Sunday, 7 December 2025

N.L. man abducts daughter and takes her to Egypt > The Law is no help

 

Newfoundland girl’s disappearance prompts calls for tougher laws to stop abductions




Bouchra Marbouhi says she last saw her young daughter more than two months ago, when the girl left with her father for a routine sleepover.

The five-year-old never came home, she said.

Instead, Marbouhi said she got a series of texts the next day from her estranged husband, her daughter’s father, saying he had taken the child to Egypt. The Canadian Press has viewed the messages.

“I was shocked, I started crying,” Marbouhi said in a recent interview. “I honestly felt like I was dreaming.”

There was a temporary court order in place, forbidding the father from taking his daughter outside of St. John’s, N.L. But it wasn’t enough to prevent her daughter’s disappearance, Marbouhi said.

“I trusted the system to protect (my daughter) and I found out too late that how many gaps are there — no exit checks, no coordination between courts and borders,” she said.

The girl’s disappearance underscores long-standing concerns from women’s groups and family lawyers about the ease with which a parent can take a child to another country without the other parent’s knowledge or consent.

They have called for stronger systems and policies to prevent international abductions, especially for those involving children taken to countries that have not signed onto The Hague Convention, a global agreement aimed at curbing abductions.

“We need to have some kind of red flag system at international borders,” said lawyer Pamela Cross, who is a member of Ontario’s Domestic Violence Deaths Review Committee.

“Because we know that once a child is removed to a country that has not signed The Hague Convention, getting them back from that country is extremely difficult.”

Egypt is not part of The Hague Convention.

Marbouhi said she asked her estranged husband for a divorce many times over the eight years they have been married, but he wouldn’t agree.

It wasn’t until she moved to Canada last year that she found community support in St. John’s, N.L., to help her get away, she said.

In May, a judge with the family division of the provincial Supreme Court granted Marbouhi’s request for an interim non-removal order, saying neither parent could take their daughter out of the jurisdiction. The judge granted the order because they were convinced of “an immediate danger of the child’s removal,” according to documents shared with The Canadian Press.

The document said the judge was not prepared to order who the primary parent was, or whether the child’s father required supervised parenting time.

Marbouhi said they began a schedule in which her daughter spent Friday nights with her father, and came home Saturday. He picked her up as usual Sept. 26. On Sept. 27, Marbouhi said she received the texts saying he’d taken her daughter to Egypt.

She said she immediately phoned 911.

The police went to his house and found it empty, and then confirmed with the airport that he was gone, she said.

The Royal Newfoundland Constabulary said in October it had issued a warrant for Ahmed Mohamed Shafik Abelfat Elgammal, Marbouhi’s estranged husband, on charges of abduction in contravention of a custody order.

The allegations against Elgammal have not been proven.

Attempts by The Canadian Press to contact Elgammal were unsuccessful.

Marbouhi is not a Canadian citizen or a permanent resident, and she is not guaranteed re-entry to Canada if she leaves the country.

“I’m trying to stay strong, but it’s too hard,” she said. “I need her, I need to be with her.”

The Canada Border Services Agency does not require people leaving Canada to speak with an agent the same way they must when they enter the country, said a spokesperson in an email. However, police can issue an Amber Alert, for example, and trigger an “enforcement flag” allowing border agents to stop someone, the email said.

Civil proceedings, such as family court orders, are not typically reported to the agency, said Luke Reimer.

The Royal Newfoundland Constabulary said it did not issue an Amber Alert because the child was already out of the country when she was reported missing. The force is working with “numerous agencies to confirm the safety of the child,” said spokesperson Const. Stephanie Myers in an email.

Cross said better systems of scrutiny should be in place for people crossing borders with children, especially to countries that have not signed on to The Hague Convention.

“It should be, ‘Excuse me, sir, we just have to check with the child’s other parent. Can you and the child please wait here?'” she said. “Everything can be done with great courtesy.”

Anuradha Dugal, executive director of Women’s Shelters Canada, said her organization has long been calling for better coordination between federal and provincial authorities, so documents such as non-removal orders would not just be enforced in their originating province.

“What’s applied in a family law has to jive with what would be expected at the federal level,” Dugal said in an interview.

Women and children are most vulnerable when the woman leaves and takes steps to protect herself and her kids, Cross said. A court order really is just a piece of paper without a larger safety plan backing it up.

“We live in a global world now,” she said. “It’s going to take a collaborative response across all systems to improve the safety of women who do what any logical person would do and turn to the law to protect them.”

Marbouhi said she wished someone at the court — even the judge — had told her that the non-removal order came with little enforcement.

“It’s terrifying,” she said. “Any child can just disappear across borders.”



CSA downunder > Aussie surf coach gets 5 years for 31 CSA offences

 

Former Queensland surf coach Connor Lyons jailed for sexually abusing children





An ex-surf coach will be eligible for parole in six months after pleading guilty to 31 child sex offences that occurred across south-east Queensland.

Warning: This story contains details of child sexual abuse.

Peregian Springs resident Connor John Christopher Lyons, 27, represented himself in Maroochydore District Court on Thursday when the sentence was handed down.

Lyons pleaded guilty in May to the charges that included the indecent treatment of children under 16, making and possessing child exploitation material and damaging evidence with intent.

The court heard Lyons committed the offences on eight boys aged seven to 10 between 2022 and 2024 in the Sunshine Coast, Brisbane and Gold Coast areas.

Vile acts

During sentencing the court heard the acts were committed during surfing lessons, a family holiday and a camping trip.

Crown prosecutor Rebecca Marks said Lyons groomed several victims and was trusted by their families.

"The defendant took one child on a camping trip on the Sunshine Coast where they shared a two-person swag with him, although they had single sleeping bags," Ms Marks said.

She said on two nights Lyons touched the child's genitals while the boy was asleep.

In a separate incident, Lyons accompanied a family on a holiday, during which he assaulted a 10-year-old while trying to hold the boy down.

Lyons was arrested in December last year.

The court heard after he was granted bail on December 16, 2024, Lyons destroyed evidence of child exploitation material before the execution of a search warrant on December 18.

"On the date the police conducted a search warrant of his home, the defendant made admissions he had deleted the videos — he also went further to making admissions to using his laptop and mobile phone," Ms Marks said.

"He also made admissions to accessing child exploitation material."

'Suffering nightmares'

In summarising the victim impact statements, Ms Marks said the defendant's actions had caused significant trauma for the victims and their families.

"One victim impact statement makes reference to how he [Lyons] had made him feel … and the innocence of not understanding what the defendant was doing to him and how it has broken something inside him," Ms Marks told the court.

"It makes references to that child suffering nightmares and waking up scared shaking and crying."

Ms Marks cited another statement in referencing a struggle to focus in school.

"A number of the children are now obtaining psychological assistance to assist them through the trauma they've experienced and for the parents that have suffered alongside their children," she said.

"What was taken from them cannot be returned, the trauma will follow them long into their future and the consequences of the crimes did not end when the abuse stopped."

A large, light-coloured building with "Maroochydore Court House" written above the glass facade.

Connor Lyons will be eligible for parole in June 2026. (ABC News: Bruce Atkinson)

Lyons read a letter in court apologising to the victims of his crimes.

"I understand the effect of my crimes and the effects it has had on the victims' families and wider community — I take full responsibility for what my actions have caused," he said.

"I accept the court will order that I complete the appropriate courses to further help my release into the community and be a valuable member of the community."

When handing down his sentence Judge Glen Cash said he took into consideration Lyons's cooperation.

"As you must know your crimes are serious and as a community we will not tolerate those who predate on children for the purpose of sexual pleasure," Judge Cash said.

"It is especially egregious in this case that there is [sic] families that trusted you with their children and you betrayed that trust by the abuse which we have heard described."

Lyons was sentenced to five years in prison.

He is required to serve at least one third of the sentence and has already spent more than 350 days in custody.

He will be eligible for parole in June next year.



Saturday, 6 December 2025

Worst Mother of the Year candidate > Hardly believable story of child abuse, child sex abuse, and child neglect, from Muskogee

 

Mother accused of enabling sexual abuse after 11-year-old gives birth to partner's baby


Cherie Walker, 33, and Dustin Walker, 34, have been charged in connection with alleged sexual abuse after an 11-year-old girl gave birth at their Muskogee home, according to court documents

Cherie Walker was charged with child neglect
Cherie Walker was charged with child neglect(Image: Muskogee County Sheriff's Department)

In a case that's shaking the nation, a mother stands accused of an unthinkable crime as she faces charges related to "one of the most serious" instances of child sexual abuse after her 11 year old daughter was forced to give birth.

33 year old Cherie Walker was initially slapped with a single count of child neglect when her young daughter was compelled to carry a baby full term and deliver at their home on Saturday, August 16.

"This is one of the most, if not the most serious child sexual abuse and neglect cases I have ever prosecuted," stated Muskogee County Assistant District Attorney Janet Hutson. The child hadn't seen a doctor in over a year, including throughout her entire pregnancy.

Adding to the horror, Cherie's boyfriend, 34 year old Dustin Walker, was also arrested and charged with child sexual abuse at their Muskogee, Oklahoma residence, as reported by NBC.


The couple initially claimed ignorance about the child's pregnancy, despite the fact that she hadn't been to a doctor in over a year.

In a chilling twist, DNA tests revealed that the stepfather was a 99.9% match for the newborn's father, reports the Express.

Following these damning test results, the charges were revised on Monday, August 25 by the Muskogee County District Attorney's Office.

Court documents indicate that Dustin is accused of sexually abusing the 11 year old girl between January and August, resulting in her perilous full-term pregnancy. Meanwhile, her mother, Cherie, now faces charges of enabling child sexual abuse.

The duo also face six counts of felony child neglect, including the failure to provide their 11 year old with proper medical care and supervision. Court documents reveal that the girl received no professional medical attention and was forced to deliver her baby at home.

The other five counts of child neglect pertain to the couple's five other children, aged two, four, six, seven, and nine. The court documents describe a grim scene where the children were found living amidst dog feces, without any clothes on.

These instances of neglect span from January to August. The documents paint a picture of "living in deplorable conditions," in which the children were living.



Friday, 5 December 2025

CSA in the USA > WA horse ranch owner gets 15+ years for CSA; Alaskan man gets 30 years for CSAM; Another WA man with CSAM, animal abuse, and threats

 

Arlington, WA ranch owner sentenced for child sex abuse



An Arlington horse ranch owner was sentenced to nearly 16 years in prison on Tuesday for sexually abusing three young girls he groomed.


38-year-old Robert Blessing, the owner of RWB Horse Ranch, pleaded guilty to two counts of sexual exploitation of a minor and one count of commercial sexual exploitation of a minor.

The married father of three declined to make a statement in court.

What they're saying:

"He's a monster who targeted children repeatedly, deliberately and without remorse," said Anna Jacobsen. Her daughter was one of the three survivors who came forward. "I've watched her go from a carefree, happy girl to someone who carries fear in her body like it is a second skin. Robert Blessing did that," Jacobsen told Judge Patrick Moriarty.

Judge Moriarty acknowledged the strength it took for Blessing's victims to come forward.

"Mr. Blessing, you have caused a great deal of harm, not only to your victims that are listed, but to everybody around them and this community as a whole. I do hope that these young women will find comfort in knowing that their bravery and their courage has prevented you from harming anyone else," said Moriarty.

Blessing showed no reaction in court as he learned his fate. Judge Moriarty said he felt it appropriate to follow the deal negotiated between the prosecutor and the defense in exchange for a guilty plea.

Dig deeper:

Blessing was sentenced to 102 months of incarceration on count one, 102 months imprisonment on count two and 189 months for count three. The sentences will run concurrently. Blessing will be required to undergo sexual deviancy treatment and register as a sex offender once released.

189 months is 27 months short of the maximum penalty. Judge Moriarty said he felt it appropriate to follow the deal negotiated by the prosecutor and the defense in exchange for a guilty plea.

"There is a lack of criminal history. He has taken account for what he has done. He is not forcing people to be revictimized, which often results in trial in these types of cases where people have to recount the horrible things that occurred," said Judge Moriarty.

Jacobsen says no amount of time can ever atone for the abuse suffered by the victims.

"There is no rehabilitation for someone who feeds on the vulnerability of children. Robert will go to prison; however, his 189-month sentence will never equal the life sentence he gave my daughter and all the others he hurt," said Jacobsen. "I hope that every night in his cell when the lights go out and the silence sets in, Robert hears the cries of girls he destroyed."



Anchorage man sentenced to 30 years

for producing and distributing 

child sex abuse videos

Crimes were called ‘despicable and perverse’ by a U.S. Attorney


Published: Dec. 3, 2025 at 2:23 PM PST

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (KTUU) - Richard Dougherty, 43, was sentenced to 30 years in prison for possessing and creating sexual abuse videos of children on Tuesday, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

Dougherty pleaded guilty to one count of production of child sex abuse videos and possession of child sex abuse material, the U.S. Attorney’s Office claims. In addition, he will also serve a lifetime of supervised release.

From January 2003 to April 2023, Dougherty possessed, received and distributed child sexual assault materials (CSAM). Some of the CSAM he distributed included visual depictions of him sexually abusing a minor.

Throughout the course of the investigation, Dougherty knowingly possessed over 600 CSAM images.

“Mr. Dougherty’s crimes are despicable and perverse. This 30-year sentence ensures that the public and Alaska’s children are protected from his deviancy,” U.S. Attorney Michael J. Heyman said. “I want to commend the survivors for showing extraordinary strength.”





Man accused of threatening minor, sending child sex abuse and animal abuse videos


Joseph Pacheco, 23, of Everett, Washington, was indicted by a grand jury in Boston on five counts of transmitting threatening communications in interstate commerce, knowingly distributing child pornography to a minor, and possession and distribution of animal crushing videos.

By Thea DiGiammerino • Published December 3, 2025 • Updated on December 3, 2025 at 2:18 pm


A Washington state man accused of threatening to murder a minor from Massachusetts and sending the victim graphic videos of child sex abuse and animal abuse is now facing federal charges.

Joseph Pacheco, 23, of Everett, Washington, was indicted by a grand jury in Boston on five counts of transmitting threatening communications in interstate commerce, knowingly distributing child pornography to a minor, and possession and distribution of animal crushing videos.

The U.S. Attorney's Office for Massachusetts described Pacheco as sharing values with "nihilistic violent extremists" (NVEs). The term is used to refer to people who law enforcement believes have a goal of "bringing about society’s collapse by sowing chaos and social instability," the office said.

They often use social media to connect with others in an attempt to desensitize them to violence, normalize exposure to graphic material like child sex abuse images and other types of gore, and groom others, particularly minors, into committing acts of violence, according to the Justice Department.

Between June 1 and July 13, Pacheco allegedly sent five threats to the minor victim. The messages included language like: "I will kill you if you ever leave me. I cannot live without you. You're mine forever," and "I have your address and I’ll commit a murder suicide."

Pacheco could face up to 20 years in prison on the child pornography charges and a fine up to $250,000. He will appear in federal court in Boston at a later date.