Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Montana father wins international custody fight

Hunter Nelson runs to his father, Byron Nelson, in Kalispell, Mont. Byron Nelson was reunited with his son, now almost 2, in late October after the Supreme Court of the Commonwealth of the Bahamas granted Nelson custody. (Associated Press)
Myers Reece Flathead (Mont.) Beacon

KALISPELL, Mont. – Hunter Nelson giggled as the leaves crunched beneath his feet. His father watched carefully, never letting the boy leave his sight.

Byron Nelson doesn’t let Hunter get too far away these days. After spending more than a year trying to get his son back from the Bahamas, he was reunited with Hunter, now almost 2 years old, in late October. The Supreme Court of the Commonwealth of the Bahamas granted Nelson custody in accordance with international child abduction laws.

Nelson began working through a legal process last September to get Hunter back from his estranged wife. He said it’s surreal to now hear a child’s voice echoing through his home. He had grown accustomed to silence.

“I’m still kind of in shock,” said Nelson, 30. “I always knew I’d get him back, I just didn’t know when. It’s the end of a nightmare. Now my house is full of kid’s stuff instead of just this sad place.”

In May, the Flathead Beacon published a story about Nelson’s efforts to reclaim his son. Nelson and his wife had taken a vacation to the Bahamas the previous summer to visit his wife’s family. Nelson returned to Kalispell alone, with the expectation that his wife and child would follow later. They never did, and his wife eventually cut off communication.

Nelson initiated a process to return Hunter to Montana through the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction. Both the U.S. Department of State and the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children took up the case.

Robert Lowery, executive director for NCMEC’s missing children division in Alexandria, Va., told the Beacon in May, “Clearly, Mr. Nelson does have the (custody) claim in this regard by our estimation.” A district court judge in Montana had granted Nelson custody.

Nelson was told his is the first successful Hague case between the Bahamas and the United States.

“With any luck it will help other people,” Nelson said. “If anything it will open it up and make it so it doesn’t take 15 months. That’s how long the process took, but it worked and I’m thankful.”

His wife hasn’t contacted him, but Nelson said he would be willing to consider shared custody if it takes place in Kalispell.

Hunter has spent more than half his life away from his father. Yet when Nelson saw him for the first time in October, Hunter said “daddy.” When Hunter got back to his birth home, he seemed to recognize his surroundings, Nelson said. The boy ran up to the sliding glass door and pounded on it to call the dogs in from the yard, just as he had done over a year ago.

“He’s adjusted really well,” Byron said. “I think he remembers this house plenty.”