Abrams trial begins with drugs, delusions
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Alex Coolman
SANTA ANA -- The portrait of a man twisted by drug problems and
delusions of “brain wave police” emerged Thursday as opening arguments
were heard in the trial of Steven Allen Abrams, the man accused of
murdering two children at a Costa Mesa day care center.
In an Orange County Superior courtroom where seats were occupied by
some family members of Abrams’ victims, defense and prosecution attorneys
laid the lurid foundation for the testimony to come.
Abrams, 40, is charged with two counts of murder and seven counts of
attempted murder for steering his Cadillac on May 3, 1999, onto the
crowded playground of the Southcoast Early Childhood Learning Center in
Costa Mesa.
The baffling action, which police say was intentional, took the lives
of Sierra Soto, 4, and Brandon Weiner, 3, and left other students and a
teacher’s aide injured.
Abrams has pleaded not guilty to the charges by reason of insanity.
As the morning progressed, Abrams seemed to shrink into his seat.
Dressed in a white shirt and khaki slacks with his long, curly hair
combed back, he stared down at his lap. He seemed to show little emotion
other than a sort of fearful resignation.
Speaking to the jury, Deputy Dist. Atty. Debora Lloyd drew attention
to the degree of care that Abrams devoted to preparing for his actions.
“The defendant premeditated this murder on these children over the
years,” Lloyd said. “He laid in wait.”
The picture she painted of Abrams was that of a habitual user of
cocaine, marijuana and methamphetamines -- a man who dulled his senses
with chemicals, but retained a fundamental moral awareness of the
difference between right and wrong.
“He said, ‘I know I’m gonna pay for what I did,”’ Lloyd said.
But in public defender Leonard Gumlia’s opening statement, Abrams’
character was portrayed in a far less rational light.
“This is the story of a paranoid schizophrenic,” Gumlia began, and
then presented, in elaborate and often bizarre detail, the “world of
paranoia” in which Abrams lived in the years leading up to his actions.
Abrams, Gumlia said, began to slide into intense delusions in the wake
of a failed romantic relationship with a neighbor in 1994. He began to
form conspiracy theories and believed he was being followed by government
agents.
Eventually, Gumlia said, Abrams formulated a vast theory about “brain
wave police,” a group that controlled thoughts, implanted memories and
manipulated the courts and government.
“Mr. Abrams did not understand the mechanism for this control,” Gumlia
said, “but he knew it existed.”
So powerful was Abrams’ delusion about the thought-controlling police,
Gumlia said, that he lacked the ability to distinguish between what was
real and what was imaginary. His sense of moral conviction, though
powerful, was entirely based on the belief that the brain wave police
were controlling his life and that he needed somehow to escape from their
clutches.
“He wasn’t planning to set up an insanity defense because he [didn’t
believe] he was mentally ill,” Gumlia said. “He thought [killing the
children] was the right thing to do.”
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