‘Deadliest Catch’: Inside Sig Hansen’s ‘Poisoned’ Relationship With His Estranged Daughter
‘Deadliest Catch’: Inside Sig Hansen’s ‘Poisoned’ Relationship With His Estranged Daughter
What happened between ‘Deadliest Catch’ star Sig Hansen and his estranged daughter, Melissa Eckstrom?
Discovery Channel’s Deadliest Catch Season 19 is in full swing, and Sig Hansen and his daughter, Mandy Hansen, share their experiences of crab fishing in the Bering Sea. Sig has been part of the series since 2005, and fans know him as the captain of the F/V Northwestern. Unfortunately, Sig had legal issues with his estranged daughter, Melissa Eckstrom. Here’s what to know about his estranged daughter’s accusations against him.
Melissa Eckstrom, ‘Deadliest Catch’ star Sig Hansen’s estranged daughter, sued him
Sig and Mandy Hansen have a loving father-daughter relationship in Deadliest Catch Season 19. But Sig has another daughter he doesn’t speak of on the show. His estranged daughter, Melissa Eckstrom, was born during his first marriage to Lisa Eckstrom. Melissa accused Sig of sexually abusing her when she was a child.
Lisa and Sig had a brief marriage and separated before Melissa’s birth. Their divorce trial awarded Sig visitation rights. But he chose to relinquish his parental rights in Melissa’s “best interest,” according to The Seattle Times.
According to Melissa’s claims, she battled trauma during her childhood that culminated in depression and an eating disorder due to her father’s abuse. She stated she had memories of her father’s abuse in the ’90s when she was 2 years old.
“I have memories … of being in a room alone with my father and crying out in pain,” Melissa stated in a court declaration in 2017.
Melissa filed a lawsuit in 2016 that included medical records, findings from a state Child Protective Services supervising caseworker, and an evaluation from a therapist when the alleged abuse occurred. A deputy prosecutor’s letter from the 1990s written to Melissa’s mother shows prosecutors didn’t file charges at the time because they didn’t believe they could prove her side of the case “beyond a reasonable doubt.”
In 2018, a three-judge panel of the Washington State Court of Appeals ruled that a civil trial for the lawsuit against Sig could proceed.
“Each time they tried to extort me, I told them no; I take responsibility when I make mistakes, but I will not put up with these false allegations that a judge dismissed decades ago,” Sig stated, according to The Seattle Times. “We will appeal this to the state supreme court and expect them to reverse the decision.”
Before this lawsuit, Sig had troubles with his ex-wife, Lisa. In 1992, he battled with his estranged wife regarding visitation rights with Melissa. The judge who handled the divorce and custody battle ruled that no abuse happened.