National Post

Rapist ‘not worthy’ to be parent, judge says

- Morgan Lowrie

MONTREAL • A Quebec Superior Court judge has ruled that a man can never again try to claim paternity of a child he fathered during a sexual assault.

Justice Carl Lachance ruled last week that the man must also pay more than $155,000 to support the child until adulthood.

“The defendant is not worthy to be recognized as the father of this child,” the judge wrote in the decision dated Feb. 16.

The ruling states that the man, whose name is redacted, sexually assaulted the child’s mother in 2019 when she was 17, resulting in her becoming pregnant and giving birth in 2020. Her assailant was arrested and later received a 63-month prison sentence after pleading guilty to several charges.

After a judge ordered a DNA paternity test against her will in 2022 that showed a genetic match, the child’s mother went to court to obtain a declaratio­n that the man not be recognized as the father.

A media report on the case prompted the Quebec government to table legislatio­n permitting a mother who is the victim of sexual assault to refuse parental rights to her assailant, or to have them revoked. That law came into effect last June.

In his decision, Lachance wrote that it’s not in the best interest of the child to allow the man to seek parental recognitio­n given his violent actions, his criminal history, and what his parole reports have deemed a high risk to reoffend.

The judge said granting paternity to the man would force the mother to have contact with him in order to arrange visitation or make decisions requiring parental authority, which he said would be “unbearable.”

The man withdrew his paternity claim in November, which the judge deemed a “strategic attempt” to leave the door open for future claims.

“We cannot condone nor tolerate that the assailant uses a procedural technique to escape an unfavourab­le result in the hopes of being able to take it up again later,” he wrote, adding that the possibilit­y of a future claim had left mother and child with a “sword of Damocles” hanging over their heads.

He ruled that the man could never “at his own initiative” seek to be recognized as the father, although he said it would be possible for the child to make the request when older.

The woman’s lawyer, Jean-maxim Lebrun, said the decision will allow his client to turn the page.

“A lot of her life projects were on standby waiting for this, and I think this is going give her the ability to really start the next chapter in her life, and I think she’s thrilled about that,” he said in a phone interview.

The lawyer listed on the court documents as representi­ng the man did not immediatel­y respond.

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