Boston Herald

Take steps to avoid paternity fraud

- By ARMIN BROTT

I’m in the early stages of what is going to be a very contested divorce. One of the core issues is that my soon-to-be-ex-wife admitted that she’s been having an affair for the past four years. As if that weren’t bad enough, we have two children that were born during that time, and she’s pregnant with another.

I’m quite wealthy and she’s already demanding a lot of money for child support. I’m quite concerned, though, that some (or none) of the children are mine.

Is there anything I can do to protect myself?

I’m sorry to hear about your situation. Divorce is never easy, and, as you know from experience, it’s even tougher when you’ve been cheated on and children are involved.

The first thing you need to do is hire a lawyer. Then get DNA tests for you and the children. Your goal here is to avoid becoming a victim of what’s being called “paternity fraud.” This is when a mother knowingly lies about who the father of her child is for the purposes of monetary gain. In your case, you could be on the hook for 18 or more years of child support for a child or children who aren’t yours.

If the DNA tests show that you’re not, in fact, the father, ask your lawyer how to challenge paternity. Depending on where you live, you’ll typically have between six months and two years to do so. Don’t let that window of opportunit­y close.

The stories of paternity fraud range from the mildly amusing (men who were confirmed to have been sterile but were told that “their” children were theirs) to the tragic (men who, out of nowhere, get a bill for back child support for children they never knew they had — and who aren’t actually theirs — but because they missed the deadline to contest the court order they hadn’t known about, were neverthele­ss legally required to pay tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars in support).

You undoubtedl­y love the two children you’ve raised as your own and you may decide that you want to continue to be their father — with everything that entails, financial and otherwise — regardless of what a paternity test might show. This means that you’ll need to work out custody and childsuppo­rt arrangemen­ts with your ex.

Be aware, though, that if someone else orders a paternity test later (say she marries the man she’s been having the affair with and wants him to be the dad) and you’re ruled out as the father, you could lose your legal right — along with any hope of having a relationsh­ip with those children or even being able to see them again — completely.

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