Könyv DNA Paternity Fraud Peter I Okafor

DNA Paternity Fraud

Blood, Love, Law, and the Lie That Raised You

Szerző: Peter I Okafor
Nyelv: Angol
Kötés: Puha kötésű
Elérhetőség: Várható készletfeltöltés
Küldés 12. 07. 2026
10 347 Ft
A cheerful Christmas DNA kit should not have the power to turn dinner into a courtroom. But when one...

Információk a könyvről

Szerző
Nyelv
Angol
Kötés
Könyv - Puha kötésű
Kiadva
2026
oldal
734
EAN
9798185857786
Enbook ID
53205233
Súly
967
Méretek
152 x 229 x 41

Teljes leírás

A cheerful Christmas DNA kit should not have the power to turn dinner into a courtroom. But when one relative match contradicts a family's accepted story of fatherhood, the quiet machinery of love, law, paperwork, biology, secrecy, and inheritance begins to grind.

DNA Paternity Fraud is a bold, emotionally charged nonfiction monograph about one of the most painful family crises of the genetic age: what happens when DNA tells one story, documents tell another, and everyone involved has something to lose.

This book goes far beyond the simple question, "Who is the father?" It examines the deeper system behind paternity fraud: birth certificates that can preserve a social fiction, legal presumptions that may protect stability while burying biological truth, consumer DNA platforms that expose secrets without preparing families for the consequences, and family cultures that often reward silence until silence becomes unbearable.

Written with the force of memoir, the precision of analysis, and the bite of social satire, the book explores how paternity uncertainty moves from private suspicion to administrative crisis. A DNA result may begin as a clue, but it can quickly become evidence, accusation, litigation, medical concern, inheritance dispute, identity rupture, and spiritual reckoning. The wound is not only genetic. It is legal, emotional, cultural, financial, medical, and moral.

Across its chapters, DNA Paternity Fraud explains the difference between biological fatherhood, legal fatherhood, and social fatherhood; how DNA testing works; why consumer DNA reports are not the same as court-admissible tests; how chain of custody matters; why medical family history can become dangerous when parentage is false; how inheritance and legitimacy turn family secrets into legal conflicts; and why the child, the presumed father, the biological father, the mother, and the wider family may all experience different forms of harm.

The book also refuses easy propaganda. It does not reduce every case to a cartoon villain or pretend that every paternity revelation has a simple solution. It recognizes that families are built not only by genes, but by care, sacrifice, presence, documents, law, culture, and years of lived attachment. Yet it also insists that truth has consequences-and that those consequences cannot be avoided forever by calling silence "peace."

At its heart, this is a book about the collision between truth and stability. It asks hard questions: When biology contradicts paperwork, which truth should count? When a man has loved and raised a child, what does a DNA exclusion destroy-and what does it fail to destroy? When a child discovers that their identity was built on omission, who owes them honesty? When the state records one father and the genome points to another, who has the right to reopen the past?

For readers interested in family law, DNA testing, fatherhood, medical ethics, inheritance, identity, consumer genetics, and hidden family trauma, DNA Paternity Fraud offers a searching, powerful, and deeply human investigation into the modern paternity crisis.

A clue is not a verdict. A birth certificate is not biology. A family secret is not peace.

And when DNA enters the room, the oldest question in the nursery becomes impossible to ignore.