Vancouver Sun

Mom jailed for abducting son, forging emails

Woman fled to Arizona with child in attempt to deny father visitation­s

- KEITH FRASER kfraser@postmedia.com

A Vancouver mother who abducted her young son and took him to the U.S. in violation of a court order has been sentenced to seven months in jail.

In imposing sentence on the woman, who cannot be identified due to a publicatio­n ban, Vancouver provincial court Judge Laura Bakan accepted a joint submission from Crown counsel Isobel Keeley and the mom’s lawyer.

The jail sentence, which will see the 33-year-old mom released in about a month after receiving credit for pre-sentence custody, is the latest developmen­t in a protracted and bitter dispute between the parents of the 10-yearold boy.

Before the abduction, the dispute saw the mom fabricatin­g emails from police officers and fabricatin­g emails from the dad in which he threatens to kill her, all in a bid to deny the dad access to the boy with whom they shared custody.

“My son hates me now and it’s your fault, it always is!” the mom wrote in one of the fake emails she claimed was sent to her by her former partner.

“I’m going to slit your throat when you least expect it and there’s nothing you or anyone can do to stop me!!! You have messed with my life one too many times, and I’ll end your life with a big grin on my face.”

The fake email was composed by the mom in September of last year and reported by her to the Vancouver police. Officers attended her residence and obtained a copy of the email.

The mom, who had pleaded guilty to abduction in contravent­ion of a court order and fabricatin­g emails, then presented the email in court in a bid to get a protection order against the dad.

I’m going to slit your throat when you least expect it and there’s nothing you or anyone can do to stop me!!! You have messed with my life one too many times. FABRICATED EMAIL MESSAGE

A protection order was granted and the dad, who met the mom in 2007 and lived with her briefly before separating after the boy was born, was prohibited access to his son and to his former partner.

Several weeks later, the dad contacted Vancouver police to advise them his former partner had presented a number of documents to his lawyer in family court that he believed were fabricated.

One of the fabricated emails was purported to be from a police officer to the mom; the officer advises her to ask a judge to put an order in place to protect her from further threats and violence from the dad.

Court heard that the mom also made false allegation­s that the father had sexually abused his son.

In December, when the mother failed to show for a family court hearing, the father was awarded unsupervis­ed access to the boy. The order prohibited either party from removing the child from B.C.

The dad says that, for several months before the abduction in March, he was aware that the mom was planning to take their son away.

He says he contacted police, spoke to the child-protection officials and even went to court to try to stop it from happening.

On March 9, when he went to the boy’s elementary school to pick him up, he wasn’t able to find his son.

He reported the matter to police, who launched a massive investigat­ion.

The mom had taken the boy and a daughter from another relationsh­ip with her to the U.S.

She caught a cab to Tsawwassen and then crossed the border to Point Roberts, Wash., where she caught a charter plane to Bellingham, Wash.

Then she made her way to Phoenix.

Police eventually got a tip as to her whereabout­s and arrested her at an apartment complex.

The two children were alone in the apartment at the time of the arrest, although the woman now says she had just taken the dog out.

The woman had used a fake name to rent the apartment and possessed fake identifica­tion, including a phoney Florida driver’s licence.

In the months leading up to the abduction, she’d sent emails to the “Dark Web” inquiring about services to hack someone’s Hotmail account and to send disturbing emails from their account that would incriminat­e them.

She also did Google searches for such things as “how to abduct a child successful­ly” and “ex murdered by hitman.”

In addition to the jail term, the mom will be on probation for three years with strict conditions.

Outside court, the father said he would remain indebted to the police “forever” for finding his son.

“It’s amazing. He could have been gone still. We could never have seen him again.”

The father said he remains fearful that his former partner, who he expects is going to seek joint custody at a family court hearing in September, will abduct his son again.

“And then we’re starting all over again, and God knows how much smarter she’s gotten since the first time she tried this.”

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