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Thomas Ray Lippert

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Thomas Ray Lippert (1950–1999) was a convict and former business law professor at Southwest State College in Marshall, Minnesota. Lippert worked at a fertility clinic named Reproductive Medical Technologies Inc. in Utah from 1988 to the mid 1990s where he reportedly replaced customers' semen with his own.[1] In 1974–1975 he was arrested and later convicted for kidnapping.[2][3][4][5]

See also

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  • Cecil Jacobson, a fertility doctor who used his own semen to impregnate his patients, without informing them of the source of the semen.

References

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  1. ^ Michelle Castillo (10 January 2014). "Families in fear after rogue employee may have swapped own sperm at Utah fertility clinic". cbsnews.com.
  2. ^ Linda Witt (October 20, 1975). "Was Susan Cochran Kidnapped or Merely Being Wooed in a Strange Courtship?". people.com.
  3. ^ Matthew Piper (January 10, 2014). "Report: Utah kidnapper is woman's father due to semen switch". The Salt Lake Tribune.
  4. ^ "Lawyer to stress vulnerability of kidnap victim to mind control". Lakeland Ledger. December 11, 1975. p. 9a.
  5. ^ "FBI agents arrest Thomas Lippert" (PDF). Marshall Independent. March 13, 1975. p. 10 (12 of 44). Archived from the original (PDF) on October 5, 2013.
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