Thank you for the reply. This is not a hypothetical situation as you may have guessed and this is US based. I won't get too much into the testing as far as companies go but they actually extract the fetal DNA from the maternal blood before birth, or that is what they claim to be able to do, and then try to use this baby DNA and match to the alleged father. We used two companies and the first company failed inexplicably in 3 attempts (3 new maternal blood samples) to provide anything conclusive; they ultimately said they could not do it for some reason. Company two came back the first time with the results I listed. I posted this question because I don't know how accurate a test like that could be and am a novice to genetics. I am uncertain of this method I outlined and which gave these results, as it is much less common than testing the alleged father and baby directly.
Once the baby is born it would be more straightforward with sampling the baby directly and matching that sample up with the alleged father of course, and this is the plan. However, in the mean time, knowing that the DNA match was done by extracting the fetal DNA signature from the mother's blood can we deduce anything about the accuracy and potential for errors?
I don't know if this is significant but I believe the mother is also Rh- and the father Rh+, her Dr. had advised her in the past to get shots to become pregnant so her body would not reject the pregnancy. Not sure if this is significant either but both of the alleged fathers share a similar heritage but are not related directly. For this and the reasons outlined I am unsure of the potential for error in the accuracy of this test, and welcome any comment.
A baby-to-father test will be conducted when the baby is born to be certain but in the meantime I wanted to get a better feel for how accurate this test may be.