Saturday, February 28, 2009

Pix of the day: Aurora Australis

February 28, 2009

Aurora australis appearing from Stewart Island/Rakiura at the southern point of the South Island of New Zealand.

Aurora australis appearing in the night sky of Swifts Creek, 100 km north of Lakes Entrance, Victoria, Australia


Friday, February 27, 2009

Octuplets: Dr Phil talks to new publicist Victor Munoz on Larry King

February 27, 2009

(2-3) Octuplets: Publicist Joann Killeen on Larry King
(2-16) Octuplets: Publicist Joann Killeen quits amidst death threats
(3-9) Octuplets: Second publicist, Victor Munoz, quits: “This woman is nuts!”
(3-10) Octuplets: Updated list of posts

Dr Phil is filling in for Larry King. He talks with Nadya’s new publicist Victor Munoz. He thinks she can handle things on her own with what the hospital is setting up with them. The hospital gave them a list of things they needed to fix in the house and Nadya said “I don’t believe it’s safe enough for the kids at this moment.” And yet six children have been living there. Munoz says he’s looking for a new house.

They discuss Angels in Waiting’s offer - which is free and requires no transfer of custody - and Munoz says he’s a little intimidated of Dr Phil and Gloria Allred. Gloria Allred explains her side. Munoz never explains why nadya did not accept the offer but agrees to allow Dr Phil to mediate. We’ll see.

TRANSCRIPT

MCGRAW: You’re not playing with dolls.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

MCGRAW: But she’s not sorry they’re here.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP FROM “DR. PHIL,” COURTESY PETESKI/CBS TV DISTRIBUTION)

N. SULEMAN: I don’t regret it and I don’t apologize for it.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

MCGRAW: Is she addicted to pregnancy?

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP FROM “DR. PHIL,” COURTESY PETESKI/CBS TV DISTRIBUTION)

MCGRAW: When you can’t handle the six you’ve got, having even one more seems to me to be way out of touch with reality.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

MCGRAW: Could she lose her babies?

Will she resort to pornography to pay the bills?

We’ll talk about why she needs help with people who know the real Nadya Suleman, including me. The octuplet mom revealed, right now on LARRY KING LIVE.

Hey, Dr. Phil McGraw here sitting in for Larry King.

Nadya Suleman may be the most notorious mother in the world right now ever since she gave birth to octuplets last month. Don’t forget, she’s got six kids under the age of seven, as well.

Her motives and her mental state have been questioned, too.

I recently sat down with Nadya for an in-depth interview.

Here’s a little of what she said.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP FROM “DR. PHIL,” COURTESY PETESKI/CBS TV DISTRIBUTION)

MCGRAW: Given the result, was it a mistake to transfer those six embryos?

N. SULEMAN: I don’t believe anything was a mistake. I believe that considering — I’m going to reiterate. Considering my own history, that the six resulted in two and then, of course, it’s — that what is the probability of that happening again?

MCGRAW: If you knew you were going to have eight, would you have done it?

N. SULEMAN: No.

MCGRAW: No?

N. SULEMAN: No.

MCGRAW: So?

N. SULEMAN: I don’t regret it and I don’t apologize for it. And I love them. So I don’t want anybody to misinterpret that as me saying I wish I hadn’t done it.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

MCGRAW: Well, joining me now, Nadya Suleman’s spokesman, Victor Munoz.

And in Las Vegas, host of “The Insider,” Lara Spencer. She interviewed Nadya and her mom this week.

Victor, how’s Nadya doing and how are the children doing today?

VICTOR MUNOZ, SPOKESMAN, OCTUPLETS’ A. SULEMAN. They’re doing great. Can’t complain too much.

MCGRAW: The babies are at what status at this point? I understand that three of them are bottle feeding?

MUNOZ: Yes. We actually…

MCGRAW: Has that number gone up since we talked last?

MUNOZ: Yes, we’re — they started the bottle feeding on three of them. And they’re getting real healthier, the rest of them. And they’re going to be coming home soon.

MCGRAW: Good. On Wednesday, you and Nadya called me at the studio right before we taped the last part of the interview show that we put up. And she was very concerned at that point because of a meeting that you guys had had with the Kaiser Permanente people, saying that there had to be certain standards met, of course, which makes common sense. What did they say specifically and who were you talking to and where is that now?

MUNOZ: Well, we were talking with Kaiser. We had a big meeting with, you know, basically, the whole entire staff that was helping her out. And it was one of the first meetings we had talking about releasing the babies. And it hit her. It hit her hard. She realized that she does have eight babies coming home. And she’s excited, she’s scared. And she wants to get the house ready in time for these kids to come home.

[HE JUST CONFIRMED SHE'S BEEN OUT OF TOUCH WITH REALITY.]

MCGRAW: Was there a conclusion that the house was not ready at that point, based on what they had seen with the RadarOnline.com footage and that sort of thing?

MUNOZ:
There was some. The — you know, they wanted a couple of things done, obviously, because there are preemies coming home. They wanted carpets changed, fresh paint on the walls, cracks taken care of — you know, normal maintenance on the house.

MCGRAW: Is any one of the babies ready for release right now?

MUNOZ: As of today, no. We still have roughly 10 to 12 days before one will be able to come home.

MCGRAW: And who’s the likely candidate to come home first?

MUNOZ: I want to say it’s Noah, but I’m not quite sure yet. It’s going to be a surprise for me.

MCGRAW: What is the progress right now on meeting the standards and requirements that you understand to be important in terms of housing and manpower and all of the things that are required to support these children?

MUNOZ: Well, you know, I mean they did ask us to do a lot, you know, as far as refreshing up the house and getting everything ready. And we’re getting close. You know, we’re almost there. You know, we’re in the middle of finding their new home. We narrowed it down to a few and we’re getting ready to pick one. That should be picked out, you know, this weekend. And once we get into that, there’s a big — there’s a big chunk of that list is taken off, you know and…

MCGRAW: So you’re clicking things off at this point?

MUNOZ: We’re — I want to say every minute of the day I’m clicking stuff off.

MCGRAW: Is Nadya doing anything to prepare herself as a mother, in terms of any parenting, there’s logistics training, any type of therapeutic support from her through Kaiser Permanente or others to get herself ready for this challenge?

MUNOZ: You know what, at this point not. No, there’s nothing
. I mean she’s already been taking care of six children. And she’s ready to jump into the new eight.

MCGRAW: How are those six children doing now?

MUNOZ: Oh, they’re doing great. I see them every day. You know, they’re happy, healthy, fun to hang around with, you know.

MCGRAW: If a child — if one of the babies was ready to be released today, would Kaiser Permanente release that child, as far as you know?

MUNOZ: Yes.

MCGRAW: So they would release the child to go to the home as it is?

MUNOZ: One child. Now we’re talking three, four or five? No.

MCGRAW: They would not.

MUNOZ: They would not.

MCGRAW: They told you they would not?

MUNOZ: They told us we would — they would not. There’s a couple of things that need to be done. There’s — we need to redo these bedrooms. We need to make sure that there’s enough room for them, you know. And we need to give them their own space. One child, yes. Eight, no.

MCGRAW: So they’ve made it clear, if multiples were ready to be released today, they could not do it?

MUNOZ: Correct.

MCGRAW: What would they do? Would they keep them at the hospital? What would they do?

MUNOZ: They would hold onto them as long as they could, you know. But they know that we’re working hard. So they really haven’t given us too many ultimatums. They did say, look, you need to get through this list. You need to take out — you need to really work on it hard and get a big chunk done. And then, you know, we’ll go from there.

MCGRAW: All right. We’ve seen some things in the media recently. One is that she’s been offered a million dollars to do a porn video with some porn producer out here.

MUNOZ: Right. Exactly.

MCGRAW: Is this anything that’s on her radar screen?

MUNOZ: No. Absolutely not. Absolutely not. She threw that away…

MCGRAW: So she wouldn’t even consider doing it?

MUNOZ: She called me up and was laughing on the phone, can you believe that they’re doing this, why would they do this?

MCGRAW: Lara Spencer is with us in Las Vegas. Lara, you’ve been following this story right along with all of us. What did — did you hear about this porn thing? Was that a surprise to you?

LARA SPENCER, ANCHOR, “THE INSIDER”: Of course it was a surprise. And I knew, having interviewed Nadya, that she would never do it. You know, I mean I think she does want help and I know she needs the money. But at the end of the day, her kids come first. And I don’t think that would be a consideration. So as I understand it — and you guys can confirm — she has walked away from that possibility.

MCGRAW: Yes. And, Victor, you’re saying that no chance, no way.

MUNOZ: No chance at all.

MCGRAW: And, you know, Lara interviewed Nadya, as well. And we’re going to see some excerpts from that in a minute. And there are going to be additional excerpts on “The Insider” over the weekend. So I hope everybody watches for that, as well.

What’s your biggest challenge right now in getting ready for these children to come home?

MUNOZ: Mine’s been housing. They’ve put a lot of pressure on me. They want — you know, Nadya and the family are asking me to get them into a new house in the next week.

MCGRAW: All right. Everybody is concerned — and, you know, of course I’ve spent my live dealing with mental illness and all types of human functioning. As you spend, probably, more time right now with Nadya than anyone, are you concerned about her level of problem solving, her level of problem recognition?

MUNOZ: You know what, I don’t. At first, before I met her and I was watching her on television and, also, I was thinking the same thing. But getting to know her and really understanding her — I mean I think I spend more time with her than just about anybody does right now. And the more I get to know her, the more I know she is level- headed. You know, there’s — I mean there’s nothing wrong with her. She’s a sweet lady.

MCGRAW: Is she prepared to accept the reality that if these children come home to her, that there has to be total transparency, where the proper authorities, agencies, nurses, whatever, can see what’s going on with those children (INAUDIBLE)?

MUNOZ: Absolutely. She knows that her life is going to be an open book.

MCGRAW: All right. Good.

Next, does Nadya watch the interviews she’s done? We’ll answer that question when we come back. Stay with us.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP FROM “THE INSIDER”)

SPENCER: On a serious note, how are the conditions at the house? Is it a clean, safe place?

N. SULEMAN: I don’t believe it’s safe enough for the kids at this moment.

[SHE JUST ADMITTED HER HOUSE IS NOT SAFE FOR CHILDREN. NOT EVEN THE ONES WHO HAVE BEEN LIVING THERE.]

SPENCER (voice-over): Inside the octuplet mom’s cramped home with her six older children — duct taped vents, holes in the walls, magic marker stains on the doors. “The Insider” behind closed doors at home with Nadya Suleman, where these eight tiny babies are expected to arrive soon.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

MCGRAW: That picture — that obviously just looks terrible, in terms of the repair of that house at this point. So, but the plan is not to stay in that house. It’s to get to another house.

MUNOZ: Correct, we do not want to stay in that house. Obviously, it’s too small. And we’re looking at buying something larger.

MCGRAW: And you say you’re making progress on that? How close are you?

MUNOZ: We are about a week away. I mean we really need to figure out which home we’re going to be taking over in the next few days.

MCGRAW: OK.

MUNOZ: When I meant buy, I mean, actually, we’re leasing. We’re not buying.

MCGRAW: OK. All right. Now, let me ask you — and then I want to get back to what is going to be required for these children. You’ve taken over as the publicist in this situation. You were asked to do so. You didn’t ask for this, it asked for you.

MUNOZ: I never asked for this.

MCGRAW: There were death threats that were involved with Ms. Killeen before, who’s a great professional. Have you had the same thing?

MUNOZ: Absolutely not. Everybody’s been real great to me. I get phone calls…

MCGRAW: But tonight’s the first time your last name has been out there.

MUNOZ: Yes, it is. Today is the first day.

MCGRAW: Are you concerned about that?

MUNOZ: No, I’m not. I mean, people on the street, they recognize me from the news reels and stuff. They ask me how she’s doing. I’ve heard nothing but nice things from people.

MCGRAW: Yes. So you’re not concerned that something’s going to happen. What’s the hospital telling you need to take care of these children? I mean do you need nurses? Do you need nannies? What are they recommending at this point?

MUNOZ: Well, you know, we have eight babies coming home, so they’re asking that we do something. And what they’re asking for is two nurses during the day, two nurses at night. They think that’s more than sufficient to help with the kids.

MCGRAW: Two nurses for eight babies?

MUNOZ: Two nurses — it would be two nurses for eight babies, yes.

MCGRAW: Two nurses around the clock for eight babies?

MUNOZ: Around the clock for eight babies.

MCGRAW: In addition to volunteers and (INAUDIBLE) or?

MUNOZ: In addition to some volunteers to help out with the older kids, you know, with the reading and the homework and stuff like that.

MCGRAW: Do you think, at this point, she gets the challenge that’s ahead of her?


MUNOZ: Absolutely. Absolutely.

MCGRAW: When I talked — when you guys called, in the phone call that we talked about, when you indicated that the hospital had said you’re going to have to make some changes before we can release these children…

MUNOZ: Right.

MCGRAW: …you told me that the night after my interview with her, that she, for the first time since the pregnancy broke down and cried. Tell me about that.

MUNOZ: Absolutely. You know, it was — it was surreal to me, also. You know, she has been a real strong woman. She knows what she wants to do and she does it. And to — after she talked to you — she was real nervous speaking to you at first. And afterwards, she just said, you know what, I feel good. And she had herself a good cry. She realizes I have babies coming home. I have 14 children, how — you know, how awesome is that? And she cried.

[SOMEHOW I DON'T THINK SHE WAS CRYING BECAUSE IT WAS AWESOME. SHE'S CRYING FOR HERSELF BECAUSE HER LIFE IS BASICALLY OVER.]

MCGRAW: She got very tearful on the phone with me that day. What was her — what space was she in then?

MUNOZ: You know what, she was in the space of extreme reality and — and thankfulness. You know, you put an olive branch out to her and she’s accepting it. And, you know, she — she’s real strong-headed at first, as you know, and didn’t really want to ask for help from anybody. And when she called you and talked to you, had a really nice conversation with you, she realized, you know what, this is a good thing. And I stepped out of the room because she did start to tear.

MCGRAW: Yes. Lara Spencer is with us. She is one of the co-hosts of “The Insider,” who also has spent time talking with Nadya Suleman. Lara, what’s been your experience? Is this a matter of being a strong woman or is this a matter of not being in touch? What’s your take on this and hearing that she finally is maybe getting in touch with her emotions?

SPENCER: Dr. Phil, first, let me say, I thought you did a phenomenal job. I thought you handled it so well and you really made her realize — you got her to say that it wasn’t the correct decision to have more. And that’s a difficult thing to do. And I understand as a mother why you wouldn’t want to do that. You never want to call a child a mistake. But I love what you said. And I actually wrote it down. You said: “There are right decisions and then there’s a way to make decisions right.”

And that’s where we are now. I mean I think she’s been vilified in the media. And it’s time to stop that. Right or wrong, no matter what you think about Nadya Suleman or her decision to go back to the well after having six healthy kids, that doesn’t matter, because here we are. You know, there are — there are eight babies who have no say in this, in addition to the six that are already home. So, you know, the questions I keep hearing is who’s going to take care of these kids? Is this going to be taxpayer money again? It sounds like it is when you’re talking about nurses. And, you know, people want to know, is she stable? I mean, you know, was this a stable decision? I don’t think it was a good decision. But I don’t know, Dr. Phil — and you’re the guy who can — I’m certainly not the judge of that. I don’t know if she’s stable.

MCGRAW: Well…

SPENCER: My reasoning for wanting to continue on this story is for those kids. I want to be the eyes and the ears of this country, because people are passionate about this. And I don’t think…

MCGRAW: Well, they are passionate about it…

SPENCER: Yes.

MCGRAW: They are passionate about it. And we are going to have to have complete and total transparency here. This is not something — and you understand that. I mean, if these children do go home with her, people are going to be watching this. Like it or not, they’re going to have to know what’s going on behind closed doors to know that these children are OK and that she’s going to demonstrate some type of consistency and some type of mental and emotional stability. And that’s going to take some help, I know.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP FROM “THE INSIDER”)

SPENCER: Are you embarrassed by Nadya?

ANGELA SULEMAN: Yes, when she started taking out 14 little children in a bus, I will be very embarrassed. I wouldn’t want to be seen with her.

SPENCER: And how does that make you feel?

N. SULEMAN: That’s your own opinion. That’s her perspective.

SPENCER: Oh, yes?

N. SULEMAN: Many, many people would totally disagree, because there’s so many people that have actually come up to me and who is she, who is anyone to point a finger at anyone else and judge them?

A. SULEMAN: Well, I’m your mother and I’m wondering how you can possibly bring up all these 14. You don’t have a job, Nadya.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

MCGRAW: Welcome back to LARRY KING LIVE. I’m Dr. Phil McGraw sitting in for Larry tonight. We’re talking about the octuplets’ mother and why she felt compelled to use her frozen embryos. Here’s what she said in a face-off with her own mother during an interview with RadarOnline.com.

SPENCER: Are you embarrassed by Nadya?

ANGELA SULEMAN: Yes, when she started taking out 14 little children in a bus, I will be very embarrassed. I wouldn’t want to be seen with her.

SPENCER: And how does that make you feel?

N. SULEMAN: That’s your own opinion. That’s her perspective.

SPENCER: Oh, yes?

N. SULEMAN: Many, many people would totally disagree, because there’s so many people that have actually come up to me and who is she, who is anyone to point a finger at anyone else and judge them?

A. SULEMAN: Well, I’m your mother and I’m wondering how you can possibly bring up all these 14. You don’t have a job, Nadya.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

MCGRAW: Welcome back to LARRY KING LIVE.

I’m Dr. Phil McGraw sitting in for Larry tonight.

We’re talking about the octuplets’ mother and why she felt compelled to use her frozen embryos.

Here’s what she said in a face-off with her own mother during an interview with RadarOnline.com.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP FROM RADARONLINE)

A. SULEMAN: You should have considered your other six children.

N. SULEMAN: OK. But I still was going to — I was not going to destroy the embryos, period. Done, done. Already done.

[RIGHT THERE SHE ADMITS SHE WAS GOING TO HAVE EERY SINGLE ONE OF THOSE EMBRYOS IMPLANTED NO MATTER HOW MANY CHILDREN RESULTED FROM EACH ONE.]

A. SULEMAN. Yes, but they are…

N. SULEMAN: You can’t go back…

A. SULEMAN. — frozen embryos.

N. SULEMAN: But you can’t go back and ring a bell. You can’t go back and alter the past. A. SULEMAN. No, no, no. You’re talking now…

N. SULEMAN: They’re there. They’re human…

A. SULEMAN. — that you, whatever you did is…

N. SULEMAN: But they’re human beings…

A. SULEMAN. — is past…

N. SULEMAN: …that are grow growing, that are related to you, that are healthy, strong and almost all four pounds.

A. SULEMAN. They are frozen. That’s the difference.

N. SULEMAN: They’re frozen right now?

A. SULEMAN. They were frozen. And you did not have to do anything.

N. SULEMAN: They were lives.

A. SULEMAN. And if you wanted to…

N. SULEMAN: The only thing you can do if they’re lives…

A. SULEMAN. — yes, they were lives, but…

N. SULEMAN: (INAUDIBLE) — use them or destroy them. But you either use them…

A. SULEMAN. But you…

N. SULEMAN: …or you destroy them.

A. SULEMAN. You decided…

N. SULEMAN: You use them or you destroy them. You use them or you destroy them.

A. SULEMAN. Whatever they do it’s all done.

N. SULEMAN: Do you want to know how they destroy them?

A. SULEMAN. No, no, no, no. Hold on. Hold on.

N. SULEMAN: They allow them to live…

A. SULEMAN. Well…

N. SULEMAN: They allow the cells to live…

A. SULEMAN. Let me finish…

N. SULEMAN: And then they kill them.

A. SULEMAN. Let me finish.

N. SULEMAN: You do not…

A. SULEMAN. You…

N. SULEMAN: No, I won’t.

A. SULEMAN. You had another option. You didn’t have to have them destroyed.

N. SULEMAN: OK. What could I have done?

A. SULEMAN. The other option is…

N. SULEMAN: What did — adoption.

A. SULEMAN. — give them up for adoption.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

MCGRAW: The senior editor of RadarOnline will be here later in the show to tell us about the Nadya she knows. But first, why did the octuplets’ mom refuse a generous offer of help? That’s next.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

N. SULEMAN: I won’t apologize for having all my children. And I never will.

A. SULEMAN: How are you going to provide for them? What are you thinking?

(END VIDEO CLIP)

MCGRAW: So what are you thinking was a good question. But now I’ve got Gloria Allred here in the studio. Gloria, you — you and I known each other a long time.

GLORIA ALLRED, ATTORNEY: Yes.

MCGRAW: You’re an attorney. You’re a family rights advocate. You work for women and you work for kids tirelessly. And you are involved in this situation because of an organization called Angels In Waiting. And that offer is basically to do what?

ALLRED: Yes. Angels in Waiting is a wonderful organization of pediatric nurses. It’s been founded Linda West-Conforti, who’s been a registered nurse for 25 years and has taken care of neo-natal issues and pediatric issues for medically fragile, high-risk, premature infants — very similar to the situation that Nadya Suleman’s octuplets have been in. And they help. And they provide supportive care for those infants.

MCGRAW: So what the offer is, is to provide 24/7 care…

ALLRED: Yes.

MCGRAW: …including housing…

ALLRED: Yes.

MCGRAW: …wrap-around care — this is nursing plus others.

ALLRED: Yes.

MCGRAW: Right. Now, is there a transfer of custody involved in this? In order for — for Nadya to avail herself of this, does she have to give up custody of the children?

ALLRED: Not at all.
In fact, they invite her to be there with her children and be part of it because, after all, they are her children and they all should be together.

MCGRAW: Then why has this gotten to be adversarial? Because it seems to me — because I’ve — I know you and talk to you. I know Victor Munoz and Nadya and talked to them. And I encouraged them to talk to you, as you know. But it seems to be adversarial at this point. Why is that?

ALLRED: I have no idea, Dr. Phil.

MCGRAW: It seems like a wonderful and generous offer, but yet it seems like they feel bullied and they feel pushed in this thing.

ALLRED: I have never spoken to Nadya Suleman. And I only spoke to Victor for probably a minute or two when he called to tell me that the appointment that Nadya had made with Linda — head of Angels In Waiting — to come to my office last Monday at 11:00 a.m. could not be kept because he didn’t realize that perhaps she had an appointment at Kaiser and therefore they couldn’t make it.

But that’s the only contact that I’ve had with Victor. So I don’t know why they would feel that this is anything but a golden opportunity, Dr. Phil, to provide the supportive services — the early intervention by trained, experienced professionals that all these babies would benefit from — and the other six, as well.

MCGRAW: Well, I have a note here that Victor maintains that he’s been calling Angels In Waiting. He has not heard back from them. He says he wants to deal with Angels In Waiting founder Linda West — is it Conforti?

ALLRED: Yes.

MCGRAW: Conforti — directly, not with you, for some reason. And he says that he can’t understand why you’re involved and that he feels threatened, on behalf of his client, that they’re going to be pushed or bullied into something.

ALLRED: Well, I don’t know why he feels that way. He has no basis for feeling that way. And the reason that I’m involved — and if he would ask, I’d be very happy to tell him, is simply because Angels In Waiting sent this invitation — this proposal to Nadya three different ways — to Kaiser, to him, to Nadya…

MCGRAW: So she loses no control of the children?

ALLRED: And she heard — and they heard nothing, so they asked me to get involved. I said give them a week. I know that they’re busy with other things. And then, perhaps, if they haven’t heard about it or responded then, then I will get involved and try to get the message to her.

MCGRAW: So they lose no control of the children?

ALLRED: Exactly.

MCGRAW: There’s no transfer of custodial?

ALLRED: None whatsoever.

MCGRAW: And this doesn’t have to be adversarial?

ALLRED: No.

MCGRAW: I mean, if I was able to get you and Victor and Nadya, attorneys, whoever involved, in a room and do my best Henry Kissinger about this, would you be willing to sit down and talk with them?

ALLRED: Well, I’m always happy to sit down and talk and listen, as well.

MCGRAW: Yes.

ALLRED: And Linda is an incredible person. I mean she has taken foster children in. She has literally saved their lives.

MCGRAW: Well, then I don’t know why it’s gotten off in this way, but maybe we can get it back on track and see if there’s — if there’s something there. So, all right, coming up, how likely is it that the state would come in and take custody of the octuplets? We’re going to find out, after the break.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP, COURTESY RADARONLINE)

N. SULEMAN: It’s — because it’s fine. It’s fine. It’s OK, because we also have a really large backyard to play. And I love that for them.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP FROM “DR. PHIL,” COURTESY PETESKI/CBS TV DISTRIBUTION)

A. SULEMAN: It seems as if she’s obsessive compulsive and she needs to keep doing this. And I hope she’s not. I mean is 14 enough?

(END VIDEO CLIP)

MCGRAW: Dr. Phil in tonight for Larry King. We’ve got another excerpt from my interview with Nadya Suleman. This one includes her mom, Angela. Watch.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP FROM “DR. PHIL,” COURTESY PETESKI/CBS TV DISTRIBUTION)

MCGRAW: I’m having to rely on a mother to — to help me here — I think I’ll go have another one. To me and to everybody in America, that is just, girl, this, you’re not playing with dolls.

N. SULEMAN: I know. I know.

MCGRAW: These are real people, real lives. And you’re going to have to feed them and clothe them and guide them and educate them for the rest of your life and for all of their lives.

N. SULEMAN: Absolute.


MCGRAW: And when you can’t handle the six you’ve got, having even one more seems to me to be way out of touch with reality. What do you think?

A. SULEMAN. That’s — I totally agree with you.

[AGAIN SHE ADMITTED SHE IS NOT IN TOUCH WITH REALITY.]

(END VIDEO CLIP)

MCGRAW: I’m back with Victor. You were listening to the Gloria Allred segment that I just did.

MUNOZ: Yes.

MCGRAW: What’s wrong with this offer? Why don’t you like it? Because on its face — you know, the first thing I said was is there a transfer of custody? Is she giving her kids over to someone? And the answer was no, not at all, she maintains custody, she maintains control. They’re offering housing, they’re offering nursing care, volunteer support, supplies — kind of all expenses paid to carry these children through the first six months and the mother doesn’t give up any controls here. What’s wrong with the offer?

MUNOZ: The offer itself, I don’t know. I don’t know what the whole offer is. I have tried to call Linda directly and I haven’t received a phone call back. There’s just not enough hours in the day for me to drive out and see Gloria Allred in Los Angeles and make the meeting on her time.

MCGRAW: Do you feel threatened and bullied by her with ultimatums and deadlines and that sort of thing?

MUNOZ: A little. When you hear Gloria Allred, obviously, you feel that way. And me being someone that’s never done this before, I do. And that’s pretty much it.

MCGRAW: Remember the first night this came up, I told you that I knew Gloria. And I said she was a good egg.

MUNOZ: You did. I understand.

MCGRAW: And you’re probably questioning that.

MUNOZ: I did. I’m a little scared of you too.


MCGRAW: Listen, Gloria is very passionate. There’s no question about it. But I would just like to be sure that if you guys make the decision to decline this offer, which is certainly your right to do, that you have at least heard the offer out. I mean — because, listen, I got involved in this from the beginning because of the children. I am a very passionate child advocate. So I’m interested in what’s happening. They’re not offering help for the eight children, they’re offering support and help for the 14 children. I want to make sure, before anybody walks away, that you have heard this offer. And if it’s not right and it doesn’t fit, it’s OK.

MUNOZ: You’re right. If I can get 30 seconds, basically what’s been going on in the last two weeks is I have been working hard with Kaiser. They have been really putting together a great plan to have these children come home. I’ve been getting a lot of calls, a lot of people anonymously that have been wanting to help. We have a lot of help out there.

And I just have not been able to make time to really sit down with Gloria to go over this, because Kaiser is sucking up a lot of my time right now, getting these babies to come home. So if there’s some way that I can get a hold of Linda, if she calls me, we can meet somewhere local, where I’m at, I will be more than happen to sit down. I will take Nadya with me. We will sit down. We will listen. We want to hear everything. We’re not blind. We want to see everything.

MCGRAW: I promise you, I will make that happen. I can make that happen, because I know Linda is so passionate about this. Everything I know about her, it’s all about the kids for her. And so I’ll do what I can to see if I can help facilitate that. And Victor, I know you want the best for these kids too. You and I have talked. I know where your heart is.

MUNOZ: Absolutely.

MCGRAW: You’re not getting paid for this, so I know that you’re volunteering here. And it is taking up all of your time and so I totally get that. There would be some great things to having a package put together, whether it’s from Kaiser or from them. Do you agree?

MUNOZ: Absolutely.

MCGRAW: So you don’t have to go piece this all together yourself. So we will be thinking about that. And Nadya is open to it as well?

MUNOZ: Absolutely.

MCGRAW: All right. So, if Nadya doesn’t want this help, is there other help involved? Are there other alternatives? What’s in store for all of her 14 children? Can it be done without a package of aid? Would it be possible to put all of these things together. I don’t know. We’ll talk about all that when we come back when LARRY KING LIVE returns.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

MCGRAW: RadarOnline.com has exclusive coverage of Nadya and her family. I want you to listen to Nadya on the idea of having any of her kids put up for adoption.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

SULEMAN: I have to disagree with anyone who would even have the audacity to say that any of these children should be adopted. I have more love for these children than I think will almost — I’m sure many parents would have just as much love.

This is something that I find to be a joke, because anyone who would say that — this is something so sensationalized, it’s not real to people. When they see them coming home and they see me doing the very best I can and giving them everything I can, plus help with family and friends, and getting together as a community to help with these children and help them thrive.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

MCGRAW: Mary Margaret is here. She is a senior news editor from RadarOnline.com. You guys have been really involved in this story. You’ve been in the house and taken some pictures of the dwelling. That’s disturbing what we see in there, true?

MARY MARGARET, RADARONLINE.COM: Definitely. I mean it was definitely a shock. Obviously, you know, it’s a three bedroom house. It’s small even for a family of six children. But when you try to wrap your mind around the fact that there’s going to be eight more children possibly entering that home — yes, we know that they’re looking for a new one. That reality is jarring for any parent, for any watcher, for sure.

MCGRAW: Let’s check out more from RadarOnline. This time, another instance of Nadya and her mother at odds over this situation.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: I’m worried about the future.

SULEMAN: People can’t comprehend, just like my mom can’t comprehend, really, why I’m not worried, because I do have strong faith that I will find a way through my strength, to tap into my greater inner resources and strength to find a way.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

MCGRAW: You didn’t hear anything in the interviews that you guys taped that adopting these children out is anywhere on her radar.

MARGARET: No, definitely not. That’s something that is the farthest thing from her mind. One thing that she’s really adamant about is that these children are the focus of her life for her entire life. What she talked to her mother about was — you know, there was this kind of loneliness that she felt as an only child and that’s something she has spent her entire life feeling. Of course, that’s reached a level that has been criticized in the past few months.

But that’s who she is. She’s someone who loves her children, is completely dedicated to them 100 percent.

[THAT IS COMPLETE AND UTTER HORSESHIT. IF SHE WAS DEDICATED TO THE SIX SHE HAD SHE WOULD NOT HAVE DONE WHAT SHE DID.]

MCGRAW: How is she responding behind closed doors with you about the fact that people are saying, put those children in foster care, get them away from that mother? Does she feel attacked by that?

MUNOZ: She does somewhat. She just doesn’t understand. She’s not angry at anybody. She’s not mad at anybody that’s talking against her. She just does not understand. At the end of the day, it’s always, why are they saying this? Why are they doing that?

MCGRAW: One of the things I want to talk about — Michael Piraino is with us from Seattle. And Michael is very involved with the court appointed special advocates program which works with foster children. Michael, this is not always just an easy place to go in terms of foster care in finding something that kids are going to really flourish in, true?

MICHAEL PIRAINO, CEO, CASA: That’s true. It can be very complicated to try to find the right solution for them.

MCGRAW: So when you go into the foster care system, what are the dangers? Everybody is saying, look, why not just put them in foster care? That’s not always an easy fix. What are the dangers?

PIRAINO: It’s difficult. First of all, you have to find a place for these kids to be where they’re going to be cared for and nurtured. And we have not enough foster parents to do that for kids. There’s another part of it too, which is that there’s a tremendous disruption to children when you move them into foster care. That’s hard on infants just as it is on older kids.

And a lot of times in foster care, kids have to move from place to place and that’s also hard. Another part of it is that it’s not cheap. I mean, it costs quite a bit of money to put kids into foster care and if you think about where the this situation is right now, you’ve got a parent, you’ve got the kids and it’s probably wiser at this point to put some investment into keeping them together and equipping them to handle the kids, and not take them out and put them into foster care.

MCGRAW: How many children are awaiting placement with foster care families right now that you just don’t have anywhere to put?

PIRAINO: I don’t know what the actual number is, but a lot of times they have to be placed on an emergency basis with — sometimes they have to spend time in offices, the Child Protection Services. There are sometimes very short-term placements that kids can be placed in. Think about these are infants, these are babies. These babies are busy doing what babies do, trying to connect to people. Those kinds of disruptions are really hard.

MCGRAW: Margaret, you guys get a lot of comments on RadarOnline.com when they see these videos. Are people wanting these children taken away based upon your message boards?

MARGARET: It’s definitely a healthy debate. Obviously, the first notion is you never want to take away children from their mother. But at the same time, faced with the reality of the resources she needs to give them a healthy existence, that’s what a lot of people are leaning to, find a different alternative for the children.

MCGRAW: That’s what you’re hearing on the message boards on RadarOnline.com. Thanks to Victor and Mary for joining us. Back in 60 seconds with your comments. You’re watching LARRY KING LIVE.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK) MCGRAW: Welcome back. I’m Dr. Phil McGraw. I’m in for Larry tonight. You have been busy on Larry’s blog and there is no shortage of opinions. Let’s check in with Sarah. So what’s everybody saying, Sarah?

SARAH SCHNARE, BLOG CORRESPONDENT: So far lots of unforgiving comments on our blog tonight, Dr. Phil. Many people are wondering if this woman has lost her marbles. Some have called her selfish and delusional, narcissistic, a young woman with no sense of reality. Most want to know how can she afford to take care of 14 kids and how much is this going to cost us all.

But one thing we do know, Dr. Phil, it’s definitely been giving comedians a lot of material. Take a look.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

JIMMY KIMMEL, “LATE SHOW”: An exclusive interview with Nadya via satellite. Hello, Nadya. Thank you for joining us.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Thank you for having me. It’s great to be on the show.

KIMMEL: The first thing I want to ask is how are the babies doing?

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: They are wonderful. They are so great. In fact, I’m feeding some of them right now.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Please welcome Joan Rivers.

JOAN RIVERS, ACTRESS: One! Two! Three! Four!

(END VIDEO CLIP)

MCGRAW: Well, thanks, Sarah. When we come back, I’ll ask infertility experts if anyone should have eight babies at once. Stick around.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

(NEWS BREAK)

MCGRAW: We’re back in studio. Lisa Masterson is with us, Dr. Lisa Masterson. She is co-host of the syndicated TV talk show, “The Doctors.” And you guys do a great job on that show. I don’t say that because my son produces it. I just say it because it’s true.

We want to talk about what is going on physiologically with this mother. Is she even going to be equal to, in any way, energy wise, the challenge of taking care of these eighth babies if they do come home to her? How long does it take to snap back?

DR. LISA MASTERSON, INFERTILITY SPECIALIST: It takes four to six weeks in a normal pregnancy. Now, granted, she had eight babies. You don’t just load up the uterus and roll the dice, as it were. These are high stakes that you’re playing with. The pregnancy really takes a toll on the body. But if everything goes well, which she actually did well, she just be back normal.

MCGRAW: We’re looking now in this animation, I mean, that is — where does everything go? I mean, look at this, the organs are pushed. As an OB/GYN, that probably doesn’t shock you as much as it does me. But when you push everything around like that, how long does it take to get back?

MASTERSON: It really still only takes about four to six weeks, because what happens is everything — and we used that animation today on “The Doctors.” What happens is that everything sort of gets pushed and gets compressed. So you worry about things like the kidneys. You worry about bowel functions and things like that. But really the problem is delivery, post-partum hemorrhage. Those are the type of things that you worry about. Because she really took a risk with her life and with the babies’ lives.

MCGRAW: So and — listen, I want to introduce also Dr. Jamie Grifo. He’s program director at the New York Fertility Center, professor of obstetrics and gynecology at NYU’s School of Medicine. Dr. Grifo, thanks for joining us. There’s been so much talk about this mother’s decision to do this. Is there any theory that you can see coming forth that’s going to explain why you would implant so many embryos in this woman?

DR. JAMIE GRIFO, DIRECTOR, NYU FERTILITY CENTER: It’s not what we do. We have guidelines for these situations, and our guidelines state that we put back no more than two embryos. I was curious about that myself, and then I researched the pregnancy rate in this doctor’s clinic. And in the year before he treated Nadya, 70 embryos were transferred in women under 35 that made three babies. So less than ten percent of his embryos were making babies.

So you just do the math, the chance that six embryos would make eight babies, with that math, is about one in a billion. You say, gosh, this doctor must be crazy. But with the pregnancy rates there, I understand why he would do it.

But I don’t justify it. We don’t justify it. This is a failure of therapy. Having eighth babies is a disaster. It’s risky. This woman was very lucky that she didn’t lose her life or her children didn’t lose their lives. Our goal as fertility specialists is to help people have a single baby.
In the year 2007, there were over 50,000 babies born from IVF, mostly singletons.

MCGRAW: That’s great. You talk about the risk to the babies and the mother. Dr. Masterson, what can happen with this kind of mega- multiple pregnancy to the mother? Is it stroke, heart attack? What happens?

MASTERSON: It’s really troubling the judgment that she and the IFV doctor used, because she’s really, again, taking her life and her baby’s life into her hands. Basically, she could have a stroke, heart attack because of this. The large blood volume that she had to deal with, again, post-partum hemorrhage, she can die from that. The prematurity of the babies, the risk of prematurity, pre-term delivery for them.

It’s just phenomenal what she really, really undertook. Again, she has the mindset of like a teenager, who wants 15 minutes of fame, but forgets about the 18 years of responsibility afterwards.

MCGRAW: I know we’re going to see that animation on Monday on “The Doctors.” People can tune in and look at that. Dr. Grifo, my question here, was this a failure of the system with Nadya Suleman? No question, there’s some bad decision making on her part. We have all talked about that. But did the system fail her from a medical stand point? Don’t you expect a doctor to say, I won’t let you put your life at risk?

GRIFO: Yes, indeed, that’s our responsibility. And our responsibility is to the mother and to the babies. We have more than one patient here. And that’s why we have these guidelines. And since the early ’90s, when we developed these guidelines, we have gone through three iterations. And we’ve made IVF much safer by doing that.

It requires good judgment and people need to follow the guidelines. I don’t have an answer for why the guidelines were disobeyed in this case.

MCGRAW: I don’t think there is a good answer. Michael Piraino is with us also. Michael is CEO CASA, the Court Appointed Special Advocates. Michael, is it easier to adopt out or place in foster care infants like this, than it is, I assume, a 12 or 13-year-old?

PIRAINO: There are a lot of kids in foster care who are waiting to be adopted. And any one of them would be great candidates to be adopted. But certainly as kids get older, there may be more issues that people think they will have in adopting those kids. There’s no child who’s waiting for adoption who’s not adoptable.

MCGRAW: Of course. And Dr. Masterson, we know that these children are likely to face some real developmental challenges. The chances of eight out of eight being completely healthy with no problems is pretty low, correct?

MASTERSON: It’s very low. She’s actually very lucky she got to 30 weeks. That’s phenomenal with eight babies. So kudos to the doctors who really took care of her. But these babies are going to have some difficulty.

MCGRAW: I understand they did a great job. When LARRY KING LIVE returns, what can we learn from this octuplet situation? We’ll address that after this.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

MCGRAW: Dr. Phil here, in tonight for Larry King. We have been talking about the octuplet mother situation. And, you know, one of the things that I want to say — I’ll take a turn here and tell you that we hear of terms like octo-mom and the octuplets. And the truth is, when you put labels on folks like that, sometimes it really de- personalizes this. The octuplet mother is Nadya Suleman. She’s an individual. The children are Noah, Malia, Isaiah, Mariah, Macai, Josaiah, Jeremiah and Jonah. At this point, Dr. Lisa Masterson, the children are all doing pretty well, because she was able to get to what, 30 weeks?

MASTERSON: Yes, the doctors really took care of her, put her on bed rest early, delivered her early, which is also very important in getting these babies out healthy, because accidents can help with multiples.

MCGRAW: Are there developmental benchmarks that they’re going to be looking for to see if these children are coming along? I assume, the first one is do they feed?

MASTERSON: Do they feed? And premature babies have a harder time feeding. It’s really important to their growth and to their development. And with premature babies, you’re going to have developmental delays. But they will catch up. They’ll get there between six months to a year. And the doctors will be looking to see how they catch up.

MCGRAW: Do you expect, at some point, they will really start closing the gap? Will there be a time that they accelerate and begin to really do well?

MASTERSON: Yes, about a year, they’ll start to really get there.

MCGRAW: And is that also when you’re going seeing signs of problems if they don’t develop? And are there things you should be doing now with these children to minimize the likelihood?

MASTERSON: Just really good care, nurturing. That’s why, When these babies come out, it’s so important that they’re cared for really, really well. Because they’re behind, they’re going to need extra care, extra attention. They’re going to need extra help with their milestones. They’re going to have to go to the doctors much more frequently. It’s just really important to be on these babies.

MCGRAW: That’s all very expensive. And the question is, of course, where does this money come from? I mean, what happens? Is it insurance? Are you and I, the taxpayers, going to pay for it? Or is there going to be come solution that takes place? What we know is that there’s going to have to be a high-degree of transparency in this situation. We just know that. so if these children stay with the mother, people are going to be watching. Agencies are going to be in there. People are going to be looking. Clearly, we will be paying attention to this and see if we can get some idea of what’s going on.

Now we want to hear from you. You can go on to LARRY KING LIVE blog here. Dr. Masterson, you guys are going to be dealing with this on “The Doctors” on Monday. So people will get more information about it then. Hopefully, we’ll get some answers and we’ll continue to watch this. It’s time for Larry’s weekly salute to someone special. Our hero this week was inspired to act by the personal impact of 9/11. And what she’s done since then has affected people from all over the world. Take a look.

Octuplets: Grandmother’s first interview (Feb 9th)

February 10, 2009

I keep finding these posts in the drafts. I don’t know why they weren’t posted right away. This is the first interview the grandmother did with Radaronline. I combined the story and the video comments and the GMA video below.

Angela Suleman reveals that her daughter, Nadya, had wanted to become pregnant from early on. At 16 she got pregnant and miscarried and discovered she had blocked fallopian tubes. It is truly hard to believe that anything in this woman’s reproductive system is blocked or malfunction. 14 children in 8 years has to be a record by any means. She turned to a friend for sperm and started getting in vitro. She doesn’t exactly say when or who the sperm donor is.

ANGELA: He was in love with her and wanted to marry her. But Nadya wanted to have children on her own.

Nadya does not work and relies on her parents to care for her children. Angela says she is the primary caregiver.

ANGELA: Yes, I was practically raised her children. She really had no means to support them. They were always living in my house.

She had just found out that Nadya had received $168K in disability payments for a bad back, while she was pregnant and giving birth over and over and over..

The truth is that Nadya hasn’t worked since she started having her children, while Ed and I battled to pay her bills.

Nadya promised to help me with the bills, but she never has.

I did hear that she received money from her insurance - she never told me. But I have never seen any money. Not for house payment or feeding the kids.

We are now living in my humble 3-bedroom home. So we’re there all crowded in.

I lost a house because of it and now I’m struggling to look after her six. We had to put in bunk beds, feed them in shifts and there’s children’s clothing piled all over the house.

Only six kids and they’re already eating in shifts?

ANGELA: The older ones will sit at the table and eat, and the younger ones have their little chairs with the tables, and the autistic boy needs to be fed. So it’s a lot of work.

Why didn’t she stop her from having more babies?

ANGELA: Her dad and I were talking to the doctor and said, she’s not married, she wants children and she really does mot have any means to support them, so she really should not have any more. That’s enough.

Angela said that she and Nadya’s father, Ed, begged one doctor not to implant any more embryos in Nadya, who already had six children. But Nadya found another doctor to implant six embryos, and two split, resulting in eight more babies. “I’m really angry about that.”

The story on the doctor has changed several times. Here she says a different doctor did the octuplets. Nadya said the same one did them all. Dr. Michael Kamrava, who Nadya is seen on video with having an ultrasound with her twin pregnancy, is being investigated by the California Medical Board.

ANGELA: She has not been thinking straight. To have more is just not right.

She already has six beautiful children, why would she do this?

She really, really has no idea what she’s doing to her children, and to me.

And while the grandparents are looking after the six kids, the mother went on NBC and told Ann Curry how bad her childhood was. It didn’t make Angela very happy.

We raised her in a loving family and her father always spoiled her.

Maybe that’s the problem. Who knows. The whole situation is devastating for all involved. RadarOnline.com took pictures and video inside the home and a reporter described the interior as “filthy”, with food on the walls. (See the pix in the links below)

ANGELA: The truth is Nadya’s not capable of raising 14 children.

How she’s going to cope, I really don’t know. I’m really tired of taking care of the six children. I need her to think about what she’s going to do and how she’ll provide for all these children.

And the six kids?

They’re wonderful beautiful children, and I love them dearly. I would never let anything happen to them so I’m talking care of them. And I have been. And I don’t know what the future will bring, becausem hopefully she will get some living accommodations, because it is really a small house. And so she could take care of all her children.

And the octuplets?

She wasn’t at the octuplets’ birth because she was looking after the other six children. “But I saw the octuplets when they were two days old. They were so tiny and fragile, with bright purple skin, I was afraid to touch them but they’re all doing well. Nadya has given them all Biblical names. Seven of them are dark-haired, but one, Noah, shows my side of the family. He looked so cute with his purple skin and bright yellow hair.”

According to ABC - Nadya’s publicist was questioned about the condition of the house and he actually said it wasn’t her fault because she wasn’t there.

Nadya Suleman’s publicist Mike Furtney said that his client has been away for nearly two months, so shouldn’t be held responsible for the home’s current condition. Furtney said his client planned to move into a larger home once the octuplets were healthy enough to leave doctors’ care. He declined to comment on any of the remarks Angela Suleman made about her daughter in the interview. “Those are very personal issues between a mother and a daughter,” he said.

Hello. She is responsible for her children’s living conditions no matter where she is or they are. And how is she going to move anywhere when she has no money?

What does Angela think about the frozen embryos?

ANGELA: She justified it by saying those frozen embryos were living human beings. However, to me, anything that is frozen is not living, and she did not have to have them thawed. She could have also - if she wanted to donate them to some couples that have no children.

But to have them all is unconscionable to me.

gracefullycreated

***

(1-30) Octuplets: Ethics of fertility treatment?
(1-30) Octuplets: What is really going on?
(2-9) Octuplets: Should not go home with that woman
(2-9) Octuplets: Octuplets: already filthy house unfit for children (pix)
(2-23) Octuplets: Mother vs grandmother caught on tape
(2-24) Octuplets: Cosmetic surgery, IVF, food stamps, disability, bankruptcy & foreclosure
(2-24) Octuplets: Mother before/after plastic surgery & Angelina Jolie (pix)
(2-25) Octuplets: Grandfather on Oprah daughter “not mentally complete”
(2-25) Octuplets: Hospital questioning her ability to care for children
(2-26) Octuplets: Video of inside the home
(2-26) Octuplets: Body language mother vs grandmother video (Part 1)
(2-26) Octuplets: Body language mother vs grandmother video (Part 2)
(2-27) Octuplets: Man claiming to be sperm donor
(2-27) Octuplets: Grandmother on The Early Show (Part 1)
(2-27) Octuplets: Grandmother on The Early Show (Part 2)
(2-27) Octuplets: Grandmother on The Early Show (Part 3)
(2-27) Octuplets: Grandmother’s first interview (Feb 9th)

Octuplets: Grandmother on The Early Show (Part 3)

February 18, 2009

Part 3

Maggie Rodriguez talks with the grandmother of the octuplets, Angela Suleman about the sperm donor and Angelina Jolie.

MAGGIE RODRIGUEZ: Tell me about the sperm donor. How did she meet him?

ANGELA SULEMAN: They were just friends. And she’s a very persuasive, well-spoken young woman. And somehow she must have talked him into it.

RODRIGUEZ: Has she been in contact with him since the babies were born?

ANGELA: I’m sure she may have spoken with him.

RODRIGUEZ:Is he part of the children’s lives - the six children?

ANGELA: Not at this point.

RODRIGUEZ: Would you like him to be?

ANGELA: I would like him to be. Yes. Every child needs a father. But my daughter wanted to raise these children by herself. So that, I think, is a kind of a little selfish act. I don’t know why she would not have a father, the father of these children in her life. I don’t.

RODRIGUEZ: Do you think he was paid for the sperm?

ANGELA: I don’t know. She’s so persuasive. I doubt that she had to pay (she laughed) for anything really. She’s a very convincing person.

RODRIGUEZ: She’s been compared to Angelina Jolie. Did Nadya ever say that she admired Jolie or wanted to be like her?

ANGELA: No. She never mentions celebrities. She’s really not into that kind of thing. People think that she, you know, admires her. But, I don’t think so.

RODRIGUEZ: People say that she even had plastic surgery to look like her.

ANGELA: No. No, I don’t think she ever did. She gained 130 pounds. So that makes a difference in the facial features, in her wherever, you know, when you gain 130 pounds, goodness, I’d hate (she laughed) this to happen to me. I probably would change a lot, too.

Is she saying she doesn’t think her daughter had any type of plastic surgery?

RODRIGUEZ: What would you like to see happen to your daughter?

ANGELA: I would like to her somehow get enough money [giggles] to get a house for these babies, but you know, she starts working, she won’t be able to take care of them because then it’s up to me and I would like start living a little too. [giggles]

RODRIGUEZ: Do you see yourself as sort of a victim of something?

ANGELA: No. I’m not a victim because I can just get up and go. And I think I’m gonna do this very soon. I’m gonna go visit my sister in Europe and my friends and just live it up a little.

RODRIGUEZ: Do you think these kids are victims?

ANGELA: Not really. You know, they are really very happy children. They’re very happy. They love their grandma and their mommy. And, you know, I think love is the main thing here. When they know they’re loved, things will work out. They’ll be normal.

14 children need more than love - they need attention. And the healthy children will get no attention other than can you be a good boy/girl and help mommy with…

***

(1-30) Octuplets: Ethics of fertility treatment?
(1-30) Octuplets: What is really going on?
(2-9) Octuplets: Should not go home with that woman
(2-9) Octuplets: Octuplets: already filthy house unfit for children (pix)
(2-23) Octuplets: Mother vs grandmother caught on tape
(2-24) Octuplets: Cosmetic surgery, IVF, food stamps, disability, bankruptcy & foreclosure
(2-24) Octuplets: Mother before/after plastic surgery & Angelina Jolie (pix)
(2-25) Octuplets: Grandfather on Oprah daughter “not mentally complete”
(2-25) Octuplets: Hospital questioning her ability to care for children
(2-26) Octuplets: Video of inside the home
(2-26) Octuplets: Body language mother vs grandmother video (Part 1)
(2-26) Octuplets: Body language mother vs grandmother video (Part 2)
(2-27) Octuplets: Man claiming to be sperm donor
(2-27) Octuplets: Grandmother on The Early Show (Part 1)
(2-27) Octuplets: Grandmother on The Early Show (Part 2)
(2-27) Octuplets: Grandmother on The Early Show (Part 3)
(2-27) Octuplets: Grandmother’s first interview (Feb 9th)

Octuplets: Grandmother on The Early Show (Part 2)

February 17, 2009

Maggie Rodriguez of The Early Show interviews Amgela Suleman the grandmother of the octuplets. Dr. Michael Kamrava, of the West Coast IVF Clinic, performed the in-vitro fertilization that led to Nadya getting pregnant with the octuplets.

MAGGIE RODRIGUEZ: How much responsibility does the doctor have in this?

ANGELA SULEMAN: As far as I’m concerned, he shouldn’t have done it. But, he’s a doctor. When he’s asked to do something, I guess he doesn’t refuse. …so the doctor actually called and wanted to talk to Nadya, and then, when I realized that was her doctor, I pleaded with him, ‘Please, don’t do this anymore,’ and he promised.

RODRIGUEZ: Promised you?

ANGELA: [She smiles.] Fell on deaf ears.

RODRIGUEZ: What did he say?

ANGELA: Yes, I realize that, you know, she shouldn’t have that many. She’s a single mother, tah dah dah,’ and he’ll not do it anymore. And yet, next year, she had another one, and another one.

RODRIGUEZ: And now eight more.

ANGELA: Yeah.

RODRIGUEZ: At what point did you tell her to stop having babies?

ANGELA: I told her she needed to stop, because I wouldn’t be able to help her, because there was not enough room in the house. And, for some reason, she couldn’t. I guess that’s what happens when a person is obsessive compulsive.

RODRIGUEZ: What would she say to your objections?

ANGELA: She said that she’ll take care of it, and she won’t have any more. And then you see, laughs, but she is pregnant again and again.

RODRIGUEZ: Is she sick?

ANGELA: She doesn’t seem sick. She was brilliant in her studies. But as far as everyday life is concerned, she is just not really thinking things through sometimes.

RODRIGUEZ: Do you blame yourself?

ANGELA: I did, but then, I thought, ‘You know, what could I have done different?’ I was a loving mother and she had a loving father. So, I don’t know.

RODRIGUEZ: When did this start? This obsession with having children?

ANGELA: When she was a teenager.

RODRIGUEZ: What do you remember?

ANGELA: I remember that she always loved to be around children. She loved to talk about having a large family. Then when she was older, she finally realized she could not have children the regular route, so did she start having in vitro.

RODRIGUEZ: Did you support her? Having a child as a single mother?

ANGELA: I was really from a different school. I was brought up differently - very strict. But I wanted to be, you know supportive because once it’s done - you can’t undo it.

Not the first one but every one after you could have prevented.

RODRIGUEZ: In other countries there are limits to the numbers of the embryos a doctor can implant. Do you hope that a change in the lawas comes about because of your daughter’s case?

ANGELA: I hope so. There should be maybe a law to forbid a doctor to do this. However, she said she didn’t want these embryos killed, you know, done away with … Those were her children, and she wanted to try and just use the rest.

RODRIGUEZ: Let’s talk about the others - how are they? What is their feeling about the new babies?

ANGELA: Well, they were actually asked and they didn’t want them. [Laughs.]

RODRIGUEZ: They said they didn’t want them? Why?

ANGELA: They’re pretty smart. Maybe they thought they would not get the attention they really deserved.

RODRIGUEZ: Is that a concern for you?

ANGELA: Yes. But as long as I am able, I am going to help out.

RODRIGUEZ: So it’s you, the six kids and Nadya in the house?

ANGELA: Yes, but there grandfather is also helping out right now.

RODRIGUEZ: And what about Nadya?

ANGELA: Nadya’s not working right now. She gets some disability. She was getting disability because she was injured on her job. But that’s also gone.

RODRIGUEZ: So now she has no money - you have very little.

ANGELA: Very limited amount.

RODRIGUEZ: And now you have eight more.

ANGELA: Yeah.

RODRIGUEZ: What will you do?

ANGELA: I don’t know. I haven’t thought about that yet. But I hope something will come up, because lots of neighbors have been very generous and nice.

RODRIGUEZ: Does she realize the huge responsibility this is?

ANGELA: I’m sure she’s realizing it more and more.

RODRIGUEZ: Is there any sense of remorse for her?

ANGELA: I didn’t hear it because those babies are here now, and it’s too late, really, to have remorse. But she loves children. What can I say? She probably should have been a teacher like I was!

RODRIGUEZ: Have you been surprised by the hate mail and the death threats?

ANGELA: Yes, It was kind of scary.

RODRIGUEZ: What was the scariest thing you read?

ANGELA: What should happen to her - how she should be hacked up. This is a mother who’s trying to take care of her children, and she’s a loving mother, so I don’t think anything should happen to her, heaven forbid, you know — because then, who’s gonna take care of all these children?

RODRIGUEZ: If you could speak directly to the people who are tormenting ou and your daughter, what would you say to them?

ANGELA: Please stop it, you know. There’s no reason to do this. Because it’s, it’s not necessary. She is going to have a tough life, with all these children. She is going to be punished. She believes in God so, you know, God is gonna take care of all this.

RODRIGUEZ: How do you think she will be punished?

ANGELA: Well, can you imagine, to be a single mother and having 14 children. It’s a horrendous job. She wants to do a good job and she’s been doing a good job. It’s going to be very difficult, to say the least.

Her children are the one who have been punished. They spoke up and said they didn’t want any more. And God is as much as an excuse as the human detonators use in the Arab world to sanction their brand of evil. She has sentenced each one of these kids to a life of neglect. That is child abuse. Period. God had nothing to do with sending her these children. She went to a lab and had them implanted out of her own selfishness. Even the children figured that out.

***

(1-30) Octuplets: Ethics of fertility treatment?
(1-30) Octuplets: What is really going on?
(2-9) Octuplets: Should not go home with that woman
(2-9) Octuplets: Octuplets: already filthy house unfit for children (pix)
(2-23) Octuplets: Mother vs grandmother caught on tape
(2-24) Octuplets: Cosmetic surgery, IVF, food stamps, disability, bankruptcy & foreclosure
(2-24) Octuplets: Mother before/after plastic surgery & Angelina Jolie (pix)
(2-25) Octuplets: Grandfather on Oprah daughter “not mentally complete”
(2-25) Octuplets: Hospital questioning her ability to care for children
(2-26) Octuplets: Video of inside the home
(2-26) Octuplets: Body language mother vs grandmother video (Part 1)
(2-26) Octuplets: Body language mother vs grandmother video (Part 2)
(2-27) Octuplets: Man claiming to be sperm donor
(2-27) Octuplets: Grandmother on The Early Show (Part 1)
(2-27) Octuplets: Grandmother on The Early Show (Part 2)
(2-27) Octuplets: Grandmother on The Early Show (Part 3)
(2-27) Octuplets: Grandmother’s first interview (Feb 9th)

Octuplets: Grandmother on The Early Show (Part 1)

February 16, 2009

Maggie Rodriguez of the Early Show interviews Angela Suleman, grandmother of the octuplets.

MAGGIE RODRIGUEZ: Angela’s is a tale of an overworked, financially-taxed woman having to put her life on hold to care for her grandchildren, angry at her daughter’s obsession with having so many kids, and resentful of the eight new babies — until she met them. Her daughter, Nadya, a single mother, had six kids already, all by in-vitro fertilization, when she had eight more embryos implanted.

ANGELA SULEMAN: I was actually very upset that my daughter had gone and done this in-vitro, but, after I saw them, you know, I thought, ‘My goodness, these are my grandchildren. They’re so tiny and fragile. I’ll have to be there for them.

RODRIGUEZ: Did she tell you before she went to get this last round of in vitro that she wanted to get pregnant again?

ANGELA: She didn’t tell me, because she knew I didn’t want her to do it.

RODRIGUEZ: So she went and did it…

ANGELA: Yes.

RODRIGUEZ: …unbeknownst to you. Did she tell you when it was successful?

ANGELA: Well, [laughs], when I saw that it was successful, she admitted to it.

RODRIGUEZ: Oh, so it’s not until she was visibly pregnant that she told you?

ANGELA: Yes.

RODRIGUEZ: When she had just the six, were there days when you felt, ‘this is too much. I’m overwhelmed’?

ANGELA [Laughs.]: Every day.

RODRIGUEZ: I can’t do this.

ANGELA: Yes.

RODRIGUEZ: How are you handling these kids financially?

ANGELA: Well, my retirement check goes every month. It’s just gone.

RODRIGUEZ: I know you live in a three bedroom house - who sleeps where?

ANGELA: There are two bunk beds in one bedroom. I mean a bunkbed. The other one has a crib and has a nice little bed. Then there’s the master bedroom. One boy sleeps on the mattress and the little ones each have a crib in that bedroom. So it’s crowded.

RODRIGUEZ: How will you accommodate 8 more babies?

ANGELA: Not in that house! I’ll have to do something to, you know, help her get another one.

RODRIGUEZ: Do you resent her already?

ANGELA: I did, but, you can resent your daughter for just so long, and then you see that she’s trying so hard, you know, to take care of these children. And she’s a good mother.

RODRIGUEZ: What is she like as a mother?

ANGELA: She’s a very good mother. [She laughs.] And she had a good example!

[They laugh.]

RODRIGUEZ: I’m sure she did.

ANGELA: There must be a reason, you know, why this happened, and that they’re all healthy. That is a miracle, a total miracle.

***

(1-30) Octuplets: Ethics of fertility treatment?
(1-30) Octuplets: What is really going on?
(2-9) Octuplets: Should not go home with that woman
(2-9) Octuplets: Octuplets: already filthy house unfit for children (pix)
(2-23) Octuplets: Mother vs grandmother caught on tape
(2-24) Octuplets: Cosmetic surgery, IVF, food stamps, disability, bankruptcy & foreclosure
(2-24) Octuplets: Mother before/after plastic surgery & Angelina Jolie (pix)
(2-25) Octuplets: Grandfather on Oprah daughter “not mentally complete”
(2-25) Octuplets: Hospital questioning her ability to care for children
(2-26) Octuplets: Video of inside the home
(2-26) Octuplets: Body language mother vs grandmother video (Part 1)
(2-26) Octuplets: Body language mother vs grandmother video (Part 2)
(2-27) Octuplets: Man claiming to be sperm donor
(2-27) Octuplets: Grandmother on The Early Show (Part 1)
(2-27) Octuplets: Grandmother on The Early Show (Part 2)
(2-27) Octuplets: Grandmother on The Early Show (Part 3)
(2-27) Octuplets: Grandmother’s first interview (Feb 9th)

Octuplets: Man claiming to be sperm donor

February 27, 2009

Now a sperm donor is coming forth wanting to know if the children were manufactured using his sperm. He is offering to help whether or not the kids are his. The man seems very credible but how could he not know what the sperm would be used for? How many men out there stop by and make “donations” without knowing what is happening to them? She could have been doling it out to her girlfriends. And where did she store it? Guess.

BEAUDOIN: I just remember her saying when I donated that the doctor told her that she had to keep it warm by putting it between her — between her breasts — just to keep it warm, keep it room temperature until she took it in.

He went out with her from 1997-99 and he made three donations - she told him she had ovarian cancer and that’s why she needed it. How does he feel knowing that she lied about having cancer? He has to be wondering what else she lied about. Like the fact that she might have been married. She says “David Solomon” is the sperm donor for all 14 children (see IVF link). After this show aired she called and said her could take a DNA test.

What is strange - he cries when he talks about the custody battle for his son. He says their relationship is “really hurt to this day”. So how is coming forward and claiming 14 new children going to improve that relationship? There was no custody battle. It was sperm. And if they aren’t his kids - think of the situation he put his kid in having to be associated with that woman.

GMA: CHRIS CUOMO, JONANN BRADY and RUSSELL GOLDMAN

Beaudoin said he thought it was “out of the ordinary” when she asked him to donate. “But I cared about her so much. And I mean, we were, we were in love. I mean, I loved Nadya very much.

She really had a really infectious laugh. You know, just her laugh would, it would make you crack up. It’s kind of like she had a real high-pitch, squeaky cartoon voice. And, you know, she was a lot of fun to be around. Just her whole bubbly outward personality was really, really cool.

She looks different, sounds different. You know, it’s just not the Nadya I remember.

You know, I could say this is something that’s all new. The Nadya that I knew, it never, it never came up to have such a huge family. It was just an urge to have a child because she was not able to.

It just seems like a lot of her statements that she’s made have been really inaccurate.

I can’t take everything she says for granted. I mean when she initially told me the whole reason why, for donating sperm in the first place, you know was to get pregnant because she was not going to be able to have kids. And it, you know, has turned into this.

This. Yes this.

Either which way, you know, know that if she needs it I’ll lend a helping hand. She needs help. I mean it’s hard. It’s hard nowadays to raise two kids, let alone 14.

Beaudoin said he is coming forward now because he knew his name would eventually surface as the potential father and, considering the negative publicity surrounding Suleman, he wanted to tell his story first. Beaudoin said he tried to reach out to Suleman but she never returned his calls. Now a business owner with a wife and two sons, Beaudoin said the entire ordeal has been very hard on his family.

You know my wife, she’s not real happy about, you know, the whole situation. I mean, you can’t really blame her. I mean I kind of threw this in her lap after, you know, it kind of hit the news.

[I] just really want to know if these are [or] these are not my kids.

Either which way, you know, know that if she needs it I’ll lend a helping hand.

If it’s him - his helping hand already helped.

***

(1-30) Octuplets: Ethics of fertility treatment?
(1-30) Octuplets: What is really going on?
(2-9) Octuplets: Should not go home with that woman
(2-9) Octuplets: Octuplets: already filthy house unfit for children (pix)
(2-23) Octuplets: Mother vs grandmother caught on tape
(2-24) Octuplets: Cosmetic surgery, IVF, food stamps, disability, bankruptcy & foreclosure
(2-24) Octuplets: Mother before/after plastic surgery & Angelina Jolie (pix)
(2-25) Octuplets: Grandfather on Oprah daughter “not mentally complete”
(2-25) Octuplets: Hospital questioning her ability to care for children
(2-26) Octuplets: Video of inside the home
(2-26) Octuplets: Body language mother vs grandmother video (Part 1)
(2-26) Octuplets: Body language mother vs grandmother video (Part 2)
(2-27) Octuplets: Man claiming to be sperm donor
(2-27) Octuplets: Grandmother on The Early Show (Part 1)
(2-27) Octuplets: Grandmother on The Early Show (Part 2)
(2-27) Octuplets: Grandmother on The Early Show (Part 3)
(2-27) Octuplets: Grandmother’s first interview (Feb 9th)