❓WHAT HAPPENED: A man featured in a surrogacy video has been identified as a registered child sex offender, raising concerns over his parental role.
👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: Former teacher Brandon Keith Mitchell, a convicted sex offender, and his husband, Logan Riley, a second-grade teacher.
📍WHEN & WHERE: Pennsylvania, with details coming to light in July 2025.
💬KEY QUOTE: “As always in cases like this, where a teacher had access to hundreds of students over multiple years, authorities are concerned that there may be other victims out there.” – District Attorney Chief of Staff Charles Gaza, following Mitchell’s arrest in 2016.
🎯IMPACT: The case raises questions about surrogacy laws and the immediate safety of the child.
Brandon Keith Mitchell, a Tier 1 sex offender in Pennsylvania, has been identified as one of the men featured in a viral video celebrating the surrogacy journey of a homosexual couple. The video, which showed Mitchell and his husband Logan Riley holding their baby, initially gained attention after Irish activist Derek Blighe posted it on social media. “Unless a miracle happens, this child has almost no chance at a normal life,” Blighe wrote.
Mitchell, a former chemistry teacher, was convicted in 2016 for soliciting a 16-year-old student for nude photos and videos and engaging in explicit “sexts.” Authorities found over 12,000 text messages exchanged with the victim, as well as hundreds of explicit videos stored on Mitchell’s devices. He pleaded guilty to felony child pornography possession and Corruption of Minors, serving just two months of a 23-month sentence before being released on parole.
Unless a miracle happens, this child has almost no chance at a normal life. pic.twitter.com/dwwXaH4Nbi
— Derek Blighe (@BligheDerek) July 27, 2025
Mitchell and Riley married in 2021 and launched a GoFundMe campaign in 2023 to raise funds for surrogacy. The fundraiser detailed their plans to use a gestational surrogate and highlighted the rigorous medical and legal processes involved. Despite a goal of $50,000, the campaign raised only $2,000. In November 2023, the couple announced they had successfully found a surrogate to carry their child.
Concerns have been raised about Mitchell’s parental role, given his criminal history. The Pennsylvania State Police confirmed that state laws do not automatically prohibit convicted sex offenders from having children or exercising parental rights. Surrogacy laws, which allow intended parents to be legally recognized through pre-birth orders, bypass restrictions that apply to adoption or foster care.
This case has reignited debates on surrogacy and the legal loopholes that enable predatory adults with serious criminal convictions to gain custody of children. Critics argue that more stringent regulations are needed to protect the welfare of children born through such arrangements.
Join Pulse+ to comment below, and receive exclusive e-mail analyses.