Santa Fe New Mexican

Doctor’s secret leads to special kinship

- By Sharon Cohen

ZIONSVILLE, Ind. — Matt White remembers the day in September 2016 when a mystery began to unravel that would change his life.

It started when White read a news report that Dr. Donald Cline, a retired Indianapol­is fertility specialist, faced charges for lying when he denied he’d inseminate­d unwitting patients with his sperm decades ago. He checked Cline’s address; it was the location of his mother’s former doctor. Then he found a photo online, and saw that he resembled Cline.

“It was just too similar to be coincident­al,” he says. White had long known he was a donor baby, but that day, he had an eerie feeling he was staring at the man who was likely his biological father.

Around the same time, Julie Harmon saw a TV news story about Cline. She’d discovered years earlier her blood type indicated she wasn’t the child of both her parents. She didn’t follow up then, but after watching the report, she says, “I knew something was wrong.”

The TV story featured Jacoba Ballard, whose mother, like Harmon’s, had been Cline’s patient. Harmon contacted Ballard, and they traded photos.

“I looked at pictures of her, and I knew,” Harmon says. “We even part our hair the same.”

These two women and White recently crowded into an Indianapol­is courtroom to hear Cline receive a oneyear suspended sentence for lying to investigat­ors when he denied wrongdoing; DNA tests determined he’s the biological father of Ballard and another woman whose mother was his patient. Cline apologized “for the pain my actions have caused” but didn’t specify how often he used his own sperm in procedures — court documents say he told Ballard about 50 times.

Cline’s sentencing, though, wasn’t the end of this story.

In an extraordin­ary epilogue, White, Harmon and Ballard have forged a kinship as they wrestle with the revelation about their identities. They’ve also reached out to 21 men and women, all in their 30s, who’ve been identified through DNA tests as half-siblings — evidence, they say, Cline is likely their father, as well.

Many stay in touch through a private Facebook page, and several gathered last fall for a cookout. Harmon and Ballard talk daily. Some prefer to remain private, but others have attended social outings and exchanged childhood photos — and confidence­s.

“I’ve shared personal stories that I haven’t shared with anyone but my wife,” White says. “You have almost this instant bond with people who are not only part of this horrible situation, but you can relate to them on an intimate level.”

White says they’ve joked about having a pool of possible bone marrow and transplant donors, but this DNA discovery has left emotional scars, too. For the three public faces of this unique club, it’s been a wrenching experience.

At Cline’s sentencing in December, Ballard told the judge “there has not been one part of my life that has not suffered.”

Her DNA match to Cline was 99.9997 percent, court records show.

In 2014, Ballard, who knew she was a donor child, had become curious about her family history and thought she might be able to find some siblings. She took a DNA test from 23andMe, a biotech company that uses saliva samples to determine ancestry and identify distant and close relatives, health risks and physical traits.

Ballard’s results listed seven halfsiblin­gs. She and two others assembled a family tree and realized their mothers had been Cline’s patients.

Ballard and a group of the halfsiblin­gs met with Cline, and she says he told conflictin­g stories, finally saying he’d donated sperm about 50 times to help unknowing patients who desperatel­y wanted children. Ballard and a woman who DNA tests determined is a half-sister filed complaints with the Indiana attorney general’s office. Cline at first denied he’d been a donor but later pleaded guilty to obstructio­n of justice. “I was foolish in my actions, and I should not have lied,” he said at his sentencing.

Harmon, who was linked to Ballard through a 23andMe test, always believed she had a biological bond with her father. “Then, 35 years later, for that to be ripped away from you … I’ve lost my entire identity,” she says. Her mother, Dianna Kiesler, says that based on discussion­s with Cline, she thought her husband was her donor and she was able to conceive with the help of drugs Cline prescribed.

Harmon says whenever she receives an online notificati­on that a DNA test has identified another half-sibling, she, Ballard or White will check Facebook for mutual friends who can explain the situation. Otherwise, one of the three will try. “Most of these people who are taking these tests have no idea that they have just opened up Pandora’s box,” she says.

Some prefer no further contact, but Harmon has befriended others.

“I consider all of them my brothers and sisters,” she says.

White, who was also linked to the two women by DNA tests, clicked instantly with another half-sister who was a 99.998 DNA match to Cline. At their first meeting, they talked for five hours.

White says he’s opened up with his new half-siblings, even discussing his own infertilit­y. His two children were conceived through in vitro fertilizat­ion. “I’ve pretty much given up all my life’s secrets,” he says.

With DNA tests becoming more popular, White believes their group will grow.

“To think we’ve found all of us in a two-year period?” he asks. “That’s not likely. There’s got to be many more children out there.”

 ?? COURTESY MATT WHITE ?? Jacoba Ballard, from left, Matt White and Julie Harmon have reached out to 21 other men and women, all in their 30s, who’ve been linked through DNA tests as their half-siblings, which they claim is evidence that former fertility doctor Donald Cline is...
COURTESY MATT WHITE Jacoba Ballard, from left, Matt White and Julie Harmon have reached out to 21 other men and women, all in their 30s, who’ve been linked through DNA tests as their half-siblings, which they claim is evidence that former fertility doctor Donald Cline is...

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