This is from Wikkipedia - no idea how reliable it is - but it is a different account from what we've heard about a DNA test done concerning Jazmin.
Paternity suits
In 1992, a California woman,
Tamara J. Rotolo, filed a paternity suit against the prince, claiming that he was the father of her illegitimate daughter, whom she named
Jazmin Grace Grimaldi. However, the case, which went to trial in 1993, eventually was dismissed by Superior Court Judge Graham Anderson Cribbs, who claimed that there was "insufficient contact between Albert and the state of California to justify hearing a suit there" (
Evening Standard,
March 24,
1993, page 20), agreeing with an assertion by the prince's lawyer,
Stanley Arkin, that the California court had no jurisdiction. In court papers, Prince Albert admitted that he had been with Tamara Rotolo in
Monaco on "a couple of occasions" in
July 1991. (The child had been born approximately nine months later, on
March 4,
1992.) As reported by a local newspaper covering the case, "Arkin asserted that the Riverside County court had no jurisdiction in the case since the romantic encounter supposedly occurred in Monaco and Albert has had no contacts with California that relate to the issues in the suit."
[3] Prince Albert has not agreed to Rotolo's request that he take a paternity test.
An earlier paternity suit, brought by
Bea Fiedler, a German topless model whom the
Daily Telegraph described as a "sex-film star", reportedly also was dismissed. A blood test, which was refused by the judge, did not prove that the prince was not the father of Fiedler's son, Daniel.
[4]
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