ORLANDO, Fla. — For 37 years, Krista Brian thought she was Hispanic and that her father had killed himself when she was an infant.
Her life was turned upside down, though, when she sent a DNA swab to Ancestry.com for testing.
“I was shocked to find out I was African-American,” Brian told Channel 9.
The website put her in touch with a possible relative based on her results and that’s when she and Orlando resident Andrew Baker connected.
“I knew her mom in high school, then we got together after high school,” Baker said. “It was just a brief thing.”
In December, the two submitted DNA for testing at an independent lab and found that they weren’t just related, they were father and daughter.
Baker never knew Brian existed and she was told by her aunt and uncle that her father was dead.
Brian did not know why her mother never told Baker he had a daughter, but said that, “When my mom had me, she had a nervous breakdown.”
Finding her father was something she never thought possible.
“That was in December,” she said. “It was the best Christmas present I could have ever had.”
The next month, Brian, who lives in California, came to Florida for a visit and started making up for lost time with trips to Disney and Universal Studios.
She was also able to meet four siblings she never knew she had.
#LOVE this story on #WFTVat5. Woman seeking ethnicity finds father who she thought was DEAD for 37 years! pic.twitter.com/tI3rgpazG4
— Janine Reyes (@JReyesWFTV) April 12, 2017
#WFTV wants to know your thoughts on an amazing story of #family connected through #genetics https://t.co/XyE0smKRfj pic.twitter.com/xkk0aqWtlc
— Janine Reyes (@JReyesWFTV) April 12, 2017
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