MOM GOES WILD When Judge Reads DNA Results! Courtroom Erupts!
Father. All right. Didn’t I tell you? Didn’t I tell you? Once I got pregnant and I told him I was pregnant, he act like he won the lottery. He was so excited. Oh, Junior. Oh, I can’t wait for you to have my son. He was so excited. Where the money at? Where’s the money at? If I won the lottery, DNA test proves that I am Elena’s father.
I will fight for my for my rights and I will fight you for custody. Mahoney, did you have two men living with you? Yes, ma’am. I had no job. I had nothing to fend my for myself. They were close family friends and they just wanted to help me help them. Did you get two girls pregnant at the same time? Yes, I did, your honor.
But I didn’t mean to. You didn’t mean to. That’s the only thing I could really say to the attention of other men with She was texting other men. She was uh going to see other men. She was using me like using you for what? Using me for a place. I wouldn’t mind with you. I was living with my mother. Case one.
The drama kicks off with Judge Lake taking charge. And right from the jump, Mr. Webb is tossing in wild claims. He says he’s been hanging around for 2 years just waiting to announce that he might be the real father instead of the other guy. Mr. Web, you have been waiting 2 years for this day. You claim the defendant, Mrs.
Forest left you for dead only to find out once you got out of a coma that she was pregnant and that the baby could be yours or her husband. Things take an even sharper turn when Miss Forest steps in and drops her own revelation. She admits she had a fling with Mr. Web while she was still tied up with her husband. And let’s just say there wasn’t much protection involved.

My husband got in some trouble and I ended up um meeting Mr. Web through one of my friends. We hit it off. I ended up leaving Mr. Forest for Mr. Web. So, you began a sexual relationship? Yes, your honor. And were you using protection at the time? No, your honor. Just when you think the case couldn’t twist any harder, Mr.
Webb reveals he had been in a coma, only to wake up and discover Miss Forest might be carrying his child. Suddenly, the entire situation turns into a soap opera turned up to maximum drama. With everyone in the courtroom, clinging to every word. As soon as I got out the hospital, I had got a phone call saying that she was pregnant. I heard it from my aunt first.
She had called me and told me that it was a possibility that Elena was my child. So that means she was admitting that she also had slept with other people. Yes, ma’am. Did you think the other person was just her husband at the time? No, your honor. The tension keeps building as timelines are put under a microscope.
Lawyers and the judge start piecing together dates, hospital stays, and baby due dates to figure out if the puzzle fits. It’s like trying to solve the hardest math problem imaginable. That is a statement from my mom and he was there the very next morning in a motel with her. Is that true? We were already broke up.
We’ve done called it quits. We done everything. Me and my wife had already been started talking back by getting back together after they done broke up like 3 days before he ever went to the hospital. No, your honor. And now you have reconciled with your husband. But I tried to see him. His mother would not let me see him.
Miss Forest then confesses she’s been holding back access to the baby because she fears Mr. Web might just vanish if given the chance. Her fears add another emotional layer and suddenly this isn’t just about paternity. It’s about trust betrayal. Elena is 2 years old and you have still not held this baby.
Never one time. No, your honor. I’m afraid that if he does get to see my daughter that he can run off with her and there’s nothing I can do to get her. So you admit that you’ve been blocking Mr. Web from seeing Elena? Yes, your honor. Then comes the ultimate standoff. Mr. Web and Mr.
Forest are both standing tall. Each determined to prove their side before the DNA test makes its final call. The energy in the courtroom feels like a showdown at high noon with everyone on edge waiting for the gavl to drop. DNA test proves that I am Elena’s father. I will fight for my child and I will fight you for custody. There’s no way he is my daughter.
No, this is our child, not yours. Mr. Forest, you’re convinced you’re I am or he is. I’m saying, are you convinced you’re her biological father? There’s a possibility. Yes. But I don’t know for 100%. Finally, the moment of truth arrives. The DNA test results are revealed. It has been determined by this court that her biological father is Mr. Web.
Case two. Out of nowhere, Miss Tucker reveals a shocking truth she’s carried for a decade. She believes the man she once thought was her father might not be the real one. Instead, all signs point to Mr. Hunter and she’s finally in court determined to uncover the reality. Miss Tucker, you believed another man was your dad until a bomb was dropped on you 10 years ago when your mother admitted that the defendant is your biological father.

You opened your case to prove to Mr. Hunter that he is your dad. Mr. Hunter, however, isn’t quick to accept the role. He admits he always had doubts thanks to a story Miss Tucker’s mother told him years ago. That version of events made him keep his distance. And now the courtroom becomes his stage to explain himself. Mr.
Hunter, you admit you have distanced yourself from the plainif because you have serious doubts you are her father. Miss Tucker, you admit you initially lied to your daughter, but claim you and Mr. Hunter have always known that he is her father. Miss Tucker recalls the uphill battle of trying to convince Mr. Hunter to take a DNA test.
Each attempt ended in disappointment, leaving her in limbo about her true identity. The waiting, the uncertainty, and the rejection built a storm of frustration that she no longer wants to carry. Few years I have been trying to get Charles to do a DNA test with me. Twice I scheduled a test. He didn’t show up and it’s just a lot of confusion in my own mind. And it’s very traumatic to me.
I’m trying to figure out if he’s my father or not to close this chapter in my life. So to find out that someone else could be my father, it’s really had an effect on me. Plot thickens when Miss Tucker’s mother drops a confession no one saw coming. She admits to lying about the father’s identity, convinced Mr. Hutter wasn’t the right influence.
Her revelation exposes a twisted web of secrets that only deepens the drama in court. I told her that someone else was her father at the time in order to protect her. I felt like Mr. Hunter was not a good role model. Someone else was her father. What? She had a better chance of having a father in her life.
What was your reasoning? No, your honor, that’s not the reason why I I was dating this guy, but it was basically over. The emotional weight falls heavy on Miss Tucker as she tells her side. She grew up believing one man was her dad, only to find out that may have been a lie. That realization hitting her as a young child, left scars she’s still trying to heal from today.
I was in the fifth grade and his sister had came and got me one weekend like she always did. They were on the phone and I was over listening to their conversation with her telling him that he needed to come around and he needed to meet me. She believed that I was his daughter, but I wanted to know, you know, where was he? Why was he not around? And that’s when he told me that my mom was not being honest with me.
Adding fuel to the fire, friends and acquaintances often pointed out Miss Tucker resembled Mr. Hunter more than the man she grew up calling dad. While her mother dismissed it all as nonsense, those comments only stirred up more doubts and confusion for Miss Tucker. I was in the seventh grade, so I was at a store.
There’s a woman who knows them both told me, she said, “You look just like your dad.” And so, so I go, “Oh, you know my dad.” And I said, “His name.” And she goes, “That’s not your dad.” And that’s when she said, “Mr. Hunter’s name.” And that was the first I have ever heard of him. So, I went home and I did tell my mom what she said, but my mom just said she was lying.
Meanwhile, Mr. Hunter shares his story of moving forward after being told the child wasn’t his. He left, started a new chapter, and tried to bury the past. Yet, whispers and rumors years later dragged him back to from a truth he thought he’d escaped forever. when she was pregnant.
She said it was the baby wasn’t mine. I left and I got my life together and I stayed gone for 15 16 years. I came back to North Carolina hearing rumors that she was mine. So, what am I supposed to do when someone tells me I’m not the father? I move on with my life. In one surprising twist, Mr. Hunter even appeared at Miss Tucker’s school, hinting that maybe the connection between them was real.
That encounter shook Miss Tucker, mixing hope with uncertainty, and reignited the storm of emotions that brought them both back to court. So, Mr. Hunter, did you show up at the school and tell Miss Tucker, “I’m your father.” I vaguely remember that conversation when she was at that school. And it could have been like a jokingly type of thing when I said, “No, you don’t joke.” Uh-uh.
Pull a child out of school and then tell them a joke that I think I’m your father. So, that’s not going to fly with me. Come with some new testimony that makes sense. Finally, the moment of truth arrives. The DNA test results are revealed. It has been determined by this court. Mr. Hunter, you are not the father.
Case three, ladies and gentlemen, hold on tight, mister. Brooks has dragged his former flame, Miss Ghoulie, into paternity court. He’s determined to prove that her 18-year-old son, Mr. Mc Donald, is his child. In his mind, there’s zero doubt, and he’s ready to lay it all out. Mr.
Brooks, you’ve summoned your ex-girlfriend, Miss Ghoulie, to paternity court to prove that you are the father of her 18-year-old son, Mr. McDonald. Miss Ghoulie, you admit you cheated on Mr. Brooks all those years ago and are here to date up to Mr. Brooks that he is not the father of your son. Yes, your honor. Mr.
Brooks recounts an emotional memory of being present the very day the boy was born. He says he watched the delivery, heard the baby cry, and even calmed him down with his own voice. To him, that moment sealed a lifelong bond that no one can take away. Mr. Brooks, why do you believe Mr. McDonald is your son? The day he was born, I took her to the hospital. I was there.
I watched him cut her open. I watched him pull my baby out. I told the doctors and the nurse, “Give me my baby.” And I said, “Ean, this daddy, I’m here, baby.” And he shot up. And at that r, I knew he was my son from day one. But here’s where the story takes a sharp turn. Miss Ghoulie confesses their relationship wasn’t exactly faithful.
With that admission, everything Mr. Brooks believed is suddenly up in the air. The court is left stunned, and the drama just got a lot messier. How long was that relationship? 10 years. Was it a committed relationship? No, your honor. During the pregnancy, did you ever tell Mr.
Brooks that he may not be biological father? No, your honor, I didn’t. You allowed him to believe that he was Mr. McDonald’s biological father the entire pregnancy. Yes, your honor, I did. Adding fuel to the fire, another man enters the backstory. Miss Gouie reveals she had more than a friendship with him during the same time.
This revelation paints a far more complicated picture, turning what seemed like certainty into a tangled web of possibilities. He was just a friend really. I mean someone that was there for me when Mr. Brooks wasn’t. If you think he’s your child’s father, you obviously were having sexual relationship with him. Yes.
Sean without using any protection. Yes. Sean, when she told you she was pregnant, there was no doubt in your mind that you were the father. No. One of the greatest days of my life when she told me she was pregnant. And I just wanted to be a a great father. Through it all, Mr. Brooks clings to evidence of his love. Photos of Mr.
Mc Donald from different stages of his life. He’s kept them close, convinced the boy is his son. Even if Miss Ghoulie isn’t by his side in the memories, his determination is hard to ignore. I got pictures. Been having these pictures with me from for 17 years. She don’t have none. Matter of fact, I don’t have I got about 60 pictures and she is not in none of them.
These are pictures you’ve carried for 17 years believing that you are Mr. McDonald’s biological father. Yes, your honor. So, at some point, you say he was taken away from you, but the past comes rushing back when the child’s supposed guardian once tried to take him away. Mr.
Brooks remembers that painful day vividly, a moment etched into his heart. The courtroom feels the weight of his struggle as the tension climbs higher. Remember that day just good. January the 23rd cuz she called me, told me, “Get the kids out the house.” I said, “For what?” I said, “They going to go to my cousin anyway.
” Police call pulled up and defect. They told me they come to get the kids. They came and got the kids in the first place because Fred Brooks is the one that called defects on me because he was That’s my family. I’m going to bring my own family. My kids away from me. That’s why defax was called. Then comes Mr. Mc Donald’s turn to speak.
He explains that he’s always believed Mr. Brooks was his dad after all. That’s the story he grew up with. Hearing it directly from him only deepens the stakes, and everyone knows the truth can’t stay hidden much longer. Mr. Brooks states that he believes he’s your biological father. Do you believe Mr. Brooks is your father? Yes, ma’am.
It was kind of nervous at the beginning, but as we sat down and talked during the visit, it kind of got okay. And then we just started talking ever since then. Finally, the moment of truth arrives. The DNA test results are revealed. It has been determined by this court. Mr. Brooks, you are his father. All right. Case four talk about a jaw-dropper David Hines gets blindsided when his father, William Hines blurts out that he might not actually be Devon’s biological dad.
The revelation flips Devon’s world upside down since he’s always believed William was the man who raised him. Mr. Hines, just two weeks ago, you were shocked when the defendant revealed to you that he is not your biological father. You’ve petitioned the court for a DNA test to prove that he is in fact your father.
Yes, ma’am. Not wasting any time, Devon takes the matter to court, demanding a DNA test to finally uncover the truth. With Williams sitting on a $20,000 child support debt, Devon insists it’s time to set the record straight once and for all. Defendant, Mr. Hines, you say you are currently behind more than $20,000 in child support, but claim to have evidence to prove you’ve always known the truth, that you are not the plaintiff’s biological father, and the results will confirm that today.
In a shocking twist, William tries to lighten the courtroom tension with bizarre impressions, almost mocking the idea of being the father. Instead of breaking the ice, his antics spark outrage and crank the intensity of the moment even higher. Well, as of two weeks ago, out of nowhere, he pops out. Not even him.
His girlfriend pops out and say, “Hey, won’t you tell him about what his aunt said?” Oh, uh, she said you might not be mine, you know. So, I kind of just blew it off, you know, like, okay, cuz we, oh well, you know, missed this and went on with it. It kind of just died off. The emotions run deep as Devon recalls the painful image of first recognizing his dad’s face on a wanted poster.
That poster wasn’t for fame. It was for owing more than $24,000 in child support. That memory still haunts him to this day. It’s 1989. We out and about. She said, “Look, dick with your father on the poster.” I looks up. It’s a wanted poster for child support for $24,000. That’s the picture that I seen of my father. That’s my first time.
I said, “Oh, that’s him.” “Yeah, that’s him.” We took down the poster board. Oh my god. This the only picture I got of my father is him on the $24,000. This is so crazy. But things aren’t all bitter. Devon shares how after reconnecting with William and Houston, they worked hard to form a genuine bond.
For 6 years, despite the looming doubts of biology, they built a relationship that felt real until the truth threatened to unravel it all. So when you get to Houston, you reach out. I reach out. And for 6 years, you all began to form a real fatherson relationship. Anything that you could say of a father and son, we was there.
But this man, in my opinion, is weak. But you say you knew all along. Is that correct? Yes. Why is it you kept that secret? Because when her got the courtroom then dives into Williams financial struggles with child support being pulled directly from his social security benefits, the case has left him strapped for cash and even more desperate for a resolution.
The money battle only fuels the fail of chaos. This is your evidence where you say they’re still taking money because of the aars that you owe child support. Ma’am, I want to understand your doubt. Did you sign the birth certificate when Devon was born? Yes, ma’am. If you believe she was messing around, why would you sign his birth certificate? Because I thought he was my child at that time. You did. Yes, ma’am.
So, what caused you to doubt? Somebody told me who her her sister. Finally, the moment of truth arrives. The DNA test results are revealed. Determined by this, Mr. Hines, you are the father. Case five. Strap in. Mr. Carter opens the case with a bombshell. What started as a brief fling spiraled into 15 years of child support payments, legal battles, and even jail time.
Now he’s demanding DNA answers to prove once and for all if the child is truly his. Mr. Connor, you say a one-time fling with the defendant turned into more than 15 years of child support payments and even jail time for a child you have never believed is yours. You need today’s results to prove you are not her child’s father.
On the other side of the courtroom, Miss Wallace and her husband aren’t backing down. They’re confident Mr. Connor is the biological father and insist the check should keep rolling in. The tension is thick and it’s clear no one’s walking away quietly. Wallace, you and your husband claim the plainif knows he is your son’s biological father and want him to pay what he owes when the results prove it.
Today, Mr. Wallace, you say you trust your mother, but acknowledge Mr. Connor<unk>’s recent actions have given you. Mr. Connor then lays bare the toll this ordeal has taken on his life. Between endless financial strain, jail time for missed payments, and the weight of constant stress, he says the system nearly broken.
But he’s not done fighting yet. The truth is closer than ever. It’s caused a lot of problems financially especially. It’s times when I can’t afford things. I’ve even been to jail. 2005, November the 5th until January 2006. There was no home for me to go to. I lost it. I was 36 years old. I had to start all over.
It’s making my character look real bad, your honor. Miss Wallace fires back, accusing Connor of living as her partner for a whole year. According to her, their romance was far from casual. Connor flatly denies it, and the back and forth feels more like a verbal boxing match than a courtroom hearing. He just wants off child support.
For one, it was more than just a one night fling. You know, Jeffrey isn’t my child. And I have you on Facebook. 42 years old, your honor. I raised my three kids by myself. You not know one, not one time, knew what I had to struggle and go through by myself. Things only get muddier when Connor insists their relationship was a single encounter that didn’t even go all the way.
Miss Wallace, however, paints the picture of a year-long love story with two completely different accounts. The court is left puzzled. There wasn’t a relationship. I met her through a family member. We came together one time and up on penetration she had a friend who told me, “Did you sleep with Wanda?” I said, “No, not really.” Sorted.
Then I told her what happened. There was penetration. I told her the story. And then she said, “Well, I just wanted to tell you she was pregnant already.” Then comes a twist. Miss Wallace recalls telling Connor she was pregnant, a claim he swears he never heard. The conflicting stories fuel even more doubt, making it nearly impossible to piece together what really happened years ago.
And he he did know how I find out that I was pregnant. I got sick. My mom taken me to my doctor’s appointment and that’s when I found out I was two months pregnant. And I called JW and I told you it back then we had P. Shut your line butt up. Hold on. Let me back then. We had President Mr. Conor. I’m going to give you a chance to respond.
Carter raises another bombshell suggesting Miss Wallace may have been motivated by money. Back then he was financially stable and he suspects she targeted him as the father for financial gain. The accusation sends shock waves through the room. At the time I was doing pretty good. I had a little BMW. We were young.
Couple of them I was watching. I say all of a sudden here come the child support. I think maybe she thought I had a little money as well. I want to know when’s the next time you saw I seen him when he was five. He came to my mother’s funeral repad and you agreed to that Miss Wallace? Yes ma’am. That happened.
Finally, the moment of truth arrives. The DNA test results are revealed. Has been determined by this court. Mr. Connor, you are not the father. I already knew it. Case six, Oman tight. This episode kicks off with Iris Moed dragging Mr. Lester into court, claiming he’s the father of her three-month-old baby girl, Nyla. She’s asking for child support, but Lester quickly fires back, saying their relationship wasn’t exclusive, and she might have other possible fathers in the picture.
Miss Moyad, you’re here in court today to prove that Mr. Lester, a man who is 20 years older than you, is the father of your three-month-old daughter, Nyla Moyet. Mr. Lester, you say that you and Miss Moyet were never in a relationship, and that she had multiple sex partners, her time of conception, so you are 100% certain that you are not the father of baby.
When money enters the chat, things heat up fast. Iris lays out a detailed list of baby costs totaling over $100 a week, formula, diapers, and clothes. Lester insists he’s pitched in before, but accuses Iris of inflating the numbers to make him look bad. He’s contributed to three cases of diapers and some sleepers.
That’s for a boy. You knew I had a girl. Why you coming in my house with boy clothes? How much do you think he spent on your child thus far? He spent maybe about $250 on the island. Do you have any receipts? No, I don’t. Without any receipts or proof of what you say you spend, I can only go off of what the evidence is that’s presented.
I understand. Then comes a jaw-dropper. Iris openly admits she was timing her visits to increase her chances of getting pregnant. Lester, visibly stunned, argues he never agreed to bring another child into the world. The clash of intentions throws gasoline on the courtroom fire. We still haven’t done anything to prevent another one.
He’s actually even told me I went to my I went to my 6 week prenatal appointment and asked him, “Yes, they’re going to ask me, do I want birth control? Should I get on it?” He told me no, cuz I’m going to want another one soon. Not only do we not have a sexual relationship now, we haven’t since she told me she was pregnant.
The drama intensifies as it’s revealed Iris wanted a real relationship while Lester was only in it for casual fun. Their conflicting expectations show just how messy the situation really is, leaving the court buzzing with tension. When a woman says to you, “I want to have your baby,” and you say, “No, I really don’t want you to.
” And you’re still having sex without protecting yourself, you’re setting yourself up. Only had sex with Iris five time. That’s a lie. You’ve never used a condom now with the girls that he’s cheating on me with. Lester isn’t done. Presents his own version of events, pointing out inconsistencies in Iris’s story.
He even claims she was seeing other men during the same period. With so many doubts, he refuses to wear the dad badge until science confirms it. Let me explain. Mr. Lester and I have never had protected sex. When Iris forced herself on me, did we not have protect? And when I said forced myself on him or not, it was always unprotected.
And I just want to point out to you the percentages of older men having babies and how it declines. Some more research. Mr. Lester, you try in this case. You better go ahead. Judge Lake steps in with some wisdom, reminding Iris that choosing partners wisely is crucial, especially when a child’s future is on the line. The message is clear parenthood isn’t just about romance or drama.
It’s about responsibility. You hear what he’s saying? Yes, John. I know when you say you had the love of an older man, you it was filling a void you felt for not having the love of your father. You were saying that. But regardless of what this result is today, I don’t want you running around behind him.
Do you understand me? Yes. Yeah. You’re better than that and you deserve more than that. Thank you. Yeah. And finally, the moment of truth. The DNA results are revealed. With every eye locked on the judge, the fate of Little Nile’s paternity is about to be decided in one explosive reveal. It has been determined by this Mr.
Lester. You are Nyla’s father. Yes. Yes. Didn’t I tell you? Didn’t I tell you? Case seven, Mr. Watson wastes no time dropping a shocker he’s in court to prove he’s not the biological father of four-year-old Kevin. He insists Miss Mahoney was seeing other men while he was away.
And one of them could very well be the real dad. What an opening twist. Mr. Watson, you are in court to prove that you are not the biological father of the defendant’s fouryear-old son, Kevin. You say that while you were away, Ms. Mahoney was having sexual relationship two different men and either of them could be the father. Miss Mahoney, however, is standing firm.
She’s nearly 100% convinced that Watson is the father and dismisses his claims of infidelity. Her confidence fills the courtroom, making it clear she’s not backing down without a fight. Say you are 99.999% sure that Mr. Watson is the father and denies accusations of infidelity. Things heat up even more when Watson reveals the stakes today’s DNA test could determine the future of their relationship.
If the results say he’s not the dad, he’s ready to walk away from both Miss Mahoney and little Kevin for good. Today’s results will determine the future of your relationship. I’ve known her since we were kids. If I we need to get these results because, you know, we are engaged and I would like to marry her and I really hope this is my son.
And you say the relationship’s on the line. Meaning, if the results don’t turn out the way you would like, the relationship, the marriage, everything, it’s out the window, your honor. It’s it’s over with really. The emotional weight of the case deepens as Money explains how Kevin is suffering from the uncertainty.
She says the boy feels unwanted, and it’s tearing her apart to watch her child question his place in the world. And Kevin’s four, so he understands this rejection. Yeah, it it takes him really hard. Um, he kind of he’s sheltered now. And so, Mr. Watson, you are rejecting the child. Yes, your honor. I’m not the dad.
That’s why when I when I was away, when when I came back, she was cheating and she has a bad reputation of being basically, as I’m going to say it, the neighborhood hug. But the draa doesn’t stop there. Watson accuses Mahoney of cozying up to two other men who were showering her with gifts.
She fires back, saying they were only helping her financially during a rough patch, nothing more. The courtroom feels like a battleground. Had two men staying with her, and they were showering her, showering her with gifts and taking care of her. Now, me as a man personally, I’m not going to do that for no woman either. Being a man though, you should have left me.
I never left. Miss Mahoney, did you have two men living with you? Yes, ma’am. I had no job. I had nothing to fend my for myself. They were close family friends, and they just wanted to help me help them. Adding to the chaos, the judge raises questions about another man rumored to be Kevin’s possible father.
Suddenly, the case isn’t just about Watson versus Mahonia, about untangling a tangled web of paternity claims. Why would a guy say to you, “I believe he probably does love me, but I don’t love him and I needed help and all he wanted was a room and that’s all.” But why would he say you were having sex with him if you weren’t? Because he knows that if he were to tell him that that he’s going to walk out and he’s going to leave me and that’s what happened and I don’t want that and I don’t want anybody else with it.
And just when you think the pot couldn’t get any hotter, Watson confesses to having a fling with another woman who just happens to be a key witness. With tensions at an all-time high, did you have sex with this friend, Mr. Wolf? No, your honor. No, I did not. Not sex.
What did she do? Be honest, because this is our chance to clear our water and make our family either complete or separate. I did not have sexual relations with that woman in any kind. We’ve heard that before, right? Was there sexual contact? Yes, your honor. So, how can you not expect this woman? All eyes shift to the DNA envelope as the final reveal approaches.
It has been determined by this court. Mr. Watson, you are the father. See, I love you. I love you so much. Case eight, get ready for fireworks. Miss Jones and Miss Hernandez storm into the courtroom. Both determined to prove that Mr. Trevino is the father of their children. The atmosphere is electric, and it’s clear neither woman is backing down without a fight.
Miss Jones and Ms. Hernandez, you are each here today to prove to a man that he is the father of your children. Now, that man, Mr. Trevino, is waiting outside the courtroom will join us shortly. Now, Miss Jones, you say Mr. Trevino is denying your child and you say it has a lot to do with Miss Hernandez. The sparks fly when Miss Jones accuses Trevino of avoiding his fatherly responsibilities, blaming Hernandez for encouraging his absence.
Drovino walks in ready to defend himself, but the tension only escalates as everyone throws shade. He’s denied her. Back and forth. He says, “I’m not the father. I am the father.” I’m not denying. I’m simply requesting the truth. My family and I have done a lot. Key word, your family. You are the father.
Remember that you have not been there. So, so I have So, you’re saying I have Jones though, you’re claiming he’s denying paternity. He has several times back and forth. And that’s your fault. Then comes a jaw-dropping twist. Jones admits that during a heated argument, she once told Trevino he wasn’t the father at all.
The confession sends the courtroom into chaos, forcing the judge to step in and regain control before things completely spiral. Oh, you’re saying you said it out of spite. I did and it was wrong to this day. I hate when women do that, especially when you do it. And Miss Jones because it felt good. Listen, you said it with the look on your face like it was the truth. I know.
You know what? You’re known to tell you and it did. It did. Let’s get some order. The drama continues as both women point out Trevino’s inconsistent behavior as a dad, painting him as unreliable. With accusations flying from every direction, the judge digs deeper to separate fact from fiction in this tangled paternity showdown.
Well, the truth is is she admitted that when she said it, it felt great. It felt great. But she said she said it out of spite, but in your mind, your doubt centers around I don’t care how mad you are. You don’t tell a man that you not. And I agree, but it can’t backwards and work hard to provide. work hard.
Your back is in perfect condition cuz you work so hard. Work, right? Judge Lake then delivers a dose of tough love, reminding Jones that her reckless words carry weight. She highlights how damaging those statements can be to Trevino’s role as a father and stresses the importance of honesty and accountability in the middle of this mess.
Now, Miss Jones, I have to say this to you. What you’re not willing to do is accept fact that your actions have a consequence. Now, when you get so angry at a man because he’s not doing what you want him to do and what you need him to do, and you decide, I’m going to hurt you, you then can’t stand up here and act mad or be the victim because he then starts to act like the child isn’t here.
And and finally, the moment everyone’s been waiting for the DNA results. Mr. Trevino, you are her father. Now, I need the help. Case 9, fasten your seat belts. This episode kicks off with the explosive case of Led versus Ellis. Miss Led insists that Mr. Ellis is her biological father, but he flat out denies it, claiming her mother wasn’t faithful during their relationship.
The stage is set for major drama. Miss Led, you say that for 26 years, you have known only one man, the defendant, Mr. Ellis, to be your biological father, and you’re devastated that he is claiming you’re not his. Ellis doesn’t hold back as he paints a picture of betrayal. He says Led’s mother was entertaining other men, which makes him certain he can’t be the father.
His doubts pour gasoline on the fire, giving this courtroom showdown a soap opera energy. Miss Led, you say that for 26 years you have known only one man, the defendant, Mr. Ellis, to be your biological father, and you’re devastated that he is claiming you’re not here. Miss Lad then opens up about her painful childhood.
Growing up without Ellis left her yearning for that father-daughter connection. She breaks down while sharing how his absence shaped her identity and left a hole in her heart. You say that Miss Led’s mother was unfaithful during your seven-year relationship and that you are certain you are not Mid’s biological father. You are here to prove that in court and to clear your name.
Then comes a shocking twist. Ellis says there was an old DNA test done years ago that already proved he wasn’t the dad. Lied, however, insists her mother told her a completely different story, leaving everyone wondering who’s telling the truth. I didn’t really have a relationship with Mr.
Ellis, growing up, it was just me and my mom. I’ve been in in and out of group homes, foster homes. When you hear her talk about her life without you, the man she believes is her biological father. How does that make you feel? I feel for her and all, but I’m I’m not her father. Look bright as she is. I mean, I ain’t no doctor or nothing, but I’m pretty sure two people this color ain’t going to make no baby this bright skinned.
The drama deepens when Lid’s mother takes a stand. She claims Ellis is twisting the facts and that the DNA results actually supported her side that he is the father. The courtroom bristles with tension as both stories clash head on. When I was away, your mother took child support on me. They did the DNA test.
I gave her the papers. They garnished my check. Mr. Ellis, explain that you you had a DNA test already. Yes. When I was away, her mother called child support on me. They came and took the DNA test. You got the results back? I got the results back. It was 99.9 that I wouldn’t have bothered.
I showed her the paperwork. Overwhelmed, lied unloads her frustrations about being caught in the crossfire of her parents’ messy battle. Was there a DNA test performed? It’s for honest DNA test got worse from her juvenile court but they never show to court. So the bottom line is a DNA test was performed.
Yes or no? Yes. What were the results? They say in the court 99% yes. That 99.9% that yes he was Danielle’s biological father. She admits the uncertainty has haunted her relationships and left lasting scars. The emotion in the room is raw as the truth inches closer. feel like cuz me I’m a mom and I feel like if you are old enough to like what you guys went through was not my fault and you guys should never have involved me in anything that you guys were going through.
I would never put my kids through that. You guys should have settled this the right way, the appropriate way, not wait for it to see the outcome of it. This is the outcome. You’re right. And that for years. Finally, the judge reaches for the envelope. The DNA results are about to decide it all. It has been determined by this court.
Mr. Ellis, you are the father. Whoa. I knew it. Yes. Boom. All case 10. Get ready for drama. Mise. Bowman enters the courtroom determined to clear the air about her daughter Kina’s father. She insists the late James Stewart is the real dad and she’s here to finally set the record straight after years of secrecy.
Dragged your daughter Kina to court to save your relationship. You admit after years of deception and confusion, you now must prove to her that her actual biological father is Mr. James Stewart, who passed away 18 years ago. But Kina isn’t holding back either. She fires back at her mom, saying the endless paternity twists have wrecked their bond.
For her, the latest claim about Mr. Stewart being her father feels like just another confusing story in a long line of lies. Miss Kina Bone, you say your mother’s paternity lies have jeopardized your relationship and you don’t believe her latest claim that Mr. Stewart is your father. Mr. Stewart, there’s no way that your deceased father is Miss Bowman’s biological father and want to clear his name in court today.
The spotlight shifts to Angela Bowman as she opens up about her past. She confesses that her false claims over the years only created more chaos. Now she’s trying to untangle the mess and repair the damage her choices caused. Over the years, I have lied to my daughter for the past four years.
It’s become very hard on our relationship. I used to be real close to her. Now, it feels like literally tore it completely apart. I need to prove to her that her father is James Stewart. When I first met Mr. Stewart, I was met him at a company that I worked with and we started working, became friends and everything, real close. We became sexual.
It got to where I found out there was somebody else. Kina, still reeling, explains how hard it is to trust her mother. Each new revelation about her father leaves her spinning in doubt. Unsure who to believe. The weight of secrets has turned their motherdaughter relationship into a battlefield. It’s been hard because the simple fact I don’t know when she’s lying or telling the truth anymore when it comes to my And so she told you another man was your biological father? Yes, your honor.
So when did you find out that he was not? I found out during the summer going into high school that he was not my father. The tension spikes when Kina recalls the day she secretly discovered that Mr. Watson wasn’t her biological dad. Sneaking a look at paternity documents shattered her world, leaving scars that still haven’t healed.
The courtroom feels every bit of her pain. And I was confused because all these years, you told me that Mr. Watson was my father. Then when we went to go take the test, when the test results finally came back after 2 weeks, I was nervous and didn’t know what to think. And I read the results even though she told me not to.
Why? She lied to me for 16 years. I didn’t know what to do, so I stopped talking to her for a month and a half. Then Angela drops another bomb. She admits to forging a letter to keep Mr. Watson convinced he was the father. A desperate move fueled by fear of losing love. It leaves the room stunned and Kina more shaken than ever. I did it because I was actually in love with Mr.
Watson and it was I wanted a child. This is my child and I lost contact with Mr. Stewart so I left it alone. So you wanted him to think that Kina was his child so that you could hold on to him? You cannot use a child to keep a man. It doesn’t work. It never works. Just when it seems the dust might settle, James Stewart’s name is pulled back into the spotlight.
Questions swirl over whether he was ever truly involved, while doubts about Angela’s story only deepen. Was 13. My father told me everything. I ain’t had a sibling 28 years, 29 years. My baby brother got killed when he was two. So, I would have wanted a sibling all my life. My father would have told me that. He didn’t want to bring her out until the test was completely done.
He wouldn’t know how to hell nothing from me. My father told me everything. That’s why I don’t I can’t believe it cuz there’s so many women that done did this. Said that their kids was mine and I had to grow without a sibling. That hurts. Finally, the judge reaches for the envelope.
The DNA results are about to decide it all. Case of Bowman versus Bowman. It has been determined by this court that James Stewart and Kina Bowman are related. Case 12. And just like that, the fireworks begin. Miss Chirp takes the stand, accusing Mr. McQueen of abandoning their 9-month-old daughter, Arya. She insists the DNA test will prove he’s the father and finally put an end to his excuses for dodging responsibility.
Miss Chpz, you claim you and your grandmother have been given no choice but to drag the defendant into court today because you say he moved away and abandoned your 9-month-old daughter, Aria. You believe the DNA results will prove that he is her biological father and you demand he stops running from his responsibilities.
MC Queen, however, isn’t sitting quietly. He fires back that he left because Chirp wasn’t faithful, claiming she had eyes for other men. His entire case rests on one thing, the DNA test. Proving Arya belongs to someone else. Miss Cherpez, you claim you and your grandmother have been given no choice but to drag the defendant into court today because you say he moved away and abandon your 9-month-old daughter, Aria.
You believe the DNA results will prove that he is her biological father, and you demand he stops running from his responsibilities. Miss Cher pulls no punches when it comes to his lack of support. She reminds the court that in nearly a year, his contributions add up to a box of diapers and a couple packs of wipes.
For her, that pitiful effort proves he’s been nothing but absent. Mr. McQueen, you claim that Miss Chirpz’s relationships with multiple other men is what drove you away, and you believe that today’s result proved baby Aria’s father is another man. MC Queen admits he hasn’t done much, but argues he has tried in his own way despite doubting he’s the father.
From his perspective, why go allin when the paternity question is always hung over his head? Still, it’s not winning him any sympathy. He has bought her one box of diapers, like two things of wipes. So, she’s 8 months old, 9 months old, pretty much nothing. And I can see that that really hurts you.
You very angry about that? Like he had promised. And how was that? Definitely not like this. I had moved out to go live with him and we had actually planned on having her. Everything went downhill from there. The story gets murkier as their messy relationship comes under the microscope. Infidelity, distrust, and explosive arguments mark their time together.
MC Queen admits to straying, but quickly suggests Chirp wasn’t exactly loyal either. Have you done anything for this baby besides just these diapers? The first day I met her, brought her diapers. Third time she let me see Aria, I also brought her diapers and wipes. The last time that I was trying to see her, before I did leave the state of Michigan, I dropped off clothes and boxes of diapers and three packs of wipes to her grandmother.
Miss Chirp claps back with a shocking revelation. She once caught MC Queen red-handed with another woman. She says walking in on him was a gut punch she never forgot. The courtroom feels the sting as her words hang heavy in the air. I have doubts because I didn’t have her full attention when uh we were together.
She had uh more interested in getting other men’s attention than mine. So tell me, what was the nature of your relationship? Were you committed? Yes, we were committed. Yes. You were boyfriend and girlfriend, Miss Cherpez? Yes. Back and forth they go, hurling accusations like a tennis match.
MC Queen claims Chirp’s been too close with other men. She points right back at his shady behavior. Just when it feels like the case can’t get more tangled, a new name surfaces Mr. Gerber. Necessarily set him up. I had told him I was going to my dad’s for about 4 days. I had only went there for a few hours.
And as soon as I pulled in the driveway, I just instantly knew. And he came to the window, looked out. I had told him, “Unlock my door.” He had unlocked it, but stood in front of the door to where I couldn’t open it all the way. And he’s like, “You’re going to be mad.” And I played dumb.
So, you open the door and someone was there. Enter Mr. Gerber, who adds fuel to the fire. He admits to having a fling with Chirp, but denies he could be Arya’s father. That I didn’t have her attention no more. She was trying to get the attention of other men. She was texting other men. She was uh going to see other men.
She was using me like using you for what? Using me for a place. I went with you. I was living with my mother ex-boyfriend to get money. I could have stayed there to what? Put her in a worse one. That was not the plan. It takes two to tango. His confession throws the entire courtroom into a tail spin, leaving everyone on edge about who the real dad is.
Did you have a sexual relationship with Miss Chz? At one point in time, yes. And so, how did you all meet? Uh, online. And it quickly developed into a sexual relationship or she was a single parent. It was kind of just getting to know each other to begin with. How often were you intimate? Not very often at all.
Do you think there’s a chance that you could be Aria’s biological father? Um, I do not. Finally, the judge pulls out the envelope. The DNA results are about to reveal the truth. The biological father is Mr. McQueen. See, story opens with a shocker. Miss Robertson reveals the man she grew up calling dad isn’t her biological father.
Her mother instead pointed the finger at Mr. Mc Bane Senior. Now standing nervously in court as the accused parent. Tired of endless confusion, Miss. Robertson drags him in to finally clear things up. Miss Robertson, your world was turned upside down at the age of eight when you received the shocking news that the man you believed to be your biological father was not.
You were informed that the defendant, Mr. McBain, Senior, is your father. You’ve dragged him to court to prove that today. Mr. McBain wastes no time declaring he’s not the dad. He leans on tales from his military service and suspicions about his wife’s alleged affairs to back up his denial.
With the swagger of someone who’s watched every courtroom TV drama, he insists he has proof, though he hasn’t shown much yet. You say during your military career, you were married to the plaintiff’s mother. However, you’re certain that you are not her father because you claim her mother was unfaithful, and you have proof. Miss Robertson recalls a peculiar childhood memory that makes this even stranger.
One day, her mother opened a phone book, pointed at MC Bane’s name, and told her, “That’s your father.” At age 8, Robertson brushed it off. But now as an adult, that moment feels like the spark of a mystery she has to solve. I was 8 years old. My mother had sat me down. She had found Mr. McBain in the phone book, and she said, “This is your biological father right here.
” She pointed him out in the phone book. Yes, your honor. From that point, I didn’t really think anything of it. I was 8 years old. It was kind of like it was nothing. Her biggest question, if MC Bane is so sure he’s not her dad, why is his name printed on her birth certificate? She wags the document like a smoking gun, demanding answers.
Even the judge leans in, curious about how a man can deny paternity while legally listed as the father. If he’s denying it, why is his name on my birth certificate? Why did he sign his rights away? I have proof right here. I can see is still affecting you, even as an adult woman. This memory of being told this at 8 years old and having so many unanswered questions.
Yes, my name may be on there, your honor. However, it’s on there because the state put it on there. I had nothing to do with with putting my name on her birth certificate. Mc Bane tries to explain it away, saying marriage laws at the time forced his name onto the paperwork. He adds that he later allowed another man to adopt Robertson, suggesting he was just following legal steps, not biological truth.
Despite his reasoning, his not the dead stance grows shakier. So your name was automatically placed on the birth certificate as father. But even in that moment at the hospital, I wasn’t there. You weren’t there, but you would not have voluntarily placed your name on the birth certificate. That’s one of the reasons why I let uh Mr.
heirs to go ahead and adopt her because she did deserve deserve to have a father. She’s not it’s not her fault her own mother is. Robertson recalls a short and painful meeting with MC Bane years ago. She says he showed up, exchanged a few words, then vanished from her life like a ghost. For her, that memory carries heartbreak.
For him, it’s like hearing about a stranger he claims he doesn’t even remember it. Let it go until I turned right before my 13th birthday. And that’s when I had told my mother that all I wanted for my 13th birthday was to meet Mr. McBain. What did she say? She got it for me. She I don’t remember that at all. Miss Robertson, what do you remember? It only lasted about 40 minutes.
That was like more than anything in the world for me at that time. In a dramatic twist, MC Bane throws shade at Robertson’s mother, accusing her of being unfaithful. He rattles off odd evidence like mismatched clothing as though auditioning for a detective show. Mom, not missing a beat, fires back. Sassily, those were your clothes.
Making the courtroom chuckle. Was working seven days a week for about 3 months straight. went back home. As I’m walking across the living room, I look over and there’s a pair of boots and a coat on on the floor and a coat on the honor. Those were his boots and his coat. They were size 10, your honor.
I wear size 12. I walked over to her room. I beat on the door. I said, “I don’t know who you are in there, but you’ve got 30 seconds to get out of my house or you’re going to be really sorry.” Then comes Mc Bane’s wildest claim yet. He says he was sterile back then, so he couldn’t possibly be Robertson’s father.
To top it off, he suggests another man in the picture could fit the bill based on his looks and background. The the fury sounds more like a soap opera than a legal defense. Excuse me. And who is that? There’s an individual I was stationed with. Yeah, you were stationed with a lot. I know. And so are you.
The Coast Guard telling me I was sterile. The fact that the man’s Hawaiian Samoan, your honor, this girl is white as white could be. You’re saying the other guy is Samoan? Yes. Through all the fingerpointing, Robertson bears her soul. She explains her search isn’t about money or revenge. It’s about identity.
She longs to know her true roots, maybe even discover siblings, and find closure in the family puzzle that’s haunted her for years. The sincerity touches everyone in the room. Even if your account is true, even if she was sleeping around, if she was your wife and you were also sleeping with her, couldn’t you potentially be Miss Robertson’s biological father? I don’t feel that she looks like as much like me as she thinks she does.
Also, due to the fact of what the coast guard told me and due to the fact that that Miss Graham was was was a cheater. And then the courtroom hushes. The judge holds the DNA envelope in hand. It has been determined by this court. Mr. McBain Senior, you are not her father. The case kicks off with a shocker.
Miss Walker takes the stand and reveals a near-death experience made her desperaton cover her real father’s identity. She explains why this question has suddenly become her number one priority. Miss Walker, you claim that your near-death experience has made your desire to determine your biological father more important than ever.
After believing one man was your father, you learned about another possibility, Bruce Simmons. But you say you must first prove to his doubtful wife that he is your father. But not everyone is on board. Mrs. Simmons quickly shuts the idea down, scoffing at the thought that her husband could possibly be connected.
She throws shade left and right, practically telling Miss Walker to move on and search elsewhere for answers. You contend that there’s absolutely no way your husband is Miss Walker’s biological father. You argue Miss Walker needs to let go of this fantasy and move on to another candidate. The tension spikes when Mrs.
Simmons gets emotional and spills a hidden detail her husband has struggled with fertility issues for years. She doesn’t hold back, openly doubting his ability to father any child. The courtroom grows quiet, waiting for the next revelation. Married 2003. I have two biological kids. We never made any.
I believe my husband is sterile. I believe he can’t make no kids. If we’ve been together that long and we ain’t made none together, what makes somebody just pop up and say, “Oh, you’re the And so the two children you have are not his.” So you know you’re capable of having children, but don’t believe he is. Yes.
Meanwhile, Miss Walker explains she hasn’t been making wild guesses. She’s been digging through family history and knocking on every door she can to solve this mystery. Then she drops a dramatic twist of medical crisis forced her to seek answers about her genetic background. And the trail has only gotten messier, Miss Walker.
So, why do you believe he’s your biological father? Your honor, I went on this search and I didn’t particularly just go out and just pick this random guy. In the beginning, I was also told that there was another man that was on my birth certificate, and I was told that was my father. Things take a darker turn when doctors reveal that the man she believed to be her father isn’t a blood match.
The shocking discovery shatters with little certainty she had left. And suddenly, another possible candidate enters the picture, stirring even more speculation. I excluded him because, as you know, I had a near-death experience. I had to I was going for a congestive heart failure, and in order to have this lung biopsy, they said that I can reach out to my family and board.
They went for donor blood. So I called my dad that I was told that was and asked him to go and ask his family all to go down give blood so I wouldn’t have to have donor blood. That’s when Mr. Simmons steps forward ready to clear the air. He reflects on old relationships, past encounters, and moments from his younger days that might hold the missing pieces of the puzzle.
His confessions ripple through the room like fresh gossip. Me and her mother got together and I was trying to get her sister, her mother’s sister. That’s how it really started out. when what had happened, her mother pushed up and said that I’m going to make you my man because her sister wasn’t that into me at that time and we made plans to spend that weekend together.
So, we spent that weekend together and then after that we lost touch with each other because she just turned around and she up and left. Finally, the stage is set for the climax. The judge prepares to deliver the long- aaited DNA results and all eyes lock on him. Has been determined by this court, Mr. Bruce Simmons, you are not her father.
The courtroom lights up as Miss Mc Duffy steps forward, determined to prove that her ex, Mr. Edwards, is the father of her two-year-old daughter, Samya. She’s had enough of his denial and his habit of dodging responsibility. With her voice steady, she insists it’s time for him to step up. Prove that your exboyfriend, Mr.
Edwards, is the father of your 2-year-old daughter, Somaya. You say you are tired of the defendant denying your child and evading. You have real reason to doubt you are the father of Miss McDuffy’s daughter. Claim after several attempts at trying to obtain a DNA test. You know today’s results will clear you of any responsibility.
Miss Mc Duffy explains to the judge that she’s given Edwards every opportunity to be part of Samya’s life. Yet he still flips back and forth claiming the child one moment then denying her the next. I know Mr. Sammy Edwards is the father. He’s a pop in and pop out dad. One minute he’s claiming her, the next minute he’s now she’s not his daughter.
And at this point, I just want my daughter to be taken care of, get the same love and support that I had growing up as a child as well. And I just feel like it’s unfair for us to have to be here today. I’ve allowed him opportunity. I’ve never denied him from his child. I’m still getting a backlash as if this is not his daughter.
Mr. Edwards takes the stand and doesn’t mince words. He admits he’s hesitant to connect with Samya, not because she isn’t sweet, but because he’s unsure if she’s really his. He claims he’s just protecting himself and his family from heartbreak in case the truth turns against him. Just simply because she’s a gorgeous little girl, you know, I don’t want to get too attached to her or get my family too attached to her because, you know, I I just don’t know if she she’s mine or not.
But you come see her all the time. Like you’re you’re constantly there. You pop in, you pop out one minute, you calling her, that’s can I see my baby? Can I do this with my daughter? And then now you’re not. Then comes the flashback moment. Edwards recalls how he and MC Duffy first met. She was working as a waitress and he couldn’t take his eyes off her as she crossed the room.
He admits with a smirk that her looks caught his attention instantly, sparking the whirlwind connection that followed. Saw her behind. She was a waitress behind the bar. You know what I’m saying? I I really ain’t, you know, paid too much attention to her till she really, you know, walked across across the bar. You know, I saw them buns.
I had to proceed. You know, I proceeded to the buns, you know. I got a number, you know, and at first, you know, we’ll text them for about a week. Their fling, as Edwards describes, started fast. He called her up, took her out for food and drinks, and before long, things escalated. The way he tells it, their chemistry was immediate, but the situation that followed wasn’t nearly as simple.
I called her again. You know what I’m saying? So, she obviously was out of the situation with him, I guess. And that’s what it is. You know, we I called her. I came and picked up. We got some good food, some good drinky drink. I guess you know, I proceeded to those buns. Back to the buns.
Yeah, you might have proceeded to a bun in the oven, too. As the story unfolds, the cracks appear. Edwards reveals how quickly doubts began to creep in. With both of them drinking, and no clear commitment in place, he admits he wondered whether their short-lived romance was more physical than meaningful. Then what do you all decide you’re going to date? Do you ever go on a date, be in a relationship? Does this sexual relationship continue? I’m sorry.
or two weeks like a week prior to you know us having sex in the car like the second date. It was she called me and said she was pregnant. A week? Two weeks? It was a week. No, it was not. It was It was It was like a week. The drama didn’t stop there. MC Duffy recalls how his family began harassing her online after she got pregnant, insisting the baby wasn’t his.
She paints a picture of relentless messages, judgment, and attacks all while she was preparing to bring a child into the world. So, you say her ex and his whole family? Her ex and his whole family. hit me up on social media. I’m talking about harassing the hell out of me talking about this is not your child.
You’re stupid. Why are you taking care of this child or why you got her or not child but wife? How pregnant was Miss McDuffy month? You know what I’m saying? Around that time he’s lying. When the spotlight turns to the delivery room, MC Duffy becomes emotional. She explains Edwards was right by her side when Sami was born, helping her through labor.
She remembers him holding one of her legs as the nurse supported the other and for a brief moment he played the part of a committed father. Sammy was right there with me holding one leg and a nurse on the other leg and he played Erica Badu when I pushed her out. So he was right there. I’m I’m more spiritual. I see you had the beads on.
I mean they look like African beads. You know what I’m saying? I’m very spiritual. So I I wanted my I felt half of me felt like he was mine. So I still wanted to really like at least beat her. Now all of that leads to this critical moment. the results with so many accusations. It has been determined by this court. Mr. Edward, you are the father.
The doors swing open and in strides Judge Lake ready to cut through the chaos. On one side sits Miss Hair demanding answers and insisting Mr. Howard acknowledge her six-month-old son, Ricardo Jr., she claims Howard hasn’t so much as bought a diaper, and today she wants proof on paper. Miss Hayesburg, you are suing the father of your six-month-old son for a paternity test. The defendant, Mr.
Howard, has never financially supported baby Ricardo Jr. Miss Haird wastes no time painting Howard as a runaway dad. She tells the court he once spoke of weddings, family, and forever until the pregnancy test turned positive. Then he disappeared. You also state that he once led you to believe that he wanted to marry you and even asked you to have his baby, but once you were actually pregnant, you say he abandoned you, has since fathered another baby who is only 2 weeks older than your child. Howard doesn’t take the
accusations lying down. He jumps in with a fiery defense, claiming he was tricked into believing Ricardo Jr. wasn’t his. To add fuel to the fire, he accuses Herod of pawning off his grandmother’s cherished ring. Mr. Howard, you argue that Miss Hayesburg told you that Ricardo Jr. was not your son and therefore is not your responsibility.
You are counter suing for $1,000 in damages for a ring Miss Howard paw that was given to you by your late grandmother. It started casually at a football game where laughter and friendly chats quickly turned into something more. Soon they were co-workers turn lovers. A pairing that felt destined until things spiraled into the mess before Judge Lake today.
I met this clown at the Washington Redskins stadium when we used to work together. One second. Let’s use respectful language. We’re co-workers and then after that we became friends. Like we used to chill with each other. After that, you know, we started having sex and we got drunk. So yeah, we got drunk, had sex, and that’s how I saved my son.
I drunk and had sex after that. Like I knew he had a girlfriend and you know I didn’t mind because we were just friends. At first, Howard seemed thrilled about fatherhood. Miss Harry recalls he spelled proudly of their baby tube and showered her with attention. But midway through her pregnancy, everything changed.
He grew distant, cold, and by the time she delivered, his presence had vanished. Once I got pregnant and I told him I was pregnant, he act like he won the lottery. He was so excited. Oh, Junior. Oh, I can’t wait for you to have my son. He was so excited. Where the money at? As soon as Where’s the money at if I won the lottery? As soon as my fifth or 6th month of pregnancy, he wanted to change up the table. He wasn’t there.
He didn’t even come to the doctor’s appointment. At about 11. Howard finds himself quartered as Miss Herod accuses him of juggling women behind her back. She insists his two timing explains the overlapping pregnancies. Howard with a shrug admits to relationships with other women, but argues it was complicated. That’s when a girlfriend started calling my phone telling me, “Oh, they’re still together.
That he never broke up with her. That he was that he lied.” Basically, that she lived with him. Can’t believe that you’re lying. When did we start dating? And we were pregnant around the same time. So she was 8 years old. Her his daughter was born December 27th. This moment that I think I want to hear from Mr. Howard. Thank you, your honor.
As if the drama wasn’t enough, Howard casually drops another confession. He may have fathered children with more than one woman in the same time frame. The crowd murmurs with disbelief while Judge Lake raises an eyebrow at the tangle of family ties he’s creating. Did you get two girls pregnant at the same time? Yes, I did, your honor.
But I didn’t mean to. That’s the only thing I could really say. But it happened. But at the same time, she did. She did call me a clown. I’m going to respect your court, but she looking like one like for real. But she meant that you slept with her, so it was obviously something about you wanted.
So what do you think? I ain’t put no gun in your ass. Tempers flare as both sides trade heated words. Miss Herd insists Howard is spinning lies to dodge responsibility while Howard counters that she’s twisting the truth for sympathy. The back and forth feels less like a courtroom and more like a live soap opera unraveling. She told you she was pregnant.
You said, “If it’s mine, I’m gonna man up.” Yes. But at some point, you said to yourself, “This is important that I get a DNA test.” You felt like this could potentially be someone else’s child as well. She was bouncing around. I wasn’t bouncing. I was only with you. That’s you. You were sleeping with me and Kiana at the same time.
You had to lie and say that you weren’t with her. Yes, you lied. You told me that you weren’t with her anymore. Judge Lake, unshaken, brings the attention back to the facts. She presents text messages showing Howard’s affectionate words about Ricardo Jr., proving his earlier enthusiasm. Suddenly, Howard’s courtroom coolness clashes with his written words, and the tension tightens like a drum.
Love you, babe. Kiss my son for me. Kiss my son for me. You’re acknowledging him for how you going to deny him, then acknowledge him. Thank you very much. Okay, since we got so much about my son, since you trying to make it seem like I’m just a bad guy and all this stuff, you see you have he was in the hospital.
Long see the test map that she wrote me and said that my son was dead. What about that? Finally, the moment everyone’s been waiting for arrives the DNA results. Chaining to sixmon-old London Howard. Mr. Howard, you are the father. We know that I I don’t see what everybody like maternity court.
Emotions always run wild, but some cases go beyond drama and dive straight into chaos. When the DNA results were unveiled in this episode, shock waves spread across the courtroom. Every jaw drop, every whisper stopped. This wasn’t just another reveal. It was a moment that rewrote the story entirely.
At the center of it all stands Miss Arbogast, accusing Mr. Vest of denying her daughter the moment he began dating her ex-friend. You are in court today claiming the defendant started denying your 2-year-old daughter Kinsley once he got into a relationship with your former friend. Ms. Arbagas fury burns bright as she demands $5,000 in child care expenses, claiming Mr.
Vest has done nothing to help her child. According to her, his total contribution in 2 years adds up to a mere $100. Mr. Vest doesn’t deny it. He admits it outright, but his excuse, he’s not even sure the child is his. The tension rises as the courtroom braces for what’s to come. Then, do you help financially with that child? I have in the past, but recently, no, I have not.
You You have not helped in the past? Not at all. You’ve helped $100 per both kids in two years. Two years. And things take an even stranger turn. It’s revealed that the two actually share another child together. Yet, Mr. Vest only claims one is his own. Despite that, he hasn’t done anything to support either child.
The courtroom murmurs as everyone wondered, is he really uncertain or just unwilling to step up as a father? The air thickens with disbelief. And Mr. Fritz is your current boyfriend. Yes, your honor. And you so he’s the person helping you raise Mr. Vess’s children. Yes. He’s the one who they wake up to every morning. He’s the one who takes them out, does things with them, plays football with them. He does the father role.
The plot twists when we learn about Mr. Fritz, Marbaggast’s current boyfriend. He’s been the one raising both children, providing for them, loving them, and being the only father figure they know. The kids even call him dad. It’s a heartbreaking detail that paints a sad picture of Mr. Vest’s absence.
Even the judge seems disappointed at this revelation. But um he obviously wanted it a lot. So we g I gave it. Our date of conception was between August 11th and August 13th. Then he told me I couldn’t be friends with somebody I had been friends with for 9 years. He told me if that’s the if you to go have sex with him, that’s the only way to break your emotional connection.
But just when we think we’ve heard it all, Miss Arbogast drops a bombshell. She says that Mr. vest once demanded she sleep with a man she had been friends with for 9 years just to prove her loyalty to him. Everyone in the courtroom goes silent. The logic behind that statement is baffled, leaving everyone, including the judge, completely scunned.
Wait, how did this happen then? You you you just go up to this guy and say, “My boyfriend says we should have sex.” It was late at night. He came and got me. We went to the lake and well, we went to the gas station, bought condoms, went to the lake, did our deal, and I went back home and got in bed with him.
In an unbelievable twist, Miss Arboggast admits she actually went through with it. Mr. Vest confesses he did say something like that, but insists it was said in anger during a heated argument. Still, the damage was done. Their relationship, already fragile, crumbled further under the weight of distrust and bad decision.
He held her before I held her. Yeah, I thought she was my daughter until you told me that she wasn’t. I never once told you on speaker. What did she say, Mr. Vest? We were on speaker phone and she blurted out that Kinsley may not be mine. To add more fuel to the fire, Mr. Vest’s current girlfriend testify.
She claims she once overheard Ms. Arbaggast telling Mr. Vest directly that he wasn’t the father of her child. Ms. Arbogast instantly denies ever saying such a thing. But the tension between the women is obvious. The courtroom feels more like a battlefield than a legal hearing. I’ve been begging for a paternity test.
I even asked him to go and buy one of those $35 kits off the shelf DNA paternity tests that you do at home and then you send it to a lab. Oh, I don’t have the money for that. Okay, but if you’re the one begging for it, why didn’t you buy? Because you’re the one who because you’re the one who denies her.
At this point, everyone wonders how these two even managed to bring two children into the world together. They can’t agree on a single thing. Every exchange feels like another explosion waiting to happen. You can almost feel judge Lauren’s patience wearing thin as she tries to maintain control over the fiery back and forth.
You say it’s pathetic that you still don’t want to grow up and claim your daughter that you signed the birth certificate for. Mr. Vest responds, “I would claim that thing if I knew she was mine.” Miss Arbagast says, “Oh, so now she’s just a thing.” A thing that could potentially be your daughter. Despite everything, Miss Arbagast’s stance remains firm.
She insists that Mr. Vest has never played any meaningful role in their children’s lives. She doesn’t believe that will ever change, even if the test proves he’s the biological father. To her, a father is someone who shows up not someone who disappears when things get tough. You believe, Mr. Vest, that you see a resemblance with Cameron, but not with Kinsley.
Yeah, I see the resemblance between Cameron and Kinsley because yeah, they’re they’re siblings. But do you have a resemblance with But I don’t see a resemblance to myself and Kinsley. You do not. No. Still, she’s certain the DNA test will confirm what she already knows. She says the resemblance between her child and Mr. Vest is undeniable.
The judge reminds everyone that appearances can be misleading and that only science can settle the matter. With baited breath, the court prepares for the moment of truth. The results that could change everything. Mr. Vest, you are the father. I see this situation’s got to change. Mr.
Kennedy presents himself as a reasonable man who simply wants the truth. He claims he was left with no choice but to bring Ms. Pope to court to prove he isn’t the father of her son. On the other side, Miss Pope, joined by her mother, insists that Mr. Kennedy is indeed the biological father. Both are standing firm on their beliefs, and the tension is already thick.
Here’s how their complicated story unfolds. You claim to be a nice guy who was forced to make the tough decision to drag the defendant to court to prove you did not father her threemon-old son Christian. Is that correct? From the start, Mr. Kennedy tells Judge Lauren that he believes Ms. Pope is trying to make him responsible for a child that might not be his.
According to him, she just wants someone to blame or depend on. His words imply she may have been with other men during the same period. It’s a bold accusation that instantly divides the court. But for now, we’ll hold off on assumptions. Wait a minute. Why were you sleeping with him if he was a jerk? He came off as an all-American guy in the beginning.
He was We had a lot of things in common. We had the same birthday, the same football team. That’s enough to sleep with somebody. Jerome birthday and a football team. So, the bottom line is you all got along in the beginning and you started a sexual relationship. Miss Pope then takes her turn to defend herself.
She claims she ended things with Mr. Kennedy because he constantly accused her of still having feelings for her ex. In her words, she was emotionally drained by his insecurity. All she wanted was a stable relationship with him. But his distrust ruined everything. Her side of the story paints a very different picture. My feelings had changed was because uh she didn’t have a GED.
She didn’t have a future plan going for her. At the time, I was going to school for my associates in criminal justice. I was working and raising my uh first son. And uh it wasn’t until my friend told me, you know, she doesn’t have anything going for her at the moment, so you need you need to drop it like a bad habit. Then Mr.
Kennedy drops his own emotional bombshell. He admits that his feelings for her faded because he didn’t see a future with her. According to him, Ms. Pope lacked direction and ambition, and he wasn’t ready to commit to someone who didn’t seem to have goal. His words sting, leaving Ms. Pope visibly frustrated. The courtroom atmosphere grows heavier.
I found out that I was pregnant at 6 weeks. I had a cutie one morning and threw it up at work. I put the two and two together. It wasn’t rocket science and I knew that I was pregnant. And after that point, he really didn’t have much to say over the fact that I was. Judge Lawrence steps in trying to cut through the tension, but Mr.
Kennedy isn’t done yet. He tells the court that when Ms. Pope got pregnant, she assured him he had nothing to worry about claiming he wasn’t the father. Later, he found out she had been intimate with two other men around the same time. That revelation, he says, completely shattered his trust. She even had the baby until after the baby was already here.
She didn’t tell you anything about the pregnancy, anything. You didn’t hear from her until after the baby was born. I had messaged him the next messages. Yes. It gets even more awkward when we learn that Mr. Kennedy didn’t even know about the pregnancy until after the baby was born. The messages he presented in court show his confusion and hesitation.
He clearly didn’t want to accept a role he wasn’t certain about. His reaction, while distant, reflects a man who felt deceived and blindsided. I took a, you know, six-hour trip out of my day to go up and actually see the child for with my own eyes just to make sure she was being truthful. I didn’t get anything until after the child was born.
Still, one can argue he should have at least checked in on the child and mother. Regardless of doubt, seeing the baby would have been the responsible thing to do, but from the look on his face, his suspicions were already deeply rooted. It’s hard to care for a child when you’re convinced the story doesn’t add up.
You do have to own the fact that once you tell a man or he becomes aware that there are two other possibilities. You do have a responsibility to get clarity on that. Do you agree with that? And that’s why you’re here. To be fair, Mr. Kennedy’s argument isn’t that he refuses fatherhood. It’s that Miss Pope once told him he wasn’t the dad.
For him, her sudden change of story feels manipulative and suspicious. The court can sense that both parties are hiding pieces of the truth. And that makes this case even more complex than it seemed. He never told me who was on the other side of his gate. I also found out that there was another woman in his life that also had a child 3 months prior to me.
If he would have told me that he wasn’t with somebody else and that she was also pregnant, I would have never even bothered with him. In the end, it’s clear that their relationship lacked clarity from day one. They never truly defined what they were to each other. And now that confusion has led them here to a DNA test.
The time for accusations and tears is over. All that’s left is to open the envelope and discover once and for all if Mr. Kennedy is the father of Miss Pope’s child. Mr. Kennedy, you are the father. Miss Hillman walks into court with her mother by her side, determined to prove that Mr. O’Neal is the father of her son.
According to her, he has completely abandoned both her and the baby since the day she told him she was pregnant. Mr. O’Neal, however, stands his ground boldly claiming there’s no way the child is his. The air in the courtroom is thick with tension as the case begins to unfold. It’s clear this won’t be an easy one. And your mother are appearing today because you claim the defendant got you pregnant and has since refused to do anything for your 13month-old son, Demarcus.
You’ve petitioned the court for a DNA test to prove that he is Demarcus’ father. Is that correct? Yes, your honor. From the start, Miss Hillman explains that she has been raising her baby entirely on her own. She tells the judge that neither Mr. O’Neal nor his family has offered a dime or any support. Her mother and grandmother have been helping her stay afloat.
For her, this case isn’t just about money. It’s about accountability. And today, she wants the truth. I got my doubts. I got my doubts. I ain’t doing nothing for the baby. So, you you mean it? Nothing. No change, no diaper, no pampers, no nothing. Cuz I ain’t going to take care of nothing. I ain’t mine. I done been through that spirit before.
So I ain’t I ain’t ready to be no dummy two times. Meanwhile, Mr. O’Neal refuses to bud. He insists he isn’t responsible for a child he doesn’t believe is his. He even admits that he’s been through something similar before and refuses to be fooled a second time. His tone is defensive but also full of resentment.
You can tell there’s a lot of emotional baggage behind his confidence. Okay, me and Mr. O’Neal, we met through two mutual friends. The first night we met, you know, we chilled. Okay. He told me like he told me I was his girlfriend. He didn’t ask me like he told me. He demanded that. Okay, you’re my girlfriend. We’re together.
Then things take a strange turn. Mr. O’Neal laughs and says he prefers women who are a challenge, implying M. Hillman made things too easy. The courtroom gasps at his bluntness. But M. Hillman fires back saying that’s a complete Lee. He was the one who begged her to be intimate.
The judge has to intervene before things get too heated. Are you using protection? No. So man wasn’t needle. where other man was with you. She was with me because y’all was at my house. So you were you you were you were there. Love at first sight. That’s what he told. And then on top of that, the first time me and him with those mutual friends ever ch it was at my mom house.
As the arguments continue, the two start sounding more like teenagers than adults in a courtroom. Mr. O’Neal claims that he’s tried to have children before, but none of those women ever got pregnant. He says it’s suspicious that M. Hillman conceived so quickly. his theory. It’s just too much of a coincidence to believe he’s the father.
You said, hold on, Mr. O’Neal. You said you caught her with her ex and you saw text messages. Oh, there me lying. What did you see? How you doing? What you doing tonight? Oh, nothing. Accusations don’t stop there. Mr. O’Neal says he once saw messages on Miss Hillman’s phone suggesting she was seeing another man.
He also claims her ex-boyfriend may have spent the night at her house right after he left. The story keeps twisting and it’s hard to tell what’s truth and what’s just speculation. The judge looks visibly frustrated at this point. Hold on. You just chilling out by yourself. Uhhuh. What happened? Me and my homeboy, we’re in the park chilling.
A random guy, he walked by first. He ain’t said nothing. Walked by the second time and looked me up. And so he like, “You little native baby daddy?” I said, “Yeah, why? What’s the problem?” “Oh, that’s my that supposed to be my homeboy baby. Did she tell you that?” Then Mr. O’Neal shares a rather bizarre story.
He claims a random man once approached him and said, “Mizen, Hillman’s baby actually belonged to one of his friends homeboy.” The courtroom falls silent as everyone processes what he just said. It’s hard to tell if he’s being paranoid or genuinely misled. Either way, his doubts are running deep. Hey, look at yourself in the mirror.
He look like you. He like all your family, all y’all got big eyes, big lips, big nose. Look at the cheeks. He got bags under his eyes just like you and your mama. But no, Mr. O’Neal, I have to say this to you because you say you’ve been through this before. Yeah, I have been through this before. Still, Mr.
O’Neal finally opens up about his fear. He says the reason he’s so hesitant is because he’s been burned before he once believed a child was his, only to find out later it wasn’t. That experience, he says, broke now. He’s too afraid to trust without DNA proof. His words show that his denial might be driven more by pain than pride. This evidence is Demarcus’s birth certificate, and under father’s name, there is no father listed.
And in and y it’s embarrassing cuz like when he go to the doctor they they look at me funny like oh it was just another person that don’t know who their daddy is or their daddy wasn’t there to sign a birth certificate. That’s embarrassing. That really is that really is embarrassing. By the end both sides are emotionally drained.
Miss Hillman breaks down saying she’s tired of people judging her as if she doesn’t know who fathered her child. Mr. O’Neal remains firm convinced the truth will clear his name. Judge Lauren takes a deep breath before reaching for the envelope. courtroom holds its breath because whatever the result is, it’s about to change everything. Mr.
O’Neal, you are the father. Can I see you? You’re the father. Can I see you? This story opens with Miss Smith stepping into the courtroom, admitting that her daughter might have not one, not two, but three possible father. The room goes silent as she reveals this shocking confession. Her goal today is simple find out who the real father is so her child can finally have clarity and a stable future.
It’s rare to see such brutal honesty, but it’s also what makes this case so intriguing. Everyone is on edge, waiting to hear more. Daughter to Mia and say you’re hoping your mistakes don’t ruin her life. Now, at this moment, you claim she has three possible fathers. You’ve requested results of multiple paternity tests to determine who her one biological father.
At least Miss Smith isn’t hiding behind excuses. She tells the judge that during her 8-year relationship, she made some terrible choices. Things weren’t good between her and her husband. And in that emotional chaos, she made mistakes she deeply regret. It’s not easy to confess that in front of cameras and strangers, but she’s determined to make things right for her child.
Her honesty sets the tone for a complicated courtroom battle. Jailey, you’re acting like you didn’t participate, but you had sex enough to understand that there’s a possibility that you’re Tama’s father. She had sex with a lot of men that could be possible to father. That’s not true. Not at all. Then there’s Mr.
Bailey, the man who finds himself dragged into this emotional storm. He denies everything, but Miss Smith insists they were intimate multiple times. According to her, they hooked up in nearly every home they toured while searching for a place to live. The judge raises an eyebrow as the courtroom erupts with murmur. The details are messy, awkward, and almost too wild to believe.
Who did you tell that you were pregnant that they were the father? I told she told both of us. Me and him actually stayed in my car. When I was standing in Rome, Georgia, we were sitting in the car. I picked him up because he was walking. The tension escalates fast. Both Miss Smith and Mr.
Bailey keep shouting over each other, trying to control the narrative. Judge Lauren finally slams the gavl, demanding silence. The back and forth arguing sounds less like a courtroom and more like a chaotic breakup scene. You can almost feel the frustration bouncing off the walls as neither side wants to back down. Window of conception and you potentially could be her daughter’s biological father.
Um, no I don’t think so. You don’t think you had a one night stand or you don’t think it was during the window of conception or you don’t think you could be the daughter’s father? When Mr. Bailey takes the stand again, his confidence is unmatched. He admits they were together during the time the baby was conceived, yet somehow still insists he can’t be the father.
The math clearly doesn’t add up, and even the judge can’t help but throw in a sarcastic remark. The courtroom bursts into laughter for a moment before things quickly turn serious again. The girl that I met her through came to see me and she brought her and the child and another child. I was sitting in a car with them talking and I seen the child, but she never said that I could be the possible father.
If everything Miss Smith said is true, you can’t blame Mr. Bailey for feeling blindsided. He says that if she truly believed he was the father, she should have handled it differently. Finding out this way through court feels like betrayal to him. You can tell he’s more hurt than anger. His body language says everything his words don’t.
Well, I have a medical condition. I was diagnosed with leukemia in 2009. Glad to see you’re well. I take um chemo pills and my doctor told me that if I did have children that they’d have severe d birth defects if I could have kids at all. What makes this case even more interesting is that Mr.
Bailey comes prepared. He shows text messages and timelines that challenge Miss Smith’s version of events. It’s turning into a real life mystery, one that’s harder to solve than anyone expected. The audience is glued to every word, eager to know which man will turn out to be the real father. The tension is unbearable.
She said me, his older sister, and her, we sat in the same kitchen together while the older sister was perming her hair, and she was telling me and the sister, “Oh, y’all need to get some of these.” At this point, there’s only one thing left to do to reveal the DNA result. The judge calls for silence as the envelope is brought forward.
Both parties look nervous, shifting in their seats. Whatever comes next will change everything for everyone involved. The moment of truth has finally arrived, and the courtroom holds its breath. that the biological father is Mr. Bailey. Thank you. That’s the news you wanted, right? No, actually not. Mr.
Miles walks into the courtroom with one mission to prove to his 37-year-old daughter that he is indeed her father. After nearly four decades of silence, he says he’s ready to face the truth and make peace with the past. Ms. Turner, however, isn’t convinced. She firmly believes that he’s not her biological father and that his sudden appearance is too little, too late.
And with that, the emotional case begins. Mr. Miles, you are in court today to prove to your 37year-old daughter, Christine, that you are her father. It’s a valid question. Can a man disappear for 37 years and suddenly decide to show up as dad? Ms. Turner makes it clear that she doesn’t owe him the acceptance he seek.
He denied her existence when she needed him most. And now she wants answer, not apology. The courtroom can feel her pain. And honestly, she has every reason to be skeptical. All of this started. I was young and I was stupid. I mean, I was 17 years old when I met your mom. I had no idea even what I was doing in life. Then comes a heavy admission from Mr.
Mile. He confesses that he was young, immature, and careless when he was involved with Ms. Turner’s mother. Back then, he had no idea she was pregnant. When summoned to court years ago, he denied being the father because according to him, Ms. Turner’s mother had been seeing other men. His regret now seems genuine.
But is it too late? How long were you in a relationship with her mother? It was about 2 months is about how long we were together. I was living with her cuz I I mean, like I said, I was 17 years old. I was couch surfing. I didn’t have really have any place to live. Mr. Miles explains that he truly thought their relationship was exclusive, but once it ended, he discovered that Ms.
Turner’s mother had been with two of his close friends. That betrayal, he says, broke him deep and made him question everything. He admits his emotions got the better of him and clouded his judgment when he denied paternity. The judge listens care, but skepticism remains in the room. Just kept on saying he’s not your father.
I don’t know why he’s doing this now after 37 years. So, who did you grow up believing was your biological father? I didn’t not until I was 16. I didn’t meet Richard until I was 16 years old. So, what was what was your childhood like growing up without a father in my heart? Meanwhile, Ms. Turner shares her own story.
Growing up without a father figure left her scarred, confused, and angry. She had to build her strength on her own, facing life without guidance or support. Despite all the pain, she stands proud. She’s built herself into the strong woman she is today. But the child inside her still aches for the truth. Two, we filed our taxes.
Taxes came back and there’s a letter. you know, like $28,000 in back child support. And that just shocked me. Like I said, I just I just didn’t have a clue that that that was even there. Mr. Miles insists he did try to find her over the years. He says that back then locating someone wasn’t as easy as it is today.
There was no internet, no social media, no simple way to reconnect. He claims he searched the old-fashioned way, but hit dead ends each time. Still, many in the courtroom wonder if his efforts were truly enough or just excuses. 16 and he came to my grandparents house and my grandparents actually let me go stay the night with him and his wife.
I was never told about them until that very day. Nothing to prepare myself for the the how I was going to feel. More shocking details surface as the hearing continued. Apparently years ago, Mr. Miles and MS Turner did cross paths. He says he wanted to step up and be a father, but things didn’t go as planned. Miss Turner recalls visiting his home once only for him to drop her off later and disappear again.
That moment of hope turned into yet another heart. Your honor, we tried. My wife, she went through this. That’s why it was so important cuz she went and didn’t have a father either. I had a father. I just didn’t know my biological. Emotions flare as M. Turner speaks through tear. She says she doesn’t know whether to be angry, sad, or relieved.
Even Mr. Miles’s current wife feels the tension, admitting she understands the pain of abandon. She quietly hopes her husband is prepared for whatever truth the DNA test bring. One thing’s clear, this case has reopened wounds for everyone involved. Understand that her mother told her you were not her biological father.
I didn’t know that because when we were in the court, she said I was the father. So after that, I assumed she would tell her that I was the father because that’s what happened in court. Why would she name her after his mother? At this point, it’s hard to say who’s right or wrong. Maybe it’s Ms.
Turner’s mother who holds the missing piece of this decades old puzzle. Secrets kept too long have led to confusion and resentment that span generations. Now only science can bring closure. As Judge Lauren opens the envelope, everyone holds their breath because the truth at last is about to be revealed. Miles, you are not the father.
Spotlight shines on Miss Stanley, who’s taking her former lover, Mr. Williams to court for a DNA showdown. She insists that he is not the father of her three-year-old son, Ryan Alexander. But Mr. Williams isn’t backing down. He’s ready to fight fiercely for his place as the child’s father.
Buckle up because this case is packed with twists. Miss Stanley, you have dragged your former fling, Mr. Williams, to court for a paternity test to prove he did not father your three-year-old son, Ryan Al. Just when you think it can’t get any messier, Aunt Mary enters the picture. She’s brought along evidence she believes will prove that Ryan Alexander is indeed Mr.
Williams’ biological child. The tension in the courtroom spikes as she prepares to reveal her proof. Everyone knows Aunt Mary doesn’t show up without a reason. And this time she’s stirring the pot. Committed relationship. This was more like a sexual type kind of relationship. Relationship. Miss Stanley openly admits that she was intimate with Mr.
Williams around the time Ryan was conceived. Still, she’s convinced that today’s DNA results will clear her name and show he isn’t the father. But Mr. Williams suspects her motives. He claims Miss Stanley just wants him out of the way now that she has a new man in her life. This is a message, a text message from Miss Stanley.
Yes, ma’am. That says, “Did you hear that me and Chris is going to get married?” Then comes the first major twist. And Mary whips out her phone and drops a bombshell screenshots of messages from Miss Stanley herself. One text even says she and Mr. Williams had plans to get married.
The courtroom gasps as the story starts to unravel. It seems there’s more to this love triangle than anyone expected. So, Miss Combmes, you did say that at some point Miss Stanley told you he was the father of Ryan Alexander. Is that true? She’s always Miss Stanley’s social media becomes the next piece of evidence and it’s not looking good for her.
Aunt Mary presents Facebook messages where Miss Stanley once praised Mr. Williams as a wonderful father. The judge can hardly keep order as the contradictions pile up. Miss Stanley’s web of stories is starting to collapse right before everyone’s eyes. Him because everyone else kept saying it wasn’t.
And as with the pictures, I said, “Yes, it does.” I said, “Don’t listen to everybody else cuz people are just going to say what they want to say.” I said, “But that boy belongs to you.” As emotions run high, the spotlight shifts back to little Ryan Alexander, the innocent child at the center of all this chaos. Mr.
Williams says Ryan means the world to him and insists he’s ready to take responsibility as a father. The Miss Dailyy stands her ground, denying any biological link between them. The courtroom air grows heavy with tension. He is Ryan Alexander’s father. Did you ever say that? No, your honor, I did not. Your honor, how did he come to this conclusion? Because he is very, very excessive with me.
Then enter Mr. Jennings, Miss Stanley’s current boyfriend. Calm, supportive, and devoted. He’s been helping raise Ryan as if the boy were his own. The judge takes note of this steady presence, but everyone wonders, will this new man’s involvement sway the outcome of today’s test? Is his father, the egg, has he played a role in Ryan Alexander’s life? No, your honor, he has not.
He has not. Who’s stepping in now and helping with Ryan Alexander and my boyfriend? Being the father. My boyfriend. Finally, the moment of truth arrives. The DNA results are ready and the entire courtroom holds its breath. Will Mr. Williams finally be confirmed as Ryan Alexander’s biological father? Or will Miss Stanley’s claims hold true? What envelope, one test result, and a truth that’s about to change everything? William, you are not his father.
Case two. All right, everyone. Fasten your seat belts because today we’re diving into the explosive Chaplain versus Jackson case. It’s a fiery courtroom faceoff between Mr. Chaplan and Miss Jackson, and emotions are already running high. This isn’t just a hearing. It’s a full-blown storm of accusations, secrets, and shocking revelation.
Get ready because this one’s about to erupt because you’re furious with your former friend, the defendant, who went behind your back, slept with your son, and is now claiming heathered her child. Here’s how it all began. Miss Jackson openly admits that she was intimate with Mr. Chaplan. But now she’s calling him a deadbeat, accusing him of doing absolutely nothing for their 3-month-old baby, little Melanie.
From the very start, the tension is thick enough to cut with a knife. And trust me, this is only the beginning of the chaos. So, throughout the entire time, I’ve known her to talk to several other men. So, you know, she was talking to several other men. Yes, ma’am. Just talking. You got to do more than talking to make a baby.
Oh, yeah. Well, whenever we used to hang out or whatever, she had multiple people coming around. Mr. Chaplain, however, isn’t having any of it. He’s completely certain he’s not the father of baby Melanie. No doubts, no hesitation. But when the judge reveals that Miss Jackson once had a fling with her friend’s son, the courtroom gasps.
The scandal is wild, and the looks on their faces say it all. This is not going to be an easy day in court. So, your friend’s son? It doesn’t matter. Her son is grown. So, the point is is you decided that it was okay to sleep with your friend’s son. The accusations start flying like wildfire. Miss Jackson lashes out, saying that Mr.
Chaplan’s mother has poisoned his mind against her. The courtroom transforms into a verbal battleground as the two sides trade insults and emotional blows. Every word feels heavier than the last and the judge can barely keep control of the chaos. I got pictures of that. They need to put it up there. I fed them. I put them in my house.
All them pictures that you see, that pictures you just put up there, we was to the school children’s dad’s Valentine dad. Through it all, Mr. Chaplan stays cool and collected, maintaining that he and Miss Jackson were never in a real relationship. According to him, she was involved with other men during the same time frame.
His calm confidence only fuels the drama further because Miss Jackson is not about to let that slide without a fight. Throughout that process, you know, you have a handsome son. Did you caution them and say, “Listen, not at that time because I don’t have friends that sleep with my damn children.” Miss Jackson fires right back, claiming that Mr. Chaplain is twisting the truth.
She insists that their connection was deeper than he admits and that they were intimate on multiple occasions. Her voice shakes with emotion, but her determination doesn’t waver. The tension between them could ignite at any second. It’s that intense. Time that we’re together. We talking forget the girls in there, too.
Girls all right. And we know ain’t the daddy. Not only that, one day we were walking down the street and a couple of guys were honking the horn, you know, trying to get her attention, but these are people that she knew. Meanwhile, things take a wild turn when Mr. Chaplan’s mother steps in. What starts as a heated debate quickly turns into a shining match between her and Miss Jax.
The judge bangs the gall repeatedly, but no one’s backing down. The courtroom now feels less like a hearing and more like a family feud going completely off the rails. At the end of the day, me and Dominique was having sex every day. Shut up. May I hope while you up there, you can take care of this dangle child support when this DNA test comes.
Let’s take a second to acknowledge the sheer level of drama unfolding here. Miss Jackson slept with her friend’s son, sparking one of the messiest scandals this courtroom has ever seen. Every revelation feels more shocking than the last. And the crowd is hanging on every word. This isn’t just a paternity case.
It’s a full-blown soap opera. Get a blood test and I ain’t got no problem with taking in none of mine or taking care of none of mine. But until then, I know who she was before. And finally, the moment of truth arrive. The DNA results are ready and the entire room falls silent. Every eyes on the judge as she prepares to read the results. Is Mr.
Chaplan really baby Melany’s father or? Is there one more shocking twist waiting in the wings? Get ready because the truth is about to explode. Mr. Chaplain, you are the father. Thank you. Case three. All right, everyone. Grab your seats because this one’s going to be wild. We’re diving head first into the Buchanan versus Stembridge case.
And trust me, it’s a full-blown emotional roller coaster. Mr. Pecan has buying in this situation more than once. In fact, this marks the third time different women have claimed he’s the father of their child. Talk about a track record. Now, in your mind, you thought she’s drinking with him again, and she said that was only a one time thing.
Okay, check it out. She told me about the beer house and not come in his bedroom. That’s right. Every time I, you know, when I was there, she’s always came in his bedroom to show up at Eric’s house to be Canon. You are her father. Thank you. Case four. All right, everyone. Get ready for a wild one.
Today, we’ve got Miss Taylor and Miss Johnson. Two fiery women with one thing in common. They both claim to be pregnant by the same man, Mr. Barber. Yep, you heard that right. This isn’t just a love triangle. It’s a full-blown courtroom showdown. And trust me, sparks are about to fly. Miss Taylor and Miss Johnson, you both claim that you were pregnant at the same time with the defendant, Mr.
Barber’s children. First up is Miss Taylor, who’s taking Mr. Barber to court for $368 in child care expenses. She’s confident, fierce, and absolutely done with his excuses. You can tell she’s here to get justice and make sure Mr. Barber pays up. But before she can finish, here comes Mr. Barber ready to fire back with his own version of the story and not yours.
I believe that he supports his other child because he’s still sleeping with his other child’s mother. According to Mr. Barber, both ladies are exaggerating and just trying to get into his pockets. He says they thrive on draa and demand way too much from him. The audience can practically feel the tension rising with every word.
But don’t blink because this case is about to take a serious turn. Mr. Barbara, you wholeheartedly admit that you are the father of of all the children. So if I saw the birth certificates, I have signed every single one. Miss Taylor isn’t holding anything back. She hits Mr. Barber with a jaw-dropping revelation, claiming he was sleeping with another baby mama while she was pregnant.
The courtroom gasps, jaws drop, and Mr. Barber’s face says it all. It seems his love life might be a lot more complicated than he wants to admit. He stayed for the first 24 hours and he left. I called him and I said, “I’m 10 cm. I’m getting ready to push.” He didn’t come. He didn’t come. Trying to recover, Mr. Barber defends himself, insisting Miss Taylor is twisting the truth, but she’s not having it.
She cuts him off mid-sentence and calls him out right to his face. The energy is electric. Even Judge Lake has to step in to calm things down. You could slice the tension in that room with a knife. How don’t I show I just took my video two weeks ago. Yeah, because for you. What are you talking about? No, you know, they had nothing to do with that.
They had nothing to do with that. Now it’s Miss Johnson’s turn to take the floor. She’s suing Mr. Barber for $3,880 in child care expenses and she’s got the receipts to back it up. Her voice is steady, her tone is sharp, and her mission is clear. She wants accountability. Miss Johnson is ready to expose everything. Judge of this court used to watching people in dispute and you all make me uncomfortable watching you yell and scream. I can only imagine.
Mr. Barber tries to talk his way out of it, claiming he’s being set up, but Miss Johnson stands firm. She refuses to be silenced and demands justice for her child. The crowd can feel her conviction. This woman came prepared and she’s not backing down until the truth is out. I made do whatever I had to do to get my son diapers.
He bought my son three pairs of shoes and three outfits. That is so sad. You two were pregnant. Did you or did you not know anything about the other? I didn’t know about her. Later on in the pregnancy, we did find out about By now, the courtroom feels like a pressure cooker ready to explode. The drama, the shouting, the accusations, it’s pure chaos.
All eyes turn to the judge as everyone waits for her decision. Will these women finally get the justice they’ve been fighting for? Or will Mr. Barber walk away once again? Stay tuned because the verdict is about to drop. And for that reason, I am awarding Miss Johnson the $3,880 she’s requesting for this court. Judgement for Miss Johnson.
Do you understand? Case five. All right, everyone. Get ready because today’s episode is pure chaos from start to finish. We’ve got young love, secret hookups, angry parents, and a paternity mystery that has everyone pointing fingers. This isn’t your average courtroom drama. It’s a teenage storm of emotions, regrets, and revelations.
Buckle up because it’s about to get wild. You and your teenage daughter, Destiny, are here to prove that Anthony Taylor is the father of your daughter’s 8-month-old son. The case centers around Miss Sisum and her daughter, Destiny, who are both convinced that Anthony Taylor is the father of Destiny’s 8-month-old son, Osiris.
Emotions are running skyhigh as they fight to prove their claim. Miss Sysum is fierce and protective, determined to get justice for her daughter and grandson. But there’s one big problem. Miss Riley, Anony’s mother, doesn’t believe it for a second. You truly believe Anthony is this child’s father? Yes, your honor. You’ve changed the course of your life by having this baby.
Yes, did your mother know you were having sex? No. And just like that, the courtroom turns into a battlefield. The two moms are clashing hard, trading accusations, and throwing shade left and right. Meanwhile, the young couple, Destiny and Anthony, sit in the hot seat, caught in the middle of their family’s feud.
They once thought they could keep their teenage romance a secret, but the truth has a funny way of coming out. Saying the same thing, blaming the opposite child. They had a plan. Destiny was gonna say, “I’m going over to visit my friend. That’s your daughter.” But really, the whole time she having sex with your son.
Turns out Destiny and Anony’s relationship was happening right under Anony’s mom’s roof, and she had no idea. Anthony finally confesses that his desire to have a baby came from a strange place. He wanted to leave a legacy. The audience is stunned. It’s a lot to process coming from someone barely old enough to drive.
Came around two two weeks ago and he was messing with another girl at the time. You saw Destiny walking with somebody else? Yes. Another guy. So, you never even thought that Destiny was having sex with your son. Anony’s explanation takes a somber turn when he admits he didn’t expect to live long and wanted to be remembered through his child.
It’s a heartbreaking confession from someone so young. What started as teenage rebellion now sounds like a desperate cry for meaning. The courtroom grows quiet. This story is deeper than anyone expected. With all the phone and cell phone having we got and all of this communication missism, it ain’t never a day in this world your daughter should be able to tell you spend a night over a friend’s house.
What friend? Who’s the mother? Where’s the number? I’m calling. Meanwhile, the grandmothers, Miss Sisum and Miss Riley, are at each other’s throats. Miss Sisum accuses Miss Riley of not caring enough about her grandchild while Miss Riley fires back defending her son. What was supposed to be a paternity test turns into a family war? These women aren’t backing down.
It’s grandmother versus grandmother in the ultimate showdown. This is a birth certificate. My son ain’t old enough to be doing all that. You believe she had you removed from the hospital strategically because they wanted to coers your son into signing the birth. You are the right.
Judge Lake finally steps in before things spiral completely out of control. With calm authority, she demands respect and order in her courtroom. Her patience is wearing thin, but her determination to uncover the truth hasn’t wavered. Everyone quiets down. The time for arguing is over. Now it’s about the evidence. Have to consider whether that’s in your best interest.
Do you understand? Yes, your honor. We’re here now. Osiris is here now. You are our kids. You don’t know what the world you’re doing. The rationale is so irrational. And at last, the moment everyone’s been waiting for arrives. The DNA results are ready, and the tension is thick enough to cut with a knife. Destiny holds her breath.
Anthony looks nervous. The mothers stare each other down. In just a few seconds, one piece of paper will determine the truth and change their lives forever. Mr. Taylor, you are his father. And finally,
