A Cape Breton father faces charges after confronting a woman who allegedly gave his 13-year-old daughter and her friend a dangerous street drug.

Stephen Sampson, from the community of Dominion, N.S., said that after confronting the woman, he was charged with possession of a weapon, uttering threats and unlawfully entering a dwelling.

He said the woman who allegedly gave his daughter the drug should be the one facing charges.

Sampson said his daughter and her 14-year-old best friend went to a house party over the weekend. The woman who owns the home bought the teens a bottle of rum, then gave them the drug to "sober them up," he alleges.

"Then this girl introduced four lines of Molly, which is a highly dangerous narcotic. It's a mix of all kinds of dangerous drugs," said Sampson.

"Whatever they can get in it to get you messed up, they put in this. 'Here, snort this, this will make you sober.'"

Molly — which commonly refers to the pure crystalline form of MDMA or ecstasy — is a combination of MDMA and other drugs.

'What the hell did you give my daughter?'

Sampson said the girls were high when they arrived home and told him what happened.

"One was tearing off her clothes trying to release whatever was in her skin. The other had a bloody nose. My daughter, she was scared she was dying, so they told me everything — where they were, what had happened," said Sampson.

"So I called this person and I said, 'What the hell did you give my daughter? What is going on?' And she said, 'Oh, it was just a bit of Molly, I thought you'd be cool, I thought you were solid.'"

Sampson said that after confronting the woman, he now faces charges and is scheduled to appear in court Nov. 25.

Police said they cannot confirm the charges until the information is sworn in court, likely two weeks before his court appearance.

Courts cannot confirm the charges because the paperwork has not yet been filed.

Sampson said he must abide by a number of court-imposed conditions such as staying in the province until he appears in court in late November.

"I work out in Alberta," said Sampson. "I'm a journeyman insulator and I support my four babies by going back and forth. Like I'm the criminal. Like, I'm not the one supplying children with drugs."

He wants police to charge her, but he said police have told him that the incident is under investigation.

Cape Breton Regional Police did not respond to CBC's request for an update on the case.