‘Octo-Mom’ wins latest round in battle over babies

LOS ANGELES, (Reuters) – The California woman who  gave birth to octuplets in January has won the latest round in  a court fight over the babies’ earnings and assets.

The state’s Fourth District Court of Appeal late on  Thursday stayed a probate judge’s order appointing a legal  guardian for the finances of the six boys and two girls.

That guardian had been sought by Paul Peterson, a onetime  Disney Mouseketeer turned child entertainer advocate, and  attorney Gloria Allred, who said they feared Nadya Suleman  would exploit her children for commercial gain.

Suleman, who has a total of 14 children including the  octuplets, had appealed the probate court’s ruling on the  grounds that Peterson had no legal standing and that the judge  had no jurisdiction.

The Fourth District did not rule on the merits of the case  but issued the stay until an Aug. 20 hearing on Suleman’s  motion to have Peterson’s petition dismissed.

The appeals court’s intervention is the latest twist for  Suleman, who gave birth on Jan. 26 to what is believed to be  only the second set of octuplets in the United States.

She has come under withering criticism for undergoing the  fertility treatments that led to the octuplets when she already  had six children, was accepting public assistance and living  with her mother.

The 33-year-old single mother was quickly dubbed “Octo-Mom”  in the tabloid press, a nickname she subsequently adopted and  sought to trademark.

Kaiser Permanente Medical Center in the Los Angeles suburb  of Bellflower, where Suleman gave birth, was fined $250,000 by  the state of California after workers there pried into her  medical records.