Couple who alleges IVF clinic mixed up their embryos continue court battle to find child's parents

A judge ordered weekly hearings in a case involving a Florida couple who alleges that an IVF clinic gave them the wrong embryos, which they learned upon the birth of a baby girl last year.

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Tiffany Score and Steven Mills filed a lawsuit against the Fertility Center of Orlando last month, asking that the reproductive health clinic identify the biological parents of the baby Score gave birth to in December, according to the complaint filed last month. The couple is also asking for information on what happened to their own embryos and whether or not someone else gave birth to their biological child.

According to the January complaint, Score gave birth to a baby girl on Dec. 11, 2025, but it was immediately clear that the baby was unlikely to be related to the couple. Mills and Score are both "racially caucasian" while the baby had the appearance of a "racially non-caucasian child," the complaint said.

"Genetic testing also proved that the baby was not Mills and Score's biological child," according to the complaint.

The couple said that they developed a strong bond with the baby girl, but that they feel a moral and legal obligation to unite her with her biological parents.

Score and Mills also feel they deserve to be relieved of the "ever-increasing mental anguish of not knowing whether a child or children belonging to them are in someone else's care."

A motion filed last week requested an emergency hearing in the case, after the couple alleged that the fertility clinic failed to identify the baby's parents to them, and that a person contacted them to say they had an embryo transfer at the same time as Score did last year.

"This patient, acting on her own initiative in response to published media reports about this litigation, self-reported to Plaintiffs as someone who also had an embryo transfer on April 7, 2025, and who birthed a baby in December 2025," the motion said.

The woman, who was not identified, has a last name similar to the couple's, the motion said. Photos of her and her husband also allegedly show they have a similar physical appearance to the baby girl who Score birthed in December.

But the woman gave birth to a baby boy, and Score and Mills were under the belief their remaining embryos were girls, the motion said.

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The motion alleges that the clinic did provide the couple with a report, but that it only detailed the clinic's processes and did not include information on who else might have received their embryo or who the baby girl's parents might be.

Robert T. Terenzio, an attorney representing Fertility Center of Orlando, submitted a letter to the court outlining a proposed protocol for investigating the situation in order to protect the privacy of the patients.

Among the items on the list was having the clinic work on an internal investigation separate from updates to the court. It also suggested providing the court with operational facts and aggregate information that do not contain identifiable information openly, but only providing information that contains personal identifying information under appropriate safeguards, according to the letter filed with the court.

Terenzio did not immediately respond to NBC News' request for comment on the matter on Thursday.

The Fertility Center of Orlando told NBC News affiliate WESH that it was "actively cooperating with an investigation to support one of our patients."

"Multiple entities are involved in this process, and all parties are working diligently to help identify when and where the error may have occurred," the statement said. "Our priority remains transparency and the well-being of the patient and child involved."

Judge Margaret Schreiber ordered weekly status hearings in the case during an emergency relief hearing on Tuesday, according to the court minutes.

The clinic was ordered to provide a certification that the patients were contacted, as well as to advise the court on who has waived their confidentiality and who has not. A report on the confidentiality matter will be sent directly to the court 24 hours before the next hearing.

Attorneys representing Score and Mills did not immediately respond to an email from NBC News requesting comment on Thursday. The couple told WESH on Wednesday that, until this week's hearing, the clinic had not provided them with a timeline or any verifiable information in the case.

"Faced with the prospect of a court order at yesterday's hearing, the clinic has now promised cooperation, but that promise has not yet been fulfilled," they said. "We hope it will be."

Couple who alleges IVF clinic mixed up their embryos continue court battle to find child's parents

A judge ordered weekly hearings in a case involving a Florida couple who alleges that an IVF clinic gave them the wrong ...
Weekend nor'easter forecast to be a 'big storm.' But there's a catch

A snowstorm is coming, but its impacts to the East Coast still remain highly uncertain just a few days before the event.

USA TODAY

"An East Coast storm could develop as soon as Sunday Feb. 22, but the track of this potential nor'easter isn't yet determined, leaving impacts such as snow, rain, wind and coastal flooding uncertain from New England to the mid-Atlantic states," saidWeather.com meteorologist Jonathan Erdman in an online forecast.

Another forecaster, AccuWeather meteorologist Jon Porter, told USA TODAY Feb. 19 that "there's going to be a big storm, but it could be just off the Atlantic coast." He said a slight shift to the west will result in higher snow totals, but a slight shift to the east means lower snow totals.

Uncertainty isn't unusual

Porter said this level of uncertainty just a few days before a storm isn't unusual. "This is a pretty typical snow threat for the eastern U.S."

One reason for the uncertainty, he said, is that part of the energy that will fuel the storm is still off the California coast. He said once that energy comes onshore in the next day or so, it will be better sampled by the National Weather Service's balloon network. This will give better data for the computer weather models to digest.

"Small details will matter in determining the final outcome of the storm," he said.

<p style=Jose Castillo of Tarrytown, NY. walks through snow along Route 9 in Tarrytown during the early hours of the winter storm Jan. 25, 2026. The storm was predicted to drop up to a foot of snow on the lower Hudson Valley. A huge winter storm dumped heavy amounts of snow and ice across wide swaths of the U.S.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> Bobby Sanchez and his Granddaughter Faith Castro walk through the snow in Blauvelt, NY on Jan. 25, 2026. Pedestrians walk in the Old City as snow falls in Knoxville, Tenn., during a winter storm on Jan. 24, 2026. Despited being covered from the chilling cold, Keith Wilson, of Milwaukee, walks with frozen eyelashes down East State Street in Milwaukee on Jan. 23, 2026. The National Weather Service issued an extreme cold watch across Wisconsin with windchills between 30 and 40 below zero. Matthew Trecek, a Marquette University first year law student from Mission Hills Kansas, is bundled up from the cold as he makes his way to class down North 13th St. on campus in Milwaukee, Wisconsin on Jan. 23, 2026. The National Weather Service issued an extreme cold watch across Wisconsin with windchills between 30 and 40 below zero. Children are pushed down a snow-covered hill during a winter storm in Oklahoma City, Saturday, Jan. 24, 2026. The William Whitner statue decorated with scarves and blankets for those in need near the Anderson County Courthouse, as residents wake up to a scene of white winter mix in Anderson, SC on Sunday, Jan 25, 2026. Mark Anstaett of Clintonville cross country skis though Whetstone Park as Winter Storm Fern continues to dump snow on the Columbus, Ohio area on Jan. 25, 2026. Indiana Hoosiers braved the single digit cold weather to celebrate on Saturday, Jan. 24, 2026, during the Indiana Football College Football Playoff National Championship celebration and parade at Memorial Stadium in Bloomington. Thomas Beckers sleds down Linden Avenue with his sons, Anouk, 6, left, and Malu, 3, on Saturday, Jan. 24, 2026 in Nashville, Tenn. The storm is expected to bring snow, sleet, freezing temperatures and ice across multiple states this weekend. Indiana Hoosiers braved the single digit cold weather to celebrate on Saturday, Jan. 24, 2026, during the Indiana Football College Football Playoff National Championship celebration and parade at Memorial Stadium in Bloomington. Indiana Hoosiers braved the single digit cold weather to celebrate on Saturday, Jan. 24, 2026, during the Indiana Football College Football Playoff National Championship celebration and parade at Memorial Stadium in Bloomington. A student of Iowa State University shields his face from the cold while wearing for bus at a bus stop in the university campus in the extreme cold on Jan. 23, 2026, in Ames, Iowa. Postal carrier Seth Martinson delivers mail during a stretch of extreme cold weather on Friday, Jan. 23, 2026, in Appleton, Wisc. Yahaira Rojas, of Milwaukee, shields her face from the cold as she walks down North 10th Street in from of the Milwaukee County Courthouse in Milwaukee, Wisc. on Jan. 23, 2026. The National Weather Service issued an extreme cold watch across Wisconsin with windchills between 30 and 40 below zero.

See fun faces of people making the best of winter weather

Jose Castillo of Tarrytown, NY. walks throughsnowalong Route 9 in Tarrytown during the early hours of the winter storm Jan. 25, 2026. The storm was predicted to drop up to a foot of snow on the lower Hudson Valley. A huge winter storm dumped heavy amounts of snow and ice across wide swaths of the U.S.

Subtle changes in track mean drastic changes to impacts

Theweather service confirmswhat the private forecasters say: "There remains a strong potential for a coastal low by Sunday [Feb. 22] and early Monday [Feb. 23] for the East Coast, but the track of the low remains uncertain. A track closer to the coast would result in heavy coastal rain and inland snow from the Mid-Atlantic to New England, and strong winds near the coast with the potential for coastal flooding."

However, the weather service said a more offshore track would mean less inland precipitation and wind, and the heaviest precipitation near the Delmarva Peninsula and extending to eastern North Carolina.

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"Both scenarios remain equally plausible at this point, but potential remains for some possible impactful snow somewhere near the Mid-Atlantic to the Northeast. This will continue to be monitored closely as even subtle changes in track could mean more drastic changes to impacts," the weather service said in anonline forecast discussion.

A National Weather Service forecast issued on Feb. 19 for Feb. 21-22 shows the potential for rain, mixed precipitation or snow from Texas to New England.

A National Weather Service forecast issued on Feb. 19 for Saturday, Feb. 21, through Sunday, Feb. 22, shows the potential for rain, mixed precipitation or snow from Texas to New England. Meanwhile, forecasts for Monday, Feb. 23, show a chance of snow throughout the Northeast.

Dueling models

Two of the main weather models that forecasters use to predict weather − colloquially known as the American and the European models − can't seem to agree on the forecast. The American "GFS" model still shows a big storm for the big cities of the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast, with 2 to 3 feet or more of snowfall, which is "unbelievable," said Weather Trader meteorologist Ryan Maue in an email to USA TODAY.

However, he said the European (ECMWF) weather model "is still NOT interested in the coastal storm having major impacts to the Mid-Atlantic or the Northeast. We're currently in the 2 inches to 4 inches category as the highest probability outcome," according to the European model, Maue said.

AccuWeather agrees with the Euro model, and as of Feb. 19 is calling for 1-3 inches of snow in Philadelphia and New York City, and 2-4 inches in Boston.

The weather service, pointing out the differences between the models, summed it up this way: "This continues to be a low-confidence forecast at this time as it pertains to extent of wintry weather and coastal winds."

AccuWeather's Porter said "we'll know more in the next 24 hours."

Doyle Rice is a national correspondent for USA TODAY, with a focus on weather and climate.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Weekend nor'easter, snow storm in forecast, but there's a catch

Weekend nor'easter forecast to be a 'big storm.' But there's a catch

A snowstorm is coming, but its impacts to the East Coast still remain highly uncertain just a few days before the event....
Hailey Bieber Opens Up About the 'Mentally Exhausting' Battle of Dealing with Scrutiny in the Public Eye

Amy Sussman/Getty

People Hailey Bieber attends the WWD Style Awards Amy Sussman/Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • Hailey Bieber is revealing how she deals with scrutiny

  • The Rhode founder appeared on the Therapuss with Jake Shane podcast, where she opened up about the "mentally exhausting" battle of dealing with wide-scale scrutiny

  • Bieber talked about how she's learned to protect her peace with boundaries while also leaning back on her people-pleasing tendencies

Hailey Bieber's road to finding a healthy relationship with fame is ever evolving.

The mom and beauty mogul, 29, appeared on an episode of theTherapuss with Jake Shanepodcastreleased on Feb. 18 and opened up about dealing with the scrutiny of being in the public eye.

During the interview, the Rhode founder said it's "mentally exhausting" to appease everyone commenting on her life and that sometimes, it feels like, "what the f--- did I ever do to you? It's that times a millions of people. Then you get caught up in a cycle of constantly trying to prove yourself."

Hailey Bieber attends the Saint Laurent Spring/Summer 2026 show in Paris Pascal Le Segretain/Getty

Pascal Le Segretain/Getty

Bieber admitted that it's still a "struggle" to quiet her people-pleasing tendencies because she wants to be "understood." Over the years, however, she's learned that over-explaining herself gets her nowhere.

"I think it's so easy to misunderstand people and pick things apart, see a tiny sliver of such a bigger picture. I've realized there's no amount of explaining yourself," she said, adding, "It really doesn't make a difference at all."

That's all to say, it doesn't mean that the criticism doesn't "hurt any less," but Bieber has found solace in setting boundaries and protecting her peace. Besides, she's "happy and grateful" to have people around her who can "totally relate to" what she's feeling.

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Hailey Bieber attends the 'Vogue' Australia Summer Ball on Feb. 13, 2026 Brendon Thorne/Getty

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In the same episode, Bieber alsoopened up about motherhoodsince welcoming her little one, Jack Blues, now 16 months, with husbandJustin Bieber.

"It is so fun. I always knew I wanted kids; I always wanted to be a mom. And then when it happens, you never know what to expect, and you don't know what it's going to be like. And it honestly, it's so much fun."

When asked by host Jake Shane what is the "one thing" no one warned her about and she wasn't expecting, she replied, "It's a whole bunch of you just don't know what's going to happen until you get there. I think something that I feel did surprise me, though, was I feel like I'm a lot more relaxed as a mom than I thought I would be. I think especially as a first-time mom."

And she hopes that she can grow her family one day. "I definitely do want one more [kid]," she said, "I'm not in a rush, but I definitely want one more. Maybe I'll have four more. Maybe I'll have three. I don't know, I really don't know. I'm just taking it one day at a time."

Read the original article onPeople

Hailey Bieber Opens Up About the 'Mentally Exhausting' Battle of Dealing with Scrutiny in the Public Eye

Amy Sussman/Getty NEED TO KNOW Hailey Bieber is revealing how she deals with scrutiny The Rhode founder app...
FBI in touch with Mexico about Nancy Guthrie's disappearance, sources say

The FBI has been in touch with the Mexican government and Mexican law enforcement regarding the disappearance ofNancy Guthrie, the mother of "Today" show co-host Savannah Guthrie, law enforcement sources told CBS News.

CBS News

Authorities believe Nancy Guthrie, 84, was forcibly taken from her Tucson, Arizona, home in the middle of the night before she was reported missing Feb. 1. Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanostold CBS News partner network BBC Newsthis week that he believes Guthrie was targeted in the apparent abduction.

The FBI maintains dedicated border liaison agents stationed along the border who work directly with their Mexican law enforcement counterparts on these kinds of situations.

The FBI's legal attaché office in Mexico City serves as the bridge between FBI headquarters, the U.S. Embassy and Mexico's federal attorney general's office.

One source told CBS News the FBI suboffice most relevant to the Guthrie case is in Hermosillo, Sonora, the Mexican state that shares a border with Arizona. Tucson is about 60 miles from the Nogales crossing.

The U.S. State Department has issued aLevel 3 travel advisoryfor Sonora, which is one level beneath its most severe advisory. The State Department urges Americans to reconsider travel to the area, noting a risk of violence from terrorist groups, cartels, gangs and criminal organizations.

Hermosillo is roughly 170 miles intoMexicoon the other side of the border. When something happens in this geographic corridor, that is the suboffice that gets the call.

Nanos has said there's no indication Guthrie was taken into Mexico, but that doesn't necessarily mean that an investigation in the area has not been launched.

Attorney General of the State of Sonora Gustavo Rómulo Salas Chávez said Thursday, "We have no information to suggest that this person is in Mexican territory, specifically in Sonora."

Carlos Flores, the commissioner general of Mexico's Criminal Investigation Agency, said Thursday, "The FBI informed us that they currently have no leads to suggest that this person could be in Mexico."

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Nancy Guthrie poses with daughter Savannah Guthrie in an undated photograph. / Credit: Courtesy NBC/Today/Handout via Reuters

One source said border protocols are already in place for situations like this, whether or not there is a confirmed lead.

Meanwhile, the local organization Madres Buscadoras De Sonora (Searching Mothers of Sonora) told CBS News they were contacted by a Guthrie family member and asked to help in the search. The organization, which is well known in Sonora, posted amessage on social mediaasking for information about Guthrie's whereabouts.

A reward from the 88-CRIME tipline was increased on Wednesday to $102,500 — thanks to a $100,000 anonymousdonation, the organization said — for information leading to the arrest of the person or persons involved in Guthrie's disappearance. That reward is in addition to a $100,000 reward the FBI is offering.

According to Nanos, investigators havenot ruled outthat an accomplice aided the suspected kidnapper seen in doorbell camera video outside Nancy Guthrie's home the night of her disappearance.

The videorecovered from Guthrie's Google Nest doorbell camera, which was shared by the FBI last week, is the only footage that Google has been able to recover from the cameras at Guthrie's home, according to the Pima County Sheriff's Department. There are additional cameras from the property that engineers are still working through as they try to recover usable video. Investigators are hopeful that tech companies working on the videos will uncover more.

Savannah Guthrie, her two siblings and their spouses were allcleared as suspectsin the case, the sheriff's department announced Monday as the high-profile investigation entered its third week.

Nanos told BBC News the Guthrie family has cooperated with investigators.

"We really put them through the wringer," Nanos said. "We take their cars, we take their houses, we take their phones, all this stuff — and we're not taking it. They're giving it to us voluntarily. They have been 100% cooperative with us through everything we've asked. They are victims. They are not suspects."

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FBI in touch with Mexico about Nancy Guthrie's disappearance, sources say

The FBI has been in touch with the Mexican government and Mexican law enforcement regarding the disappearance ofNancy Gu...
FCC chairman says the agency is investigating ABC's 'The View' over equal time rule

The Federal Communications Commission is investigating ABC's "The View" over possible violations of the requirement that broadcast stations giveequal timeto political candidates when they appear on-air, according to the head of the agency that oversees U.S. broadcast airwaves.

Associated Press

"The FCC has an enforcement action underway on that," Chairman Brendan Carr told reporters after an agency meeting Wednesday, in response to a question about whether there were an investigation into the daytime series over potential violations of the "equal time" rule. "And we're taking a look at it."

James Talarico, a Democratic candidate for the Senate in Texas, appeared on "The View" on Feb. 2. U.S. Rep.Jasmine Crockett, who is running against Talarico for the nomination, has also been on the show.

The Trump administration has taken steps to clamp down on talk shows, which the FCC has suggested may be "motivated by partisan purposes." Earlier in the week, late-night host Stephen Colbert said CBS executives hadpulled an appearanceby Talarico on his program over fears it ran afoul of equal time provisions.

The FCC issuednew guidancein January to late-night and daytime hosts that they needed to give political candidates equal time. There are exceptions to the rule, including for newscasts, "bona fide" interview programs, and coverage of live events or documentaries. Carr has raised questions about the talk show exemption and whether it should stand.

"The FCC has not been presented with any evidence that the interview portion of any late night or daytime television talk show program on air presently would qualify for the bona fide news exemption," according to the agency's public notice last month.

Carr, a Trump appointee, suggested last year that investigating "The View," whose hosts have frequently been critical of the Republican president, might be "worthwhile."

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The FCC has not responded to a message seeking comment on "The View" or Colbert's show.

On Wednesday, Carr said watching the fallout from Colbert's characterization of what happened with Talarico "was probably one of the most fun days I've had in the job," adding that the candidate "took advantage" of media attention "apparently for the purpose of raising money and getting clicks."

Theequal time provision appliesonly to broadcast, not streaming or internet programs. Colbert later posted the Talarico interview to YouTube, where it's been viewed more than 7.5 million times — several times what the comic's CBS program draws each night.

Talarico reported that he had raised $2.5 million in campaign donations in the 24 hours after the Colbert interview.

A spokesperson for "The View" on Thursday declined to comment on Carr's statement.

CBS says Colbert was provided "legal guidance" that broadcasting the interview with Talarico could trigger the equal time rule. Colbertsaid on his show Tuesday nightthat while Carr said in January he was thinking about getting rid of the exemption for late-night talk shows, "CBS generously did it for him."

Meg Kinnard can be reached athttp://x.com/MegKinnardAP

FCC chairman says the agency is investigating ABC's 'The View' over equal time rule

The Federal Communications Commission is investigating ABC's "The View" over possible violations of the re...

 

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