A deeply emotional fertility case in the United States is now entering a new and uncertain phase, after a Florida couple discovered the biological parents of the baby they unknowingly carried and raised.
The case has drawn widespread attention, not just for the rare medical error involved, but for the complex human and legal questions it now raises about parenthood, identity, and custody.
A life-changing mistake inside a fertility clinic
Tiffany Score and her husband Steven Mills had spent five years trying to have a child. Their journey finally seemed complete when their daughter was born in December 2025 following IVF treatment.
But what should have been a moment of joy quickly turned into a legal and emotional ordeal.
The couple later discovered that the embryo implanted during treatment in March 2025 did not belong to them. Instead, it belonged to another couple, meaning the child they carried had no genetic link to them.
The revelation led to a lawsuit against the fertility clinic, IVF Life Inc., citing severe emotional trauma and negligence.
Biological parents identified after months of uncertainty
Earlier this month, genetic testing confirmed that the baby was of 100% South Asian origin, which helped narrow down potential biological parents.
The clinic reportedly reviewed multiple cases and identified 16 possible matches based on treatment timelines.
Now, a confirmed match has been established with one couple, although their identity remains confidential.
The situation has raised a pressing question that remains unanswered: will the biological parents seek custody?
The outcome could redefine the lives of everyone involved.
An emotional bond that complicates everything
Despite the genetic mismatch, Score and Mills have raised the baby since birth and describe their bond as “extremely strong.”
They have publicly stated that they will always love and consider themselves the child’s parents, regardless of what legal decisions follow.
At the same time, they live with the constant fear that the child could be taken from them.
This kind of case sits at the intersection of medicine, law, and human emotion, where traditional definitions of parenthood are challenged by real-life experiences.
Missing embryos and growing legal pressure
Adding to the uncertainty, the couple still does not know what happened to their own embryos.
There is concern that their biological child could exist somewhere else, unknowingly raised by another family.
Legal proceedings are ongoing, with the couple seeking compensation for both financial losses and long-term emotional distress.
According to reporting from People, their legal team is now focusing on accountability and ensuring such incidents do not happen again.
A clinic closure that raises further questions
In a move that has drawn further scrutiny, the Orlando-based clinic involved in the case has announced it will close on May 20.
Patients have been advised to transfer their care to another provider, leaving unanswered questions about oversight and responsibility.
The closure does little to resolve the emotional turmoil faced by families affected by the error.
As the legal case unfolds, it highlights the risks tied to assisted reproductive technologies and the need for stricter safeguards in fertility clinics.
For now, the future of the child remains uncertain, caught between biology and the powerful reality of the family that has raised her since birth.














