What Trans Babysitter Did To Kids Is HORRIFYING!

Police car with flashing lights at night.

A child sex assault story tied to a “trans babysitter” in Quebec is racing around conservative media, yet no one can prove the case even exists.

Story Snapshot

  • The Quebec “trans babysitter” case rests on one activist outlet, not official records
  • Verified child sex assault cases with babysitters show what real evidence looks like
  • Government data on gender diverse offenders is grim, but also complex and easy to twist
  • American conservative values demand we protect kids without turning rumors into weapons

What We Actually Know And What We Do Not

The core claim is simple: a man who identifies as transgender, working as a babysitter in Quebec, was arrested for sexually assaulting multiple children. That is a serious charge. Yet there is no police report, no court file, no named prosecutor, and no mainstream Canadian news story to back it up. The claim appears to trace to a single LifeSiteNews-style advocacy blog, which is openly conservative and openly hostile to transgender ideology, not a neutral reporter of facts.

Major outlets in Canada have covered many child sex assault stories. Canadian Broadcasting Corporation reported on a man who used Facebook to lure babysitters and then assaulted a 14-year-old girl at knifepoint; he received 12 years in prison, and the story cites court evidence and victim testimony. When Global News reported on a babysitter accused of sexual assault and later facing extra charges, they had police statements and new complainants. That is what real coverage looks like, with a paper trail behind the outrage.

Real Babysitter Abuse Cases Show The Evidence Standard

In Connecticut, a 20-year-old babysitter was arrested for allegedly having sex with a 14-year-old boy she was hired to watch. Police described a three-month investigation, listed charges like second-degree sexual assault and risk of injury to a minor, and named court dates and bond amounts. Another Connecticut case involved a 25-year-old woman accused of assaulting a 10-year-old boy; again, officers reported multiple incidents, locations, and timelines to the press. These cases include dates, victims’ ages, charges, and police departments on record. That is the minimum baseline for taking a story from rumor to fact.

Quebec’s own public health authority explains that sexual assault includes any sexual act without consent, and minors often cannot legally consent because of age. They also describe sexual exploitation when an adult in a position of trust targets teens aged 16 to 18. A babysitter fits that “position of trust” perfectly. So if police had charged a babysitter in Quebec for multiple child assaults, we would expect charges under sexual assault or exploitation laws and at least a local news brief citing those sections of the Criminal Code. Nothing like that appears in the record tied to this alleged “trans babysitter” case.

How Transgender Offender Data Gets Weaponized

There is no shortage of disturbing stories involving transgender offenders, which makes it easy for activists to blend fact with fear. One Canadian study of “gender diverse offenders” found that over 80 percent of such offenders with sexual offense histories were transgender women. A related federal publication reported that about two-thirds of gender diverse prisoners in the study group had homicide or sex-related index offenses. These numbers are not fake, and they show that a small group of gender diverse prisoners can be very dangerous.

Other work has pointed out that more than 90 percent of transgender women prisoners in one sample were locked up for violent offenses, and nearly half had a serious violent crime as their main conviction. A submission to the British Parliament noted that of 125 transgender prisoners counted in 2017, 60 had sexual offense convictions. These data points are real, but they are narrow. They focus on known offenders inside systems, not on the millions of transgender people who never commit crimes. They are easy to twist into “trans people are predators,” which does not match broader research that says lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer people are not more likely to sexually abuse children than straight people.

Victims Need Protection, But Rumors Help No One

From an American conservative point of view, two instincts clash here. One instinct says: protect children at all costs, be skeptical of ideology that plays with sex and identity, and take accusations seriously, especially when they involve adults in trusted roles like babysitters, teachers, and clergy. Another instinct says: rely on evidence, distrust activist spin from any side, and refuse to destroy someone’s life with a story that cannot clear basic proof tests. Both instincts point toward the same rule: no conviction without facts.

Parents do have reason to worry about who watches their children. There are many documented cases of babysitters, male and female, straight and gay, assaulting children or allowing boyfriends to molest kids they were paid to protect. Conservatives are right to demand stricter vetting, tougher sentences, and zero tolerance for sexual crimes against minors. But turning one unverified “trans babysitter in Quebec” story into a symbol of an entire group does not help those goals. It teaches activists to chase funding and clicks, not truth, and leaves real victims lost in the noise.

Sources:

abcnews.com, abc7chicago.com, hivjustice.net, dhs.gov, cbc.ca, facebook.com, youtube.com, ctvnews.ca, coastreporter.net

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