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Separated
at Birth, United in Lawsuit
By Daniel Woolls
The Associated Press
New York Lawyer
May 27, 2008
MADRID, Spain - Spanish twins who were separated at birth through a
hospital error and reunited as adult women through a fluke are suing
for millions in damages, a lawyer said Tuesday.
The women finally
met each other in 2001. The case has been working its way through
the courts since 2004 and a court ruling on possible damages is
expected soon, said Sebastian Socorro Perdomo, a lawyer for one of
the twins.
He would not release the
names of the women, who are 35.
Socorro Perdomo said in an
interview that his client is seeking $4.7 million from the
government of the Canary Islands, where the error occurred in 1973
in a state-run hospital in the city of Las Palmas.
He said his client was
taken out of her crib as her twin sister lay in one right next to
her, mistakenly replaced by another baby girl, and ultimately raised
by the family of that child.
The other two girls were
brought up in the mistaken belief they were twin sisters. Both of
those two, including the one who was not actually a twin, are suing
— making three lawsuits in all.
"It does not take a lot of
effort to put yourself in the position of any of these people in
order to understand the damage that has been done," Socorro Perdomo
said.
Of the three, he said his
client — taken away from her twin sister and real family — is the
most devastated. "Since this discovery, her world has turned a bit
upside down," he said.
"The first right of any
child is the right to their own personal and family identity," he
said. "In this case, that right has been violated."
The error emerged a
generation later, through a chance encounter at a clothing store in
Las Palmas.
A friend of Socorro
Perdomo's client worked in the shop. When a woman who was the
spitting image of that client came in and failed to recognize the
employee, the clerk was dumbfounded.
When the dead ringer came
by the store a second time, the clerk began to put two and two
together and arranged for the women to meet.
DNA tests proved they were
identical twins, the lawyer said.
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