I wondered about that too. Paternity testing labs don't require proof of who the samples came from (I think the reports usually say something like sample A, sample B, etc) , so she could have easily submitted DNA from the child's real father, and no one would be the wiser. The lawyer (Alissa Milano's character) should have picked up on that when her friend said that she had verified the results with the company. I wonder how deep the scam goes....I can't imagine that she got the child to fake an injury....
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i knew i didnt trust her shes a con-artist
ReplyDeleteI wondered about that too. Paternity testing labs don't require proof of who the samples came from (I think the reports usually say something like sample A, sample B, etc) , so she could have easily submitted DNA from the child's real father, and no one would be the wiser. The lawyer (Alissa Milano's character) should have picked up on that when her friend said that she had verified the results with the company. I wonder how deep the scam goes....I can't imagine that she got the child to fake an injury....
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