At the heart of the lawsuit was Cramblett's claim that she was unprepared to raise an African-American child and that her community and her "unconsciously insensitive" family members might not be accepting of a child of a different race.
"Getting a young daughter's hair cut is not particularly stressful for most mothers, but to Jennifer it is not a routine matter, because Payton has hair typical of an African-American girl," the lawsuit said. "To get a decent cut, Jennifer must travel to a black neighborhood, far from where she lives, where she is obviously different in appearance, and not overtly welcome."
According to the suit, the couple chose sperm from donor No. 380, a white man; instead, they were given sperm from donor No. 330, a black man. They blame a paper records system that allegedly caused an employee to misread the numbers.
"Jennifer's stress and anxiety intensify when she envisions Payton entering an all-white school," the lawsuit says. "Ironically, Jennifer and Amanda moved to Uniontown from racially diverse Akron, because the schools were better and to be closer to family."
"Jennifer is well aware of the child psychology research and literature correlating intolerance and racism with reduced academic and psychological well-being of bi-racial children."
She sought at least $50,000 in damages.