Scottish Daily Mail

Boss who told woman: Don’t abort your baby – my wife and I will have him instead!

- By Steve Doughty Social Affairs Correspond­ent

A MIDDLE-CLASS couple risked prison when they adopted another woman’s baby and paid her nearly £5,000, a court was told.

The pair made the arrangemen­t after they learned that the pregnant woman and her husband had decided to have an abortion.

Under English law natural mothers can be paid only expenses by someone who hopes to become the parent of their child, and the payment of extra fees is a crime.

But social workers alerted the police after the money changed hands – putting the couple at risk of facing six months in jail or a fine of £10,000.

The court heard that the well-off couple had been trying unsuccessf­ully for five years to start a family before social workers admitted them to a course for potential adoptive parents in 2013.

A fortnight after they began the course, the husband was asked by a junior col - league if she could have time off work . The woman said she wanted to go to help an old friend who was undergoing an abortion. During the conversati­on, the husband told his colleague that he and his wife hoped to adopt a baby , and the woman decided to introduce her friend to her boss.

High Court judge Mr Justice Keehan said of the pregnant woman and her husband: ‘They felt that, given their financial circumstan­ces, they were not in a position to look after another child. Accordingl­y , they had come to the difficult and sad conclusion that she should undergo a terminatio­n.

‘When told that there were two people, a Sikh couple, who would be potential carers for their unborn child, they were delighted.

‘The father told me that termi - nating a pregnancy is the biggest sin and that it was far better that the child should be born and placed with a prosperous couple.’

The couple said that throughout the pregnancy in 2013 they paid the mother between £30 and £40 a month to cover food ‘and the like’.

But five days before the baby was born in January last year , the cou - ple visited the natural parents and were asked for a loan of £5,000. This, the court heard, was because the natural mother was in England only on a student visa and needed to satisfy the financial require - ments for a more permanent visa.

When social workers were told that £4,900 had been handed over , they reported the payments to police. However in a ruling pub - lished yesterday, Mr Justice K eehan said the adoption of the boy , who is 18 months old, could go ahead – as his upbringing so far had been ‘exemplary’.

The judge went on to say that he was satisfied the adoption had been ‘a sincere arrangemen­t and not a commercial arrangemen­t ’. And he said that while paying for a private adoption was a crime, ‘the ultimate considerat­ion for the court is the best interests of the child’.

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