Prepared by:
John Kiedrowski,M.A.(Crim.)
C.H.S. Jayewardene,Ph.D.
Kiedrowski and Associates
Marlene Dalley, Ph.D.
Missing Children's Registry,
RCMP
1200 Vanier Parkway
Ottawa, Ontario
K1A 0R2 Canada
Executive Summary
The Canadian federal government is seeking to promote the well-being of children by addressing conditions-of-risk to which they may be exposed. The abduction of children by a parent is one of those conditions. The exact number of parental abductions in Canada and the United States, however, is unknown. Estimates of such abductions range from approximately 400 per year in Canada to 350,000 per year in the United States. To address the concerns of parental abductions in Canada, the Missing Children's Registry, Royal Canadian Mounted Police requested the development of an overview of the literature and from this overview a profile of a parental abductor.
The overview examines a number of factors related to the parental abductor. These include gender, socio-economic characteristics, psychological and sociological factors, and international abductions. The paper also presents information on the relationship between the abductor and the child. This information includes: the age and sex of the child; site and timing of the abduction; use of accomplices; and mental abuse, physical and sexual harm to the child; and impact on those involved.
Based upon this information a profile was created. The profile is an educated attempt to provide the police and other agencies with specific information on the type of individual who commits such offenses. The profile and it's usefulness, however, depend on the perspectives from which the task has been approached. The paper presents findings and information that the police may need to know to locate and recover the missing child. This information includes: information about the abducting parent, communication between the parties, travel plans, and recovery of the child.
The following information may be used to construct an overall profile of a parental abduction: