The true story behind the nationally publicized case of egg and embryo theft at a prestigious fertility clinic.
When three whistle-blowers informed authorities and the media in 1995 that doctors at the prestigious and lucrative Center for Reproductive Health -- a fertility clinic operated by the University of California, Irvine (UCI) -- were taking eggs from some women and implanting them into others without donor consent, a scandal unfolded that ended careers, destroyed reputations, and forever altered the lives of many families. This first incident of egg and embryo theft, as well as claims of insurance fraud, research misconduct, and misappropriation of funds, grabbed headlines around the world and was featured on television programs from Primetime to The Oprah Winfrey Show. By the time the scandal had subsided several years later, two of the clinic's preeminent physicians had fled the country to avoid prosecution, one doctor was convicted on criminal charges in a highly controversial trial, and UCI had paid over twenty million dollars to settle laws suits filed by former patients.
The full story behind the much-publicized case is unveiled for the first time in this riveting book. The authors untangle an intricate web of repeated cover-ups, scapegoats, evasions, self-interest, nastiness, and injustice. They scrutinize how a complex interplay of circumstances set the stage for wrongdoing at the clinic, reveal how the dramatic events were played out on both the public and legal battlefields, and examine the personal histories, motivations, and actions of the major players-the physicians, the whistle-blowers, the claimants, the lawyers, the various investigatory committees, the overzealous media, and UCI administrators.
Stealing Dreams provides an absorbing, evenhanded look at the evolution of the fertility clinic scandal and illuminates the complex ethical, medical, and legal issues surrounding the largely unregulated field of reproductive medicine.
“Stealing Dreams is a model case study of white-collar crime, and depicts the profound difficulties of investigating and exposing malfeasance on the new frontiers of biomedical practice. The book is of interest to anyone interested in issues of professional ethics, of institutional cover-ups, and of media sensationalism. It also makes for a simply engrossing story.” —Philip Jenkins, author of Moral Panic: Changing Concepts of the Child Molester in Modern America and Beyond Tolerance: Child Pornography Online
“This is a brilliant piece of research that is a fine testimony to the power of the sociological imagination to make sense of the otherwise incomprehensible. It should be must reading for every student of sociology as a demonstration of sociology at its best.”
—William Chambliss, past president of the American Society of Criminology and the Society for the Study of Social Problems
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Mary Dodge is Assistant Professor in the Graduate School of Public Affairs at the University of Colorado, Denver. She is the coeditor (with Gilbert Geis) of Lessons in Criminology. Gilbert Geis is Professor Emeritus in the Department of Criminology, Law and Society, at the University of California, Irvine. He has written twenty-five books, including Crimes of the Century: From Leopold and Loeb to O.J. Simpson, also published by Northeastern University Press.
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