Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

A documentar­y details the secrets of a once-renowned Las Vegas fertility doctor.

HBO’s ‘Baby God’ chronicles shocking story of Las Vegas fertility doctor

- By Christophe­r Lawrence |

LONGTIME Las Vegans will remember the name Dr. Quincy Fortier. For everyone else: Buckle up. This ride’s about to get wild. A renowned fertility doctor, Fortier began a general practice in Pioche in 1945, opened Women’s Hospital in Las Vegas in 1961, and was a pillar of the community for the next 35 years.

Unfortunat­ely for his reputation, Fortier lived 45 more years and spent the decade before his death in 2006 dogged by lawsuits alleging sexual abuse and that he impregnate­d patients with his sperm without their knowledge or consent.

Fortier’s dirty little secrets form the basis of the documentar­y “Baby God” (9 p.m. Wednesday, HBO).

“In the ’60s, it was, ‘Get married, have kids, everything’s gonna go nice for the rest of your life,’ ” Cathy Holm says in the film, directed by Hannah Olson.

She was 22, married, living in Las Vegas and having trouble conceiving.

Despite his medical expertise, the doctor surely never imagined the availabili­ty of inexpensiv­e home DNA test kits would further sully his reputation.

“Nobody had any solutions,” Holm says, “until I went to Dr. Fortier.”

Holm brought Fortier a sample of her husband’s sperm and, in 1966, she

gave birth to a daughter named Wendi.

“Then, over time,” she says in the documentar­y, “I would look at Wendi, and I’d think, ‘Gee, you know, it’s really funny that she doesn’t really resemble her father’s side of the family at all.’ ”

As Wendi got older, Holm remembers thinking it was odd that her daughter was gifted with so much intelligen­ce — more than either parent should have passed down. It was that intelligen­ce that would lead to Fortier’s further undoing.

It’s hard to overstate the doctor’s good standing in Nevada. Fortier was commander of a medical reserve unit at Nellis Air Force Base. He was instrument­al in the growth of Faith Lutheran Academy. In 1966, Fortier was elected to the Southern Nevada Memorial Hospital board of trustees alongside an up-and-comer named Harry Reid. In 1991, he was named Nevada Physician of the Year by the Nevada State Medical Associatio­n.

Then, in 1996, Fortier was sued by Mary Craddock, a former patient who said she thought she was being inseminate­d with her husband’s sperm during visits in 1974 and 1976. DNA tests later confirmed Fortier as the father of those two children, and a confidenti­al settlement was reached during the trial.

With the benefit of mod

ern hindsight, parts of Fortier’s past maybe should have raised some eyebrows. The doctor’s staunchest defenders in “Baby God,” his daughters Sonia and Nanette, discuss how he delivered them and then adopted them when Fortier was 55 and going through a divorce. They mention that Fortier circumcise­d himself and that he treated them as their gynecologi­st.

Despite his medical expertise, the doctor surely never imagined the availabili­ty of inexpensiv­e home DNA test kits would further sully his reputation. Yet that’s how Holm’s daughter, Wendi Babst, a former detective who’d embraced genealogy as a hobby during her retirement, learned Fortier

was her real father. Her investigat­ion, chronicled in the film, unearthed many

more half-siblings, born between the 1940s and 1980s, than she ever expected.

Asked how many siblings he thinks he has, Quincy Fortier Jr. says in the documentar­y, “Hundreds. Plural. Lots and lots. My father was real busy.”

One of those siblings is Mike Otis, who reveals to his 93-year-old mother, Dorothy, that Fortier was his biological father. Unlike his fertility patients, the former Pioche resident says she went to Fortier because she wasn’t feeling well and thought she was being treated for an infection.

“I wasn’t even looking to have a baby. I wasn’t wanting a baby at that time,” Dorothy Otis says. “You know, my life may have been altogether different.”

The revelation­s and allegation­s, including instances of child sexual abuse, only grow more horrible from there.

Several of Fortier’s secret offspring are interviewe­d in “Baby God.”

Over the years, they’ve wrestled with the reality of how they came to exist and how much of Fortier, from his genetics to his personalit­y, is present inside them.

“I struggle with whether or not I think he was a good person,” investigat­or Babst says. “Do you want to say that your father was a monster? And what does that say about you?”

 ?? HBO ?? When Wendi Babst bought a DNA kit to trace her genealogy, she learned Dr. Quincy Fortier, who helped her mother conceive, was her biological father.
HBO When Wendi Babst bought a DNA kit to trace her genealogy, she learned Dr. Quincy Fortier, who helped her mother conceive, was her biological father.
 ??  ?? The film “Baby God” chronicles the story of Quincy Fortier, a fertility doctor who impregnate­d patients using his sperm rather than that of their husbands.
The film “Baby God” chronicles the story of Quincy Fortier, a fertility doctor who impregnate­d patients using his sperm rather than that of their husbands.
 ?? Las Vegas Review-Journal file ?? Dr. Quincy Fortier leaves a Las Vegas courtroom in 1996 with his daughter Nanette after reaching a settlement. Fortier was sued by Mary Craddock, a former patient whose sons he fathered.
Las Vegas Review-Journal file Dr. Quincy Fortier leaves a Las Vegas courtroom in 1996 with his daughter Nanette after reaching a settlement. Fortier was sued by Mary Craddock, a former patient whose sons he fathered.
 ?? HBO ?? Cathy Holm with her daughter, Wendi, who would grow up to investigat­e her parentage, in “Baby God.”
HBO Cathy Holm with her daughter, Wendi, who would grow up to investigat­e her parentage, in “Baby God.”

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