Angie Collins opened her laptop one evening in June 2014 to a Facebook
message she says “made her heart sink like a lead ball into my stomach.”
It was from a woman in the United States who had used the same sperm
donor as she had to get pregnant. They knew each other from an online
forum that connects donor-conceived families.
Chris Aggeles, a now 39-year-old man from Georgia had the perfect sperm
bank profile. His profile on the sperm bank website claimed that he was
working on a PhD in neuroscience engineering en route to becoming a
professor of biomedical robotics at a medical school. The website also
calimed he perfect health.
The woman wrote to Collins that she had learned some unsettling
information about their supposedly anonymous donor. He was not the
healthy man advertised on his sperm-bank profile. She had discovered he
has schizophrenia, a serious mental illness that he has had for much of
his adult life. In addition to schizophrenia, court documents show he
has had diagnoses of bipolar and narcissistic personality disorders, and
has described himself as having schizoaffective disorder. He also has
colour blindness on his dad’s side, dropped out of college, struggled in
the past to hold down jobs. and has a lengthy prison record among other
problems.
Collins, mother of a then 6-year-old son, and other moms who used the
donor’s sperm frantically took to the Internet in search of information
they hoped would disprove the revelation.
Instead, “it just kept getting worse and worse,” she recounts in her
first exclusive interview since her case made headlines around the world
a year ago.
A lawyer representing the women who used Aggeles' sperm said he sold his
sperm to Xytex between 2000 and 2014, she says, adding that some was
stored and made available for use after that time.
Collins, a 45-year-old teacher from this quiet town east of Toronto,
says she felt physically ill when she was hit with the realization her
“son’s life could just turn on a dime in puberty.”
“It was like a dream turned nightmare in an instant,” she says.
As early as this week, she and her partner, Beth Hanson, intend to file a lawsuit against Xytex from Toronto, Hersh says, noting they have retained local legal counsel. More Canadian families may join the legal action.
As well, Hersh says she intends to file additional lawsuits in the
United States on behalf of affected American and British families within
the next two months.
In a recent email, Xytex lawyer Ted Lavender says the company has been
in compliance with industry standards. Xytex will “vigorously defend”
itself against any new lawsuits and seek to have them dismissed, he
writes, adding that he has no further comment at this time.
Sperm donor with 36 children who had the 'perfect profile' discovered to be a fraud
4/
5
Oleh
healthandwealth