Charlotte Danciu: 'A Beacon
of Hope' in the World of Adoption and Reproductive Law.
By FSU LAW - Alumni Focus
Spring 2005
Source: FSU LAW - Spring 2005 Edition
Charlotte Danciu:
'A Beacon of Hope' in the
World of Adoption and Reproductive Law
Charlotte
Danciu is one of those fortunate people for whom her work not only
is a passion, but a labor of love. She has practiced family law
in South Florida for more than 22 years in the areas of private
adoption, gestational and traditional surrogacy, paternity, egg
and sperm donation contracts, and all aspects of reproductive law.
She has attended more than 50 births and handled more than 2,000
adoptions.
The 1980 College
of Law graduate has been called a "beacon of hope" to
people who dream of having a baby, but for whatever reason, can't,
as well as for women caught in "crisis pregnancies."
Danciu is recognized as an information source and an expert in her
field, and has been on the cover of The New York Times featured
in People and maire claire magazines, among other
publications. She has appeared on the "Today Show with Katie
Couric," "The Phil Donohue Show," "NewsNight
with Aaron Braun," "The John Walsh Show," and on
all the major television networks and cable stations as a result
of court appearances dealing with issues related to her specialized
practice.
She has represented hundreds of clients in the United States and
abroad, and has successfully influenced Florida's legislation resulting
in some of the most progressive adoption and surrogacy laws in the
world.
Two famous adoption cases in the Florida Supreme Court and the Fourth
District Court of Appeals earned her worldwide recognition and sealed
her reputation as an aggressive advocate for women and children's
rights.
The
first, in 1995, was the "Baby Emily" case, in which Danciu
represented a birth mother who wanted to let a family adopt her
daughter. The adoption was blocked by the birth father, a convicted
rapist, who sought custody of the child. The three-year battle reached
the Florida Supreme Court, which established that birth fathers
have no rights in cases of "pre-natal abandonment."
In the second case, she fought for the repeal of the "Scarlet
Ltter Law," an experience she refers to as "the battle
of my life." The state Legislature in October 2001 passed a
law making it mandatory for birth mothers wishing to give a child
up for adoption to place ads in local newspapers giving their sexual
histories and names of possible fathers. Representing six women,
Danciu challenged the law, saying it was a violation of their constitutional
right to privacy. The Fourth District Court of Appeal agreed and
a month later, the Florida Legislature and Gov. Jeb Bush repealed
the law, instead establishing a paternity registry where men who
think they have fathered a child can enroll to be contracted if
the child is offered for adoption.
Handling
Adoptions a 'Natural'
Danciu
earned a bachelor's degree in exceptional child education childhood
at Florida Atlantic University. While interning in elementary schools,
she became frustrated with the system, and decided she could better
advocate for children as a lawyer than as a teacher.
While waiting to begin law school, she trained as an Emergency Medical
Technician. For leisure, she says, she reads William's Obstetrics
and any assisted reproduction article she can get her hands
on. They have helped her gain a better understanding of pregnancy
and reproduction.
Danciu
arrived at the College of Law in 1977 and calls her time at the
law school the "some of the best years of my life." As
a first-year, she was the class representative to the Student Bar
Association, and in her second and third years, served as vice president
and president of the organization.
In
1982, she succesfully handled one of the first battered women syndrome
cases in Palm beach County and a number of DUIs before taking on
her first adoptions. "Handling adoptions was a natural for
me because I was a support to women in crisis, and I was helping
people who wanted children," said Danciu, who, as a single
woman adoption a special needs child in 1984.
She
estimates that in the early 1980s and 1990s, she handled 75 percent
of the adoptions in Florida. In the 1990s, she began focusing on
other legal options to traditional adoption: surrogacy, gestational
surrogacy, egg/sperm donation and embryo adoption. "Reproductive
law is cutting-edge, and there are new technologies available that
allow people to have their own biological child," she said.
"Being infertile is a terrible thing and it's heart breaking
for couples and individuals. But traditional and gestational surrogacy
offer additional options to those who have been trying unsuccessfully
to have a child. Surrogacy is a wonderful thing--if you have the
right contract."
About
75 percent of her practice now involves reproductive law, and she
devotes much of her time keeping up with medical technology and
creating increasingly better contracts for an increasingly complex
issue. "My contracts are evolving every year because there
is little precedent and new issue skeep coming up. We need to address
those issues by putting into writing the intentions of the parties
and what the law provides as their legal rights. This is so important
and hopefully avoids problems in the future."
In
addition to the numerous surrogacies and egg and sperm donation
contracts Danciu is writing, she is also handling the "adoptions"
of embryos that would have otherwise been stored indefinetly or
destroyed. She says that the embryos that are "adopted"
as "extras", remaining after fortunate couples have completed
their families through in vitro or either assisted reproduction
methods.
"Everyone
should be able to have a family of their of their own, if possible.
Our goalis for our clients to have the biological or adopted child
they've so desired. I'm here to insure that they achieve their dream
smoothly through a competent medical and proper legal process."

|