Black market adoption is the sale of babies for profit. The phrase
conjures up images of back alleys and illegal payments. A look back in history
give us an insight as to how black market adoption got started in this
country.
In the early 1900’s, private secular and religious groups began
the permanent residential care of orphaned children, but were ill equipped to
handle the multitude of America’s orphans. By the 1920’s, social changes and the
absence of state run orphanages provided fertile ground for the emergence of
black market adoption as a means to place babies with adoptive
parents.
From elite maternity homes to the back doors of private doctors’
offices, babies began to be sold in great numbers by unscrupulous doctors,
attorneys, and other individuals. Word quickly spread in cities all over the
country: if you wanted to adopt a baby in a short amount of time, one could be
obtained for you, for a fee of anywhere from $100 to $10,000, no questions
asked. Faced with long waiting lists and sometimes outright rejection from
established agencies, many tens of thousands of couples chose to buy a baby on
the black market.
Many doctors still delivered babies in their offices
and records were easily falsified. Most states even allowed certain information
to be changed. Society knew of the existence of the black market baby trade, but
little was done to stop it. Many of the baby sellers are now deceased, but they
have left behind thousands of adoptees with little or no information to aid them
in their searches for their birth families.
A typical black market
adoption might work like this: a young, unmarried pregnant woman paid a fee to
stay with the doctor until she gave birth. Once the baby was born, she was free
to return home with no one the wiser as to why she had gone away on "vacation."
The doctor would then, usually unbeknownst to the birth mother, sell the baby to
adoptive parents. Perhaps these parents would be given a birth certificate,
filled out by the doctor, listing them as the birth parents so there would be no
need for a legal adoption, and the sale could never be traced. Other details on
the birth certificate may have been changed also as to date of birth, and place
of birth. If the adoptive parents insisted on legal adoption, some doctors
provided falsified birth mothers’ consents as well. Another method of black
market adoption involved the birth mother checking into the hospital under the
adoptive mother’s name so that all subsequent records of mother and child would
be listed under the adoptive mom’s name. Many adoptees were sold by these
methods to loving parents, but since no backround checks were done, some were
exposed to physical, psychological, and sexual abuse as a result. The doctors,
attorneys, and other individuals became rich. The adoptive parents were happy to
complete their families with a new baby and the birth mothers were free to get
on with their lives. Everyone was happy….until the adoptees grew up and birth
mothers and adoptees began to search for eachother.
Whatever the method,
black market adoptions have left little or nothing in the way of a paper trail
for those now searching.Adoptive parents are frequently the best source of
information, sometimes having met the birth mother beforehand, and certainly
knowing where and when they went to pick up their baby. Adoptees should attempt
to gather as much information as possible before beginning their search. In some
cases, there are already others adopted from the same source who can provide
information to a new searcher. Some of the already established groups include
Cole babies, Hicks babies, Bessie babies, Dr. Mary babies, Butterbox babies, and
Springer babies. Black market adoptees should use all established methods for
obtaining information, but cannot take anything for granted as details were so
often changed, deleted, or missing altogether. They should be aware that
documents such as birth certificates and consent forms were often falsified,
even in so-called legal adoptions. Black market adoptees do have successful
searches, but they are made much more difficult by the lack of reliable
information.
The first place any adoptee should register is with the
International Soundex Reunion Registry by mail. Support groups can also play a
large roll in helping black market adoptees who are searching, by providing them
with a means to access information, support, and search tips. The internet has
fast become one of the best means of sharing information, and a new registry has
opened online just for black market adoptions. Adoptees should attempt to
register with as many free online registries as they can, keeping records of
where they have posted in case they move or change their e-mail address.
Guestbooks and bulletin boards can also be utilized to post
information.
Sadly, black market adoptions still continue to this day.
Couples are waiting too long to conceive naturally. There are many thousands of
foreign orphans available for adoption and our society no longer carries the
social stigma of adopting a baby of a different race or ethnic backround. Our
government has a system devoted to foster care rather than the permanent
placement of orphans. All these factors keep black market baby sellers in
business. The sale of babies for profit is both immoral and illegal. It is the
opinion of the author, that only by educating the public, can black market
adoptions be stopped. Unless we do so, we condemn another whole generation to
years of emptiness, lack of identity, and fruitless searches.