Baby Parker’s identity has been a mystery for more than two decades. Last week, the Brantford Police Service revealed a big break in the case.
A 39-year-old woman, believed to be the newborn’s mother, was charged in connection to his death.
His story may have ended too soon, but it had a lasting impact in the community.

History of the case
On July 28, 2005, a woman walking her dog near Dufferin Avenue and Parkside Drive discovered the dead body of a full-term baby.
An autopsy found trauma to the child’s ribs and skull, but the medical examiner could not determine what had happened to him.

Baby Parker’s family never came forward.
Police said DNA and “advanced investigative techniques” were used to identify the child’s mother, who would have been around 18-years-old at the time. She was arrested on Feb. 26, 2026 and charged with indignity to a body and concealing the body of a child.

Community impact
Shalyn Wilson said Baby Parker’s story hit home. She first heard about it at an event for young parents.
“I really had to sit with it and put my emotions in check,” she told CTV News during an interview on Sunday. “On one hand, I am so grateful that the police service cared enough to keep looking. On the other hand, I have always been terrified for his mother because the community, a lot of it, doesn’t see any of this with compassion. They see it with anger.”

Wilson understands what it means to be a young mother. She had her child at the age of 20 and said it was overwhelming to navigate homelessness and postpartum depression at the same time.
“We don’t know what Parker’s mom was going through.”
Wilson is part of Parker’s Project. In addition to holding memorials every year on the anniversary of the baby’s death, the local initiative is focused on judgement-free support.
“I think justice for Parker [is] making sure we continue the work to ensure that no parent or caregiver is ever in that state of mind again.”

Safe surrender
While there are several resources for struggling parents in Brantford, one is missing – a safe surrender site for infants.
“Babies are still being abandoned,” Wilson said. “I think that would be step one. Step two is we need to listen to the people who are in that position now.”
There are currently four safe surrender sites, called “Hope’s Cradle,” operating in Canada. The nearest one to Brantford is in Clarington, Ont. The trip is approximately two hours by car.

“They want to give women the choice for safe surrender but, in order to do that, the woman has to be assured that it’s anonymous,” explained Lynn Jeffs, who brought the idea to Ontario. “All we’re trying to do is expand these Hope’s Cradles across Canada, so the option is available for women.”
She said the focus should be on support.
“The Baby Parker cold case has taken 20 years of police investigation and resulted in a woman being charged for a decision she made as a teenager. A better use of resources would have been the option of safe surrender in a Hope’s Cradle where both the baby would have lived, and the woman supported through her crisis.”

Lasting change
While an arrest in Baby Parker’s case brings some measure of closure, it also underscores a bigger issue in the community.
“I think we always need to be looking at the data and listening to people in those situations,” Wilson urged. “What Parker’s mother needed 20 years ago might not look exactly like what we need right now. Parker is the inspiration for what I do today.”

Her organization has launched Parker’s Promise Hub, a website where families and caregivers can find resources in their neighbourhood.
Wilson said finding help can be challenging.
“You will come across seven dead links, and you will call six phone numbers and they will say, ‘We don’t run that program anymore,’ or ‘There’s a very long waitlist,’” she explained. “I try to put very honest descriptions on the hub like, ‘This has a waitlist,’ or ‘There is a registry,’ or whatever the case may be. It is all up front and hopefully easy to navigate.”
Beyond resources, community leaders say Baby Parker’s story has reshaped the conversation around support, prevention and compassion.

