternity tests. As part of the application, both she and Jamie Townsend, her then-estranged partner and her children’s father, had to submit DNA samples in the forms of cheek swabs to establish the maternity and paternity results for the children. According to a documentary produced on Fairchild’s case, “The Twin Inside Me,” a social worker called Fairchild to come to her office after obtaining the maternity test results. During that visit, the social worker and a legal representative confronted Fairchild with DNA evidence that her children were not biologically related to her. They asserted she was committing welfare fraud by lying about her relationship with her children.

In Fairchild’s case, DNA analysis found no match between her and her children’s DNA, although there was a clear match between the children and their father, Jamie Townsend. The prosecutor’s office in the state of Washington took over Fairchild’s case suspecting welfare fraud. Initially, the prosecutor’s office ordered that the family receive three separate cheek swab DNA tests to account for lab error. Each time, the results indicated that Fairchild was not the biological mother of the two children. Although she was able to produce photographs of her with her children throughout their lives, the prosecutor’s office continued to allege that she was not being truthful about the origin of her pregnancies, and that because she had claimed her children as dependents on her application for benefits, doing so constituted welfare fraud.

In 2002, Fairchild was at the end of her third pregnancy with Townsend. Fairchild states in “The Twin Inside Me” that the prosecutor’s office threatened her with a lie detector test, something Fairchild stated she would undergo if it meant proving her children were hers. Rather than sending Fairchild for a lie detector test, though, the prosecutor’s office sent her a court summons to determine Fairchild’s relationship with her children. According to the documentary, US courts at the time accepted DNA evidence as infallible, meaning it was seldom contested in a court of law. According to the documentary, other forms of evidence of Fairchild’s maternity, including photographs of Fairchild with her children throughout their lives, Townsend stating he had witnessed both children’s births, and footprint records taken from the children as neonates, were repeatedly dismissed. Fairchild states she could not convince a lawyer to represent her because they told her they would not win a case against DNA evidence.

When Fairchild went to court, she represented herself, bringing photos from her two previous pregnancies and pictures of her with her children as infants. The court suggested placing her two children in separate foster homes while the case was contested to monitor the children’s wellbeing, since officials assumed that Fairchild was being fraudulent about her relationship with the children. Fairchild appeared in court on a Friday. Her doctors were scheduled to induce labor of her third pregnancy the following Monday. Because of the induction date, Fairchild requested that the court postpone the case until after they tested the DNA of her third child. The judge then ordered a court officer to be present at the birth. That officer later witnessed the neonate being delivered from Fairchild’s body and watched as doctors drew blood from both Fairchild and the infant. After two weeks, the court received results that there was no genetic match between Fairchild and her infant. Although there had been a witness for the birth and blood samples, the judge maintained his statement that Fairchild was being deceitful about the pregnancies in some way. However, with the new evidence that an infant Fairchild had undeniably delivered did not match her DNA, a lawyer, Alan Tindell, agreed to represent her. In the documentary, Tindell stated that the DNA evidence against Fairchild was odd enough that it intrigued him, convincing him to take the case.

As Tindell surveyed the evidence against Fairchild, he discovered the article “Disputed Maternity Leading to Identification of Tetragametic Chimerism,” published on 16 May 2002 in The New England Journal of Medicine, in which doctor Neng Yu and a team of researchers presented the case of Karen Keegan, a woman who had needed a kidney transplant. Keegan’s family members, including her husband and two of her three sons, submitted DNA to see if they would be a match to donate a kidney to her. After discovering Keegan’s two sons were not a genetic match for her, a group of researchers suggested chimerism as the potential explanation. Those researchers then tested Keegan’s third son, who had not originally been tested because he was a child at the time and would be unable to donate a kidney. After testing Keegan’s son, the researchers discovered that he was a genetic match to Keegan. The research team then received a grant from the National Institutes of Health to further study Keegan and her family, and found that Keegan had evidence of two distinct sets of DNA throughout her body. In “The Twin Inside Me,” researchers speculate that Keegan and Fairchild were both chimeras, resulting from the fusion of two independently fertilized eggs at a very early stage of development.

The researchers, led by Yu, published the results they found with Keegan’s case in 2002, the same year that Fairchild’s investigation began. According to the documentary, that evidence was crucial in the court determining that Fairchild could also be a human chimera. After taking hair, cheek, skin, and blood samples from Fairchild’s body, the court-appointed lab technicians could only find one DNA lineage. However, once they took a sample from Fairchild’s cervix, the narrow tube that connects the vagina to the uterus, they finally found a second DNA lineage that matched those of her children. Once Fairchild’s mother submitted her DNA in comparison, matching as the maternal grandmother of the children, the judge dismissed the case, admitting he was wrong. In the documentary, Townsend, the father of the three children, states that if the third infant had not exhibited the same contradictory DNA results, he believes that the couple would have lost their children permanently.

Fairchild’s case prompted new concerns about the reliability of DNA evidence in the United States legal system. In the documentary, Fairchild’s lawyer, Tindell, suggested that DNA may not be as infallible as previously thought. Fairchild’s case showed that DNA evidence could actually lead to an incorrect conclusion, which in her case was that Fairchild was not the mother of her children. In 2012, Sheldon Krimsky, policy professor at Tufts University in Medford, Massachusetts, and Tania Simoncelli, who at the time of publication worked as Senior Advisor in the Office of the Commissioner of the US Food and Drug Administration, published the book Genetic Justice: DNA Databanks, Criminal Investigations, and Civil Liberties, in which they stated that human chimerism could potentially upend the US court system’s reliance on DNA evidence, citing Fairchild and Keegan as case studies. The use of DNA in courts relies on the belief that there is a direct connection between a DNA sample and the person it is taken from. But Fairchild and Keegan, as human chimeras, show that DNA may not always accurately identify an individual or biological relationships. Krimsky and Simoncelli also stated that potentially every human being could exhibit some trait of chimerism, which they claim may impact the way that forensic scientists collect and utilize DNA in crime scene investigations.

In response to that book, legal professor David H. Kaye published the article, “Chimeric Criminals,” in the Minnesota Journal of Law, Science, and Technology in 2013, in which he asserts the basis of Krimsky and Simoncelli’s book was completely unfounded. Kaye acknowledges that human chimerism should be a consideration in DNA testing, given its unknown frequency, but rejects the statement that it is a significant obstacle to its use in forensic investigation. Kaye states that Krimsky and Simoncelli’s point that any human could display some trait of chimerism is only true because there are numerous ways someone could be considered a chimera. One is maternal-fetal microchimerism, a phenomenon that occurs during typical human gestation involving a transfer of cells between the fetus and pregnant woman. Since every human undergoes gestation, every developing fetus would have some cells from its gestational carrier in addition to its own cells, technically making it a chimera. However, Kaye states that those forms of chimerism would not affect how DNA is left in crime scenes. Kaye also asserts that chimerism in the cases of Fairchild and Keegan are the exception and should not change how the public views DNA evidence. That is due to the fact that Fairchild and Keegan exhibit two DNA lines only in very specific areas of their bodies, and only at a microscopic level.

The Fairchild case of chimerism prompted many questions about the reliance on DNA evidence in the US justice system and how common chimerism might be in the general population. The documentary “The Twin Inside Me,” which first aired in 2006, documents a firsthand account from Fairchild and her family. It examines the extent of the legal and biological questions raised by an example of legal guardianship being threatened by genetic evidence in the case of a chimeric woman.

Get the best deals here!

Comments

Uncovered True Crime and Holocaust story's

Popular posts from this blog

The Nazi party girls of Auschwitz: SS women romanced and caroused with death camp guard lovers as they oversaw the murder of thousands of Jews - before paying the ultimate price on the gallows

The biographies of over 200 SS women serving at Auschwitz death camp and their 'after work parties' have been published online in an effort to show the world that it wasn't just men involved. Entitled 'Women working for the SS', the project from the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum documents the women's lives from birth and how they ended up serving Adolf Hitler. One of the women was Maria Mandl, a senior SS guard in Auschwitz from October 1942 to October 1944 who was nicknamed 'The Beast' by prisoners Born in 1912 the daughter of a shoemaker, she first started work in a Nazi concentration camp in Lichtenburg  Germany  in 1938 before being transferred to the camp for women in Ravensbruk, also in Germany. In 1942 she was sent to Auschwitz where she became infamous for her sadism and sending 'an estimated half a million women and children to their deaths in the gas chambers.' In 1942 she was sent to Auschwitz where she became infamous for her sadism...

A group of prisoners documented the medical experimentations that German doctors were performing on them.

This photo was taken secretly inside the Ravensbrück concentration camp. A group of prisoners documented the medical experimentations that German doctors were performing on them. Joanna Szydłowska traded her bread to another prisoner for a camera. She was one of 74 Polish women subjected to cruel experiments, including unnecessary surgeries.  Doctors cut open some women's legs and intentionally infected them to try to simulate battlefield wounds. Some of the women were given no medication when they became desperately ill. Ravensbrück was liberated on this day in 1945 after most prisoners had been evacuated from the camp. Some of the experimentation victims testified at trials after the war. The photos they took were part of the evidence. Continue reading  #OTD #OnThisDayinHistory #Holocaust

Fugitive drug lord 'Taliban' who stole cartel's 450lb cocaine shipment is tossed ALIVE into ocean with an anchor tied to his waist

Fugitive drug lord 'Taliban' who stole cartel's 450lb cocaine shipment is tossed ALIVE into ocean with an anchor tied to his waist This is the moment a fugitive Venezuelan drug trafficker known as Taliban is dumped alive in the ocean with his hands zip-tied and an anchor around his waist in revenge for stealing 450 pounds of cocaine - and cash - from a cartel. The footage, shared to social media, shows Fuentes staring at the person recording the video. He is then dumped overboard and left to drown.'.. read and watch the video  None of his kidnappers are identified but one is heard in the background of the video saying 'make sure none of our faces can be seen' and another later said 'he has no way to save himself'. Make money online: Paying sites and apps for making cash In an elaborate - and poorly thought out - ruse, Fuentes, a middleman for the Venezuelan Clan del Cartel, earlier had dumped a shipment of narcotics worth $10 million at s...

In the fall of 1944, ten-year-old Thomas Buergenthal found himself all alone in Auschwitz, destined for the gas chamber

In the fall of 1944, ten-year-old Thomas Buergenthal found himself all alone in Auschwitz, destined for the gas chamber. Thomas had already survived the Kielce ghetto and a forced labor camp by the time German authorities deported him and his parents to Auschwitz in August 1944. Typically, children were taken on arrival and murdered in the gas chambers, but, because there was no selection when Thomas and his family arrived there, he managed to survive. His mother was taken to the women's section of the camp, but Thomas and his father remained together. However, Thomas remained in grave danger. The SS guards regularly selected prisoners to be murdered in the gas chambers and as a child Thomas stood out. While he had survived a number of selections by hiding, this time, Thomas had been caught. "They saw me as a child, and they motioned me to go one way, and my father go the other way," Thomas remembered. "And that's the last I saw of ... my father." Thomas and...

In April 1981, the body of a young white woman was found in a ditch on Greenlee Road in Newton Township, Ohio

In April 1981, the body of a young white woman was found in a ditch on Greenlee Road in Newton Township, Ohio. She was wearing a buckskin poncho, so investigators called her the "Buckskin Girl." That same day, her body was examined. It was found that she had suffered serious injuries to her head and neck before being strangled to death about 48 hours before her body was found. Despite many years of hard work by investigators, the identity of the Buckskin Girl remained unknown for over 30 years. On April 9, 2018, the Miami Valley Regional Crime Laboratory announced that they had identified the woman as 21-year-old Marcia Lenore King from Little Rock, Arkansas. Marcia had last been seen by her family in 1980. Although she wasn’t officially reported missing, her family had kept searching for her. The identification was made possible by detailed DNA testing. Sadly, the person who caused her death has still not been found. Continue reading 

Outrage as video showing bullies beating schoolgirl, 14, and forcing her to strip naked in public goes viral

Outrage as video showing bullies beating schoolgirl, 14, and forcing her to strip naked in public goes viral Sick clip shows helpless teen taking her clothes off in broad daylight THIS is the shocking moment a helpless teen is forced to strip in public as her laughing tormentors beat her. An uncensored version of the sick video filmed in Bulgaria has gone viral on social media. It sees a girl, 14, dressed in denim shorts and a black top being humiliated in a busy residential complex in the capital Sofia. The girl, named in local media only by her initials A.G, is made to take her clothes off in broad daylight. One of her attackers can be heard saying: "Take off your clothes! Do you hear me?" She pleads with them to not make strip in public before one lunges at her and pushes her to the ground. The person who uploaded it to social media is said to be assisting police, naming two attackers as Laura and Paula and revealing that a male was filming. He is been ...

Julie Keefer’s constant cries put her family in danger. In the end, this may have saved her life.

Julie Keefer’s constant cries put her family in danger. In the end, this may have saved her life. After escaping the Lwów ghetto, Julie, her sister, Tola, and their family hid from the Nazis in a forest hideout for several months. Over time, the girls’ crying put the Jewish family at risk. Their grandfather made the painful decision to place two-year-old Julie and baby Tola with a friend. Soon after they were removed, the Germans discovered the hiding place in the woods and murdered everyone inside. Julie’s grandfather, who was away visiting the girls, was the only survivor. Julie never saw her parents again. During the chaos of the war, Julie and Tola were separated, and Tola was sent to a Catholic orphanage. After the Holocaust, Julie and her grandfather desperately searched for Tola but they were unable to locate the baby. Julie never lost hope of finding her sister. Despite all that she lost, Julie chose to share her story with visitors at our Museum. “For many, many years I did no...

MAN CUTS OFF FOOTBALLER’S GENITALS, SLITS THROAT OVER WHATSAPP PRANK

MAN CUTS OFF FOOTBALLER’S GENITALS, SLITS THROAT OVER WHATSAPP PRANK A footballer found dead with his genitals cut off was tortured and killed “in barbaric fashion” over a drunken  whatsapp prank, it is claimed. Daniel Corea's body body was found in the Brazilian city of Sao Jose dos Pinhais on Saturday, October 27. He had been castrated and his throat slit with such force that he was almost beheaded. The 24-year-old, who played for , had been at the 18th birthday party of Allana Brittes at a nightclub in Curitiba before he was killed. Three days later, Allana’s dad,  Junior, 39, confessed to killing Correa, telling police he had found the footballer trying to rape his wife Cristiana. On Monday, pictures emerged showing Correa in bed with a sleeping woman, thought to be Brittes’ wife. They had been sent by the footballer to his friends on WhatsApp in his final hours. Police said the pictures were most likely taken as part of an “immature stunt”. Sources added that Correa suffe...

Brunhilda had the worst death due to the way she was killed

Brunhilda had the worst death due to the way she was killed Brunhilda of Austrasia Bruhilda was a Gothic Princess in the Early middle ages who married the King of Austrasia while her sister Galswintha married Chilperic I of Nesutria Brunhilda (c. 534 – 613)[1] was a Visigoth princess. Her father was King Athanagild of Spain. She married King Sigebert I of Austrasia. She ruled the eastern kingdoms of Austrasia and Burgundy in the names of her sons and grandsons. At first she was known as a fair and just ruler. She later became known for her cruelty and vengeful behavior. Before her arrival to the Frankish kingdoms, Brunhilda was an Arian Christian, but later converted to Roman Catholicism. Brunhilda traveled to Austrasia to marry King Sigebert I. King Sigebert I's half brother, King Chilperic I married Brunhilda's sister, Galswintha. However, Galswintha was not happy, and wanted to go home and take back her dowry. King Chilperic refused, and murdered her. King Chilperic remmarri...

“In Auschwitz, I never cried, and people around me never cried.”

“In Auschwitz, I never cried, and people around me never cried.” Irene Weiss was just a teenager when she learned to turn off her feelings in order to survive. When a Nazi officer selected Irene to perform forced labor at Auschwitz-Birkenau, it gave her a chance to survive that was denied to her mother and younger siblings, who were murdered upon arrival. She was assigned to a unit responsible for sorting through the stolen personal belongings of Jews. The storage barracks where she worked were next to one of Auschwitz's gas chambers. Irene often saw the faces of those unknowingly headed toward their deaths. Sometimes they would stop and talk to her. Other times, she heard their screams. “When we worked night shifts … this place was close enough to the train platform that you could hear in the night the whistle of the train and then you would hear the humming noise of large crowds. You could hear people in the distance. Within a few minutes or so the large column of young women, mo...