The women in the prison became pregnant one after another: the guards couldn’t understand how such a thing could happen in locked cells, until the horrifying truth was revealed
At the beginning of 2023, strange things began happening in the women’s colony, in Block Z for particularly dangerous inmates. First, one prisoner suddenly fainted during the morning inspection. A few days later, the same thing happened to another. Then to three more. All of them were held in solitary confinement, had no contact with one another, did not go on group walks, and had been in complete isolation for almost a year.
The medical staff, after examining the women, said a sentence that made everyone in Block Z freeze: they were all pregnant — each one at a different stage of pregnancy.
It was impossible. The cells were locked, the guards were all women, access to men was completely excluded, and surveillance was constant.
The administration reviewed the entire archive from the past months. They checked movement logs, reports, surveillance cameras — no violations. Everything was perfectly “clean.”
The inmates themselves didn’t understand why they were being called in for questioning. They repeated only one thing:
“We knew we were pregnant. And we want our babies.”
But by whom? How?
No one could explain it.
The investigation hit a dead end until one of the investigators requested additional documents from the prison hospital. And that was when the horrifying secret came to light Continues in the first comment
The investigator requested documents related to the medical procedures performed on the inmates over the past months. At first glance, they looked like ordinary notes: examination, complaints of headaches, high blood pressure, abdominal pain.
Several women had indeed visited the infirmary throughout the year, but each time they were sent back to their cells the same day.
And only after a detailed analysis did something appear that no one expected.
Every one of the pregnant women had visited the infirmary on the exact days when the same doctor — an experienced gynecologist transferred there for a “special assignment” — was on duty.
And each had complained of different symptoms, easy to fake or provoke.
The investigator opened a classified logbook: on those days, the inmates were taken under anesthesia to a separate procedure room “for examination.”
The logbook was classified. Only three people had access to it.
And it was there, according to the documents, that “assigned reproductive manipulations” were carried out — a phrase that gave the entire commission chills.
When the bank records of the doctor and the head of the infirmary were examined, everything became clear. The women of Block Z were being used as secret surrogate mothers.
Extremely wealthy people were paying enormous sums for their embryos to be carried by women who “would never be able to claim any rights.” The system was perfectly organized: false diagnoses, anesthesia, quick procedures, falsified records.
The inmates knew nothing. And when the first signs appeared months later, they thought it was something natural — who would have told them the truth?

