Family Shares Update After Suing IVF Clinic For Delivering ‘Non-Caucasian’ Baby

The Florida couple at the center of a painful IVF mix-up say they have now found their daughter’s biological parents. The update marks a major step in a case that has raised difficult questions about family, genetics, and fertility treatment.

Tiffany Score and Steven Mills were thrilled when they learned they were expecting a baby after turning to the Fertility Center of Orlando for help. Like many couples who use IVF, they hoped the treatment would help them build the family they had long wanted.

But when their daughter, Shea, was born on December 11, 2025, the moment brought both happiness and heartbreak. Tiffany and Steven soon realized the child was not biologically related to either of them.

The couple has since started legal action against the clinic. They allege that another couple’s embryo was placed inside Tiffany during the IVF process. According to the lawsuit, per News6, Tiffany and Steven are both white, while their baby appeared to be “a racially non-Caucasian child.”

Tiffany and Steven also wanted to find Shea’s biological parents, even though doing so brought more emotional and legal questions. A new update has now confirmed that the genetic parents have been identified.

A ‘moral obligation’

In a statement given to PEOPLE, Tiffany and Steven said finding Shea’s biological parents allowed them to close “one chapter in our heartbreaking journey.” Still, they made clear that the discovery does not end everything they are facing.

“The results of testing delivered to us today confirm that our baby’s genetic parents have been identified,” the couple said in a statement released through their attorney on April 22.

The couple also said they would keep the identities of Shea’s biological parents “confidential” so they could “respect their privacy.” They did not share any further details about the genetic parents.

Tiffany and Steven gave birth to a child, who is not genetically related to them, in December 2025WESH2
Tiffany and Steven had said before that they felt a “moral obligation” to find their daughter’s biological parents. At the same time, they were also worried about what could happen if those relatives were found, including whether Shea could be taken from the home she had known since birth.

Fox News spoke with attorney Mara Hatfield in January about the legal questions in the case. She said: “What are the rights that they, as the biologically nurturing now 10-month parents, have vs. the rights of the genetic parents that they hope to identify?”

“That is very much a developing question that the law is trying to identify, because unfortunately, these mistakes very rarely happen, but they do happen.”

Jack Scarola, the attorney representing Tiffany and Steven, told the outlet that Shea’s biological parents have not made any request to take custody of the infant. That detail offered some relief as the family continues through the legal process.

“Only one thing is as absolutely certain today as it was on the day our daughter was born —we will love and will be this child’s parents forever,” the couple added.

‘New issues that will have to be resolved’

The clinic that handled Tiffany and Steven’s IVF treatment has since said it will close its doors on May 20. That planned closure comes while questions still remain about what happened and what became of the couple’s embryos.

“This ends one chapter in our heartbreaking journey, but it raises new issues that will have to be resolved,” the statement continued.

“In addition, questions about the disposition of our own embryos are still unanswered and are even more unlikely to ever be answered.”

The couple are currently undertaking legal proceedings against the clinicWESH2
Scarola said questions about Tiffany and Steven’s three viable embryos remain “still pending.” Those questions are now part of the wider legal matter, along with the emotional harm the couple says they have suffered.

“The current legal proceeding will remain open to address those matters,” he explained.

“However, we expect that we will now also begin to focus on the need for our clients to be compensated for the expenses they have incurred and the severe emotional trauma that they endured and will continue to experience.”

IVF Life, which operates as The Fertility Center of Orlando, previously said it was “actively cooperating with an investigation to support one of our patients in determining the source of an error that resulted in the birth of a child who is not genetically related to them.” The statement came as the couple’s lawsuit and search for answers continued.

The case has left Tiffany and Steven dealing with more than one kind of loss. They say they are raising and loving Shea as their daughter, while also trying to understand how an embryo mix-up could have happened during a process that depends on trust and care.

For the couple, identifying Shea’s biological parents answered one major question, but it also opened the door to others. They still want answers about their own embryos, the clinic’s handling of the IVF process, and the emotional cost of what they say they have been forced to live through.

The legal case is expected to remain open while those issues are addressed. In the meantime, Tiffany and Steven have said one point has not changed: they consider themselves Shea’s parents and say they will love her forever.

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