Calgary dad mourns daughter murdered by her stepfather

Story from the Calgary Sun.

Excerpt:

He barely knew his daughter Clare, having seen her only five times since the divorce.

James Shelswell said he was looking forward to Clare growing older, and the far-off day when he might finally bond with the child he surrendered when she was only four months old.

Instead, Shelswell will fly this week from Calgary to Abbotsford B.C., to attend Clare’s funeral.

On Sunday, Clare was murdered, her throat slashed open after an apparent domestic dispute between her mom and step-dad over how to discipline the kids.

Peter Wilson, 29, is charged with killing his step daughter.

And now, all that’s left for her biological dad is to say goodbye to the stranger who was once his baby girl.

“She didn’t really know me — I’d seen her maybe five time in five years,” said Shelswell.

If his daughter dying in pain and terror at the hands of the man she knew as her dad wasn’t devastating enough, Shelswell has been told [by his ex-wife] he’s not welcome at the funeral.

[…]“I asked if she was in the room when it happened and why she didn’t protect Clare — she said it happened in a different room, and I asked if my other daughter saw it. She said no.”

His ex, said Shelswell, then made it clear he is not welcome at Clare’s private funeral service.

“She said I shouldn’t go to the funeral, and I have no rights to my kids,” said Shelswell.

[…]In Calgary, Shelswell, who is re-married with two kids, is a man whose fury is mixed with remorse.He laments that he didn’t have enough money to fight back with a lawyer, back when his wife took their Calgary-born daughters away to B.C.

He says he settled into a pattern of paying child support, and looking forward to yearly visit with his girls — the last, a happy trip to Vancouver, included the aquarium and McDonald’s.

This is my worst nightmare, but it illustrates the general truth that biological dads are the least likely person to harm their own children, which I blogged about before. This paper from the Heritage Foundation cites a very interesting study that shows more about which who is really dangerous to children. Here’s another paper that explains why marriages are the safest arrangements for women and children. The very institution that is under attack by third-wave feminists who abhor the “unequal” gender roles that emerge in marriage.

Here’s a government report:

Mothers are almost twice as likely to be directly involved in child maltreatment as fathers.

[…]Generally speaking, the same characteristics that make a man a good father make him less likely to abuse or neglect his children. Fathers who nurture and take significant responsibility for basic childcare for their children (e.g., feeding, changing diapers) from an early age are significantly less likely to sexually abuse their children.35 These fathers typically develop such a strong connection with their children that it decreases the likelihood of any maltreatment.

The involvement of a father in the life of a family is also associated with lower levels of child neglect, even in families that may be facing other factors, such as unemployment and poverty, which could place the family at risk for maltreatment.36 Such involvement reduces the parenting and housework load a mother has to bear and increases the overall parental investments in family life, thereby minimizing the chances that either parent will neglect to care for or to supervise their children.

On average, fathers who live in a married household with their children are better able to create a family environment that is more conducive to the safety and necessary care of their children. Consequently, children who live with their biological father in a married household are significantly less likely to be physically abused, sexually abused, or neglected than children who do not live with their married biological parents.

When feminists make fathers out to be monsters, and lobby for extremely liberal divorce laws enforced by extremely anti-male divorce courts, the result is that more children are assaulted, sexually-abused and even murdered at the hands of live-in boyfriends and stepfathers.

Sorry to all of my male readers who are honorable stepfathers, but the fact is that stepfathers on average are not as safe for children as biological fathers. And that’s why we should not be encouraging the break-up of marriages with no-fault divorce laws and anti-male divorce courts. Women also need to be more careful about who they choose to have children with!

By the way, if you guys are looking for a great movie to watch that is extremely pro-fatherhood, watch “Taken” with Liam Neeson. Be warned, it is very mature subject matter. Definitely, definitely for grown-ups only. If you are a man, you will ADORE this movie. Oh, and it’s not PC, so don’t watch it if you are all multicultural and moral relativistic.

13 thoughts on “Calgary dad mourns daughter murdered by her stepfather”

  1. Powerful story, Knight. My wife had an awful stepfather. A terrible man by all accounts. Only by God’s Grace did she recover from that experience.

    And yeah, Taken is a great movie to watch as a Dad. And Liam Neeson rocks!

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    1. Hey, hey! It’s a great movie to watch as a non-Dad too! Kicking asses is written in the universal language of alpha males!

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  2. This echoes what happened with my Uncle and cousins, except no one was murdered. He wasn’t able to see his kids until they were over 18, and the horrible man who had taken their place, a Wilson as well, ironically, had a nasty habit of laying his fist down when things didn’t go his way.

    Sad… really damn sad. Our justice system, as equal as it appears to be, is somewhat lenient to women in matters like this.

    Why?

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    1. It’s the same way hwere:women get a few thousand benefits of the doubt and men get thrown under the steamroller–decades of drinking the feminist happy fun-time fruit punch will do that a country. (The only cold comfort I take is that we’re a decade behind Canada, but that won’t last.)

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        1. I have a friend who pays hundreds a month in alimony and child support. He never sees his own kid any more, and the mother is a drug-addict. The judge just keeps awarding her sole-custody at the hearings.

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  3. Taken is a great movie. I fully plan on watching it with my daughter when she gets older over and over and over again until she memorizes every bit of it before I let her go overseas :-P

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  4. I suspect the stat on mothers being more likely to abuse their children is related to the habit of the female parent usually getting custody, even when the father would be a better choice.

    That genuflection out of the way….

    I’ve been gut-sick about this story since I heard about it.

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    1. I’m sorry! I don’t know why I keep posting these gut-wrenching stories, but I think that’s the end of my run for a while at least. I’m reading these books by Catholics like Dr. Morse, etc. on marriage and parenting, and it just opens my eyes to the plight of men, women and children and how they hurt themselves.

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      1. Not your fault. You would’ve tried to help the little girl, if you’d seen it– that’s about all one can ask of third parties, isn’t it?

        Human nature is sad. Wonderful, sometimes, but you’ve got to drain the infection of the other times or there won’t be any improvement.

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