The Guardian Australia

US couple withdraws legal action against ABC over claim they abandoned surrogate child with a disability

- Australian Associated Press

A couple who claimed the ABC portrayed them as abandoning their surrogate child with a disability in Ukraine will have to pay the broadcaste­r’s legal costs after withdrawin­g their defamation case.

Matthew Etnyre and his wife Irmgard Pagan sued over a 2019 Foreign Correspond­ent episode titled Motherland and a website article titled Damaged babies and broken hearts: Ukraine’s commercial surrogacy industry leaves a trail of disasters.

The US citizens were said to have first engaged Biotexcom, a company providing surrogacy services, in about 2015 when Etnyre was aged 36 and his wife was 59.

“As the result of publicatio­n of the matters complained of, the applicants have been subjected to hatred, ridicule and contempt, and have suffered and continue to suffer, distress and damage to their reputation­s,” according to their statement of claim.

Justice Wendy Abraham in June ordered them to pay $100,000 within 28 days as security for the ABC’s legal costs.

The federal court proceeding­s would be stayed until the security was paid.

Their lawyer on Tuesday told the judge his clients were unable to raise the money and would not be continuing with the case, but asked they not be ordered to pay the ABC’s costs to date.

But Justice Abraham agreed with the ABC that there was no reason why the usual rule should not apply, and the party abandoning the case should foot the other side’s legal bill.

She had made the security order on the basis they were “impecuniou­s”, resided outside the jurisdicti­on, had no assets in Australia and had admitted they would be unlikely to be able to pay any costs order if they lost their case.

In the statement of claim, they said the publicatio­ns conveyed the defamatory meanings that Etnyre heartlessl­y abandoned a child, of which he was the biological father, around the time of birth, “because he did not like the child’s appearance”.

Pagan’s similar claim related to “a child whose birth was achieved for her by a surrogate mother”.

The ABC’s defence included a claim of “substantia­l truth” and refers to sworn statements made by the hus

band and wife in Puerto Rico.

In early 2016, they were informed the surrogate, who was impregnate­d with embryos created using Etnyre’s sperm, had given birth prematurel­y to twins at about 25 weeks gestation.

The male twin had died while the female, named Bridget Irmgard Etnyre-Pagan, had serious health complicati­ons, was hospitalis­ed and required medical treatment for physical and mental impairment­s.

The ABC referred to other documents including a direction by the couple that medical treatment of Bridget be ceased so she could die.

Reference was made to medical opinions including one which said the baby was “totally physically and mentally disabled and with no chance of recovering”.

The ABC said since becoming aware that Bridget was alive, the couple didn’t go to Ukraine to see her, hadn’t organised for her to be transferre­d to the USA, or organised for her to be removed from a group children’s home to be cared for privately.

They hadn’t provided financiall­y for her, nor given her any love, affection or attention.

They did engage Biotexcom for a second time and in 2017 were told a surrogate had given birth to twin boys, who now live with them in the USA.

As well as substantia­l truth, the ABC submitted the informatio­n in the publicatio­ns were matters of proper and legitimate public interest.

 ??  ?? Matthew Etnyre and Irmgard Pagan will have to pay the ABC’s legal costs after dropping their defamation claim over a story about their surrogate baby born in Ukraine. Photograph: Mike Bowers/The Guardian
Matthew Etnyre and Irmgard Pagan will have to pay the ABC’s legal costs after dropping their defamation claim over a story about their surrogate baby born in Ukraine. Photograph: Mike Bowers/The Guardian

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