Preschool lawsuit takes another dramatic turn
Mathis Winkler
COSTA MESA -- One day after an Orange County Superior Court judge
ruled that a preschool center and its former director were not liable in
the deaths of two children, the U.S. Postal Service confirmed Wednesday
that a mail carrier did run into the school about three years before the
murders.
The earlier accident had been central to the lawsuit filed by the
parents of Sierra Soto, 4, and Brandon Wiener, 3, who were killed when
Steven Allan Abrams attacked the center’s playground in May 1999. Abrams
was sentenced to life without parole in December.
In a lawsuit similar to the one against the center, a judge in
December ruled against the families and in favor of First Baptist Church
of Costa Mesa, which owns the ground of the center.
And a civil suit against Abrams ended with the Soto and Wiener
families, as well as the family of another child injured during the
attack, splitting Abrams’ $60,000 in insurance money after he declined to
defend the lawsuit.
The children’s mothers, whose lawsuit alleged that knowledge of the
earlier accident could have prevented the deaths, said Wednesday they had
tried to find out about the incident after one of the center’s neighbors
testified that the postal truck accident had taken place.
Pamela Wiener, Brandon’s mother, said the postal service’s admission
showed parents should have been informed of the previous incident, which
apparently took place sometime in 1996.
“If there was a cover-up, that person should be held accountable,”
Wiener said. “We should have been told that there was a previous
incident. . . . We want to be able to heal, but our children are gone.
They are not coming back. We want some answers.”
The center’s director, who closed the preschool in Sept. 1999 as a
result of the murders, said she didn’t start working at Southcoast Early
Childhood Learning Center until June 1997.
“I wasn’t even there,” said Sheryl Hawkinson, adding that the previous
owner had not told her about the 1996 accident.
The previous owner, who still runs a preschool on Costa Mesa’s
Eastside, could not be reached for comment Wednesday.
While Hawkinson said Tuesday’s court ruling was “bittersweet,” she
added that she had hoped to support the children’s families rather than
fighting them in a lawsuit.
“As I’m sitting here right now, looking into the eyes of my baby, I
think about how sad it is for those parents that they can’t look into
their children’s eyes,” she said, choking back tears. “And all because of
a decision one man made. I do love [the parents] as I love their
children.”
Cindy Soto, Sierra’s mother, responded that Hawkinson should help the
families find out the truth about the 1996 accident.
Hawkinson should “help us find out what happened,” Soto said. “Instead
of sitting there and being the victim. She didn’t lose a child. . . .
Let’s find out the truth. That’s all I want, because I don’t want this to
happen again. . . . I wish I could say, ‘Never mind.’ I just can’t.”
In April, former Costa Mesa resident Noel Ulriksen testified that a
postal truck had run into the playground at some point in 1996.
“The mail truck bounced up over the curb and went through the fence
and came to rest at the tree inside the yard,” Ulriksen testified,
according to a written transcript of the deposition.
He also said he saw a center official try to fix the damage to the
fence after the accident occurred.
“He was trying to tie the fence up in there,” Ulriksen said. “And I
asked him if he needed some plastic ties, and I went over to my garage
and got the plastic ties for them. . . . He wanted to hurry up and get it
fixed before any parents came by.”
But postal officials said the fence had actually stopped the truck.
The carrier, not wearing a seat belt, had fallen out of the vehicle.
The truck “stopped at the curb,” said Terri Bouffiou, a spokeswoman
for the U.S. Postal Service, adding that Costa Mesa postal service
officials had told her about the accident from memory.
“It did not go through the fence,” Bouffiou said. “The carrier was at
fault.”
She added that in all certainty, the carrier would have been fired or
at least suspended.
“Not only did he damage the vehicle, but he broke a zillion rules,”
Bouffiou said, adding that she could not disclose the carrier’s name.
But Soto said the postal service’s explanation didn’t satisfy her.
“I still believe that [the truck] went through” the fence, she said.
“I believe the details in [Ulriksen’s] deposition. I don’t see why an
individual would come forward and say that if it weren’t true. . . . I
just want the truth. Can’t they just tell the truth?”
Costa Mesa Police Department officials, who have said in the past that
no report on a 1996 accident at the center exists, said the only accident
at the center involved cars in June 1997 and did not do any damage to the
playground, according to the report.
“We may have never been called on it,” said Sgt. Dale Birney, the
department’s spokesman, adding that accidents involving postal trucks
usually led to a police report. “If we were [called] and if we don’t have
any record, it might be something that we might be interested in looking
at.”
Wiener’s attorney said Wednesday he and the lawyers for the other
families would file an appeal against Tuesday’s ruling.
“The question is, is it foreseeable that a car might come crashing
into these people,” said Evan Ginsburg, adding that his team would try to
prove the playground was exposed to car crashes both intentional and
unintentional.
But “when you’re in a tragic case like this, the vision is somewhat
clouded,” he said. “Maybe the judge is right, and I’m wrong. . . . It’s
very possible I’m wrong.”
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