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Couple accused in international kidnapping case used fake Canadian camping trip as cover story: prosecutors

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A couple from the United States is facing international kidnapping charges after prosecutors claimed they took a 10-year-old child to Cuba to potentially undergo gender transition surgery, allegedly deceiving the child's biological mother with a fake Canadian camping trip to get there.

Suspects allegedy used fake Canadian camping trip as cover story, prosecutors say

Rhianna Schmunk · CBC News

· Posted: Apr 23, 2026 7:20 PM EDT | Last Updated: 30 minutes ago

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Cars line up to cross the border on a sunny day.
The Peace Arch border crossing connecting Surrey, B.C., and Blaine, Wash., is seen from the American side in 2024. The U.S. Justice Department claims a couple accused in an international kidnapping case crossed the Peace Arch border before fleeing to Cuba. (Ethan Cairns/CBC)

A couple from the United States is facing international kidnapping charges after prosecutors claimed they took a 10-year-old child to Cuba to potentially undergo gender transition surgery, allegedly deceiving the child's biological mother with a Canadian camping trip as cover story.

On Wednesday, the U.S. Justice Department said Rose Inessa-Ethington, 42, and Blue Inessa-Ethington, 32, were arrested and charged after Trump administration took the rare step of sending a government plane to bring the child back from Havana, Cuba, on Monday.

"The pair is accused of allegedly skipping out on a planned camping trip to Canada with a shared custody child and instead took the 10-year-old to Havana, Cuba, without the biological mother’s knowledge or court approval," the statement read.

A series of court documents filed in U.S. District Court detail what prosecutors say was an international kidnapping plot that involved "extensive" planning and thousands of dollars in cash.

Group crossed into B.C. on foot, filings say

The filings say Rose Inessa-Ethington, one of the child's biological parents, was supposed to be going camping in Calgary, Alta., on March 28 with Blue, the 10-year-old child and another three-year-old child. But documents say the women never reached the Days Inn hotel nor the Tunnel Mountain Village campground in Calgary, and they turned off their cellphones.

Rose shared custody of the child with their biological mother, identified only as L.B. The justice department said L.B. contacted police when the couple did not return as scheduled on April 3.

LB claimed Rose, her ex-spouse, had violated the terms of their custody agreement.

Investigators determined Rose, Blue and the children never went to Alberta, according to court documents. Prosecutors say the group instead walked into British Columbia from Washington State through the Peace Arch border crossing on March 29.

The group flew from Vancouver International Airport to Mexico City that afternoon before continuing on to Cuba with their U.S. passports two days later, the filings said.

In an affidavit sworn last week, FBI special agent Jennifer Waterfield said investigators who searched the couple's home in Utah found “to-do” lists detailing plans to empty bank accounts, learn Spanish, put their belongings in storage and secure tourist visas. She said investigators also found notes with instructions from a mental health therapist in Washington, D.C., related to “gender affirming medical care for children” and a request to send the therapist $10,000 US ($13,650 CAD).

An aerial view of a city.
Havana, Cuba, in February. (Norlys Perez/Reuters)

The affidavit said Rose Inessa-Ethington quit her job before leaving town and Blue Inessa-Ethington had booked time off, but never got back in touch with her employer once they left. The sworn statement also said Blue withdrew $10,000 US from her chequing account in the days before the trip.

In her affidavit, Waterfield said "concerns exist that [the child] was transported to Cuba for gender reassignment surgery prior to puberty."

A Utah state court judge granted L.B. sole custody and ordered the child immediately returned to her care on April 13, according to the justice department. Cuban law enforcement found the group last Thursday and the U.S. government plane retrieved the child on Monday.

The unusual use of the government aircraft comes as the Trump administration continues to block access to gender-affirming care for minors across the U.S. and threaten health-care providers who perform that care. Gender-affirming surgery is rare among American children, research has shown.

The Inessa-Ethingtons made an initial appearance in federal district court in Richmond, Virginia, on Tuesday after they were flown back to the U.S.

Prosecution will continue in Utah, where the couple lives. The child has been returned to L.B.'s care, the statement said.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Rhianna Schmunk is a senior writer covering domestic and international affairs at CBC News. Her work over the past decade has taken her across North America, from the Canadian Rockies to Washington, D.C. She routinely covers the Canadian courts, with a focus on precedent-setting civil cases. You can send story tips to [email protected].

With files from The Associated Press

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