Women in the prison kept becoming pregnant one after another, leaving the guards baffled since the cells were locked — until a chilling truth finally came to light.

In a high‑security women’s prison wing, guards were stunned when multiple inmates — all isolated in locked cells with no physical contact — began showing signs of pregnancy. Medical exams confirmed several women were at different stages of gestation, sparking frantic internal reviews of surveillance, locks, and staff behavior. Everything appeared secure, and no obvious breaches were found.

When investigators dug deeper, they noticed a pattern: all the affected women had been seen in the infirmary on days when a particular gynecologist was on duty. A review of medical logs uncovered a hidden record describing “assigned reproductive manipulation,” suggesting something illegal and clandestine was happening during supposed diagnostic visits.

Further investigation traced the scheme to an illicit surrogacy operation using incarcerated women as unwitting hosts for embryos paid for by wealthy outsiders — exploiting their lack of rights and isolation. The scandal exposed systemic abuse and corruption in the prison’s medical oversight, triggering arrests of staff and a broader inquiry into how inmates’ bodies had been used for profit.

While true prison pregnancies do occur behind bars due to pre‑existing pregnancy or contact situations, there is no verified evidence that inmates in complete solitary with no contact have been forcibly impregnated through medical procedures — such claims circulating online are unverified and appear to be fictional or exaggerated narratives, rather than documented events.