
Man at centre of W5 investigation accused of historical sexual assault of his then six-year-old cousin
This article is part of an ongoing W5 investigation that has infiltrated a global online network of men who are secretly drugging, raping, filming and sharing the videos of their unsuspecting wives and intimate partners.
Bryan Hayward, the 36-year-old Hamilton, Ont. man accused of drugging, raping, filming and sharing content of his ex-girlfriend is also accused of sexually assaulting his then six-year-old cousin, 19 years ago.
Hayward was arrested on May 16 for allegedly sexually abusing his ex-girlfriend. Hamilton police apprehended Hayward after a W5 investigation revealed Hayward was posting videos of women who appear to be unconscious while Hayward potentially abused them.
Bryan Hayward
Hamilton police arrested Bryan Hayward on May 16. (Undated photo)
After his arrest, numerous women have come forward to Hamilton police over concerns they may have been assaulted by Hayward. Hamilton police will not confirm the number of women who have come forward, writing in a statement to W5 that '...to protect the integrity of the investigation we will not be releasing the number.'
This latest accusation that Hayward assaulted his cousin stems from an alleged incident that occurred almost 20 years ago.
For tips on this or any other story please email: avery.haines@bellmedia.ca
In an exclusive interview with W5's Avery Haines, Hayward's younger cousin who is now 25 and, who we are calling Taylor in order to protect her identity, detailed the alleged abuse she says she suffered when Hayward first allegedly assaulted her.
'You never prepare yourself in your own home. It was my birthday. And we would play hide and go seek. …Bryan would always say, 'hey, Taylor, come over here, come with me. Let's go hide underneath these covers.' And I would follow him and we would go hide underneath the covers and, um, and he would just start touching me…'
Following Hayward's arrest last month, Taylor contacted W5 in relation to her claims that Hayward assaulted her when she was a child.
Taylor first came forward that Hayward allegedly abused her when she was nine, three years after the alleged abuse first occurred.
Taylor says she first kept the alleged abuse to herself, fearing that no one would believe her. But then told her mother as they were planning her ninth birthday.
Taylor, Bryan Hayward's cousin, in silhouette
Bryan Hayward's cousin, Taylor, says he sexually assaulted her when she was 6-years-old and he was 17. (CTV W5)
'I just remember driving to Kumon with my mom and she's talking about my birthday party and how her cousins are gonna come and we're all gonna have fun and socialize, and I'll never forget. I told her, I said, 'you can't, like, please don't be mad, but I don't want Bryan there. This is what has been happening to me.' And next thing you know, I'm in court trying to tell my story.'
Hayward would be charged for allegedly abusing Taylor. The case advanced to trial but was eventually dismissed. Taylor had to testify during the trial but upon the court not allowing her mom or dad to be present during the examination, Taylor says Hayward's defence attorney broke her down.
'I brought my two favorite stuffed animals there with me…my parents weren't allowed in the court. So it was just myself and my stuffed animals,' Taylor said. 'Nothing came out of it because I couldn't, because I broke down on the stand. I couldn't get my full story out there and it really bothered me.'
Bryan Hayward in 2006
Bryan Hayward, now 36, is charged with drugging and raping an ex-girlfriend. His cousin accuses him of sexually assaulting her 19 years ago when she was 6 and he was 17. (Supplied photo)
Taylor's father, who we are calling Mark, lauds his daughter for having the strength to come forward at such a young age, but says the justice system failed his family.
'We're standing outside the room and I heard her break down and it was horrible. It was like someone stuck a knife in my gut,' he said.
Mark wants to see Hayward locked up indefinitely. 'That monster needs to stay behind bars for the rest of his life, because he's going to continue to do this,' he said.
Taylor's father, Mark, in silhouette
Taylor's dad, Mark says Bryan Hayward should be behind bars for life. (CTV W5)
Hayward is currently behind bars in Hamilton Wentworth Detention Centre, awaiting a bail hearing scheduled for June 13.
In response to inquiries about numerous past allegations and cases surrounding Hayward, Hamilton police have stated to W5 that '...we will be reviewing all cases involving Brian Hayward and continue to work with victims to support them when, and if, they are ready to report.'
Taylor says she'll now be looking for Hamilton police to reopen the historical case of alleged sexual assault against her.
'I want to get justice and I'm going to be reaching out to them to reopen my case and this time I'm not going to break down,' she said, 'because it makes me so angry seeing or knowing that he walked away, hurt so many others along the way.'
More in this series:
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CBC
16 minutes ago
- CBC
Basketball tournament honours 14-year-old murdered in Toronto's east end
Social Sharing Dozens of young people came out Saturday for a memorial basketball tournament Saturday in honour of a local 14-year-old who was fatally stabbed in the city's east end earlier this month. The tournament took place at Père Philippe Lamarche — a French Catholic secondary school in Scarborough — to pay tribute to their former friend and classmate, Abdoul Aziz Sarr. The memorial tournament was organized by TAIBU Community Health Centre, where Sarr regularly volunteered. On July 5, late in the evening, Sarr was stabbed near a fast food restaurant near Eastern and Woodward avenues, according to police. He later died in hospital. Two 16-year-olds have been charged with second-degree murder in connection with the stabbing, Toronto police said earlier this month. "We couldn't really believe what happened," said 14-year-old Malik Tchecoim, who was at the tournament Saturday and said he knew Sarr. "The day before that happened we just saw him, we talked to him. And the next day we just heard about him passing away," he said. "It was a shock" Tchecoim said he and his friends, as well as the rest of Sarr's classmates, were saddened by Sarr's death, but the stabbing hasn't made him afraid of their neighbourhood. Still, he said his parents now ask that he check in with them diligently when he goes around town to be sure he makes it safely to where he's going. Brahim Nokour, project co-ordinator for TAIBU, remembered Sarr as a young person who was highly engaged in his community — including TAIBU's basketball tournaments. "He used to coordinate everything," said Nokour. "How could such a young person doing all this for his community tragically pass away?" This weekend's tournament was a way for TAIBU to not only honour Sarr's memory, but also to teach the importance of physical and mental well-being to youth and parents through workshops, said Nokour. It's part of a 12-week-long initiative promoting mental and physical health for Francophone youth. In response to this month's tragedy, Nokour said TAIBU organizers are trying to teach kids to "just be careful." "Instead of being out on the street, just hang out here, play basketball, socialize," he said.


CTV News
18 minutes ago
- CTV News
Suspect arrested after man stabbed in Stockyards District
Police are on the scene of a stabbing near St. Clair Avenue West and Weston Road on Saturday, July 26, 2025. (Jacob Estrin/CTV News A man has been arrested in connection with the stabbing of another man in the city's Stockyards District on Saturday morning. Toronto police say they got a call about someone stabbed in the area of Weston Road and Birdstone Crescent, north of St. Clair Avenue West, just before noon. Stabbing A police officer stands at the scene of a stabbing on Weston Road on Saturday July 26, 2025. (Jacob Estrin/CTV News) When they arrived, officers found a man in his 30s with serious but non-life-threatening injuries. He was taken to the hospital for treatment. Police said the suspect fled the scene but was later apprehended. The circumstances that led to the stabbing are unknown.


National Post
18 minutes ago
- National Post
Newcomers face rising racism in Alberta as province debates immigration policy
Alberta resident Shamaila Akram says she can handle the increase in racial slurs and derogatory comments being thrown at her, but she worries about her newcomer and immigrant clients. Article content As debates unfold over Canada's immigration system, those who provide help to newcomers in Alberta say there has been an uptick of hostility toward immigrants. Article content 'I hear from people in my own communities — women specifically who wear hijabs — many bad things and we realize there is a need to educate people,' said Akram, with Calgary's Centre for Newcomers. Article content Article content 'Clients are coming with severe anxiety and sometimes panic attacks after hearing racial slurs outside our door. We have instances where they're being harassed while walking in (the) downtown.' Article content Article content People have also screamed, 'Go back to where you came from!' at Akram while she has been with her children multiple times this year, she said, and some have been aggressive. Article content The Canadian Anti-Hate Network says charged debates about immigration in Canada and the United States are behind the rise in hostility toward immigrants online and in person. 'We have been noticing a large increase in online hatred towards migrants, and especially towards South Asian communities lately,' said Evan Balgord, the organization's executive director. Article content 'We are seeing classically racist narratives being spread that groups of people are dirty, criminal, incompatible with society and dangerous.' Article content In Calgary, Kelly Ernst, the Centre for Newcomers' chief program officer, says it has had to increase building security, reduce its online program marketing and bolster the number of workers on its crisis line for newcomers. Article content Article content Article content He said the ongoing Alberta Next panel led by Premier Danielle Smith that's touring the province to hear public grievances with the federal government is stoking that anger. Article content 'Since (the) Alberta Next panel raised its ugly head, it's also created additional hostility with some of the comments associated to that,' he said. Article content Ernst said he agrees that the population of newcomers in Canada and Alberta has exploded, but said governments need to stop using immigrants as scapegoats for housing and infrastructure issues. Article content 'It's not the people themselves that are creating that particular strain,' Ernst said. 'The problem is government policy.' Article content The Alberta Next panel has already made stops in Red Deer and Edmonton and will return to Edmonton again, with visits to Fort McMurray and Lloydminster in August. Article content Six surveys launched on the panel's website help inform what questions the government is putting to locals, and one of them is about immigration. Article content 'If Alberta isn't satisfied with the number or economic qualifications of newcomers moving to our province, we may have the option to withhold provincial social programs to any non-citizen or non-permanent resident who does not have an Alberta-approved immigration status,' says a video participants are required to view before taking the immigration survey.