Preschool tragedy revisited
Deepa Bharath
COSTA MESA -- Cindy Soto and Pam Wiener still can’t find words to
describe the irreparable loss -- the gnawing feeling, the throbbing pain
in their hearts that they will feel even more strongly today.
It’s a day that marks the second anniversary of their children’s
deaths.
Sierra Soto, 4, and Brandon Wiener, 3, were killed on this day two
years ago by Steven Allen Abrams, who plowed through their preschool
playground in his 1967 Cadillac, murdering the two children and injuring
several others.
That bloody rampage is in the past, and it has been five months since
Abrams was sentenced to spend the rest of his life in prison without the
possibility of parole for the crime.
Wiener says knowing her son’s killer will be behind bars for the rest
of his life brings her some relief.
“I don’t have that weight on my shoulders anymore,” she said. “I don’t
have that stress at the back of my neck. But our lives have been changed
forever. Not a day goes by when I don’t think of Brandon.”
Soto says the pain never goes away, whether it’s been two years or 20.
“You just try to keep busy and try to stay positive,” she said. “But
[today] I’ll spend time with Sierra at the cemetery, maybe reflect on
what has happened and do some soul-searching. I don’t know what else to
do.”
While Abrams might have been put away in a state prison, there are
other issues relating to the incident that remain unresolved.
The Sotos and the Wieners are appealing a January decision by a
Superior Court judge who ruled in favor of the South Coast Early
Childhood Learning Center in a lawsuit the two families filed after the
children’s deaths.
In that decision, the judge said that neither owner Sheryl Hawkinson
nor the Lighthouse Coastal Community Church, where the center was
located, was responsible for the death of the children.
Hawkinson, the former director of the preschool, says she loved the
children.
“The incident literally broke my heart,” said Hawkinson, who suffered
a heart attack during the slain children’s memorial service.
Today is a day she would never forget, she said.
“I dread this day and pray that all parents and children who were
involved in that incident may find peace,” Hawkinson said.
Still, she said she was emotionally hurt by the lawsuit.
“Our society has changed in such a way and there’s so much hatred
around us . . . children just aren’t safe anymore,” Hawkinson said. “You
can’t put kids in a metal bubble.”
But Wiener’s attorney, Evan Ginsburg, said he believes the parents
have a point.
“The court used the wrong standard in determining foreseeability” when
making the decision, he said.
“With the playground this close to the street, a fence with no
foundation and with a previous incident of a car going through the
fence,” he said, “the question is: Is it possible that anyone could have
crashed into this school, let alone a crazy guy?”
Ginsburg referred to a disputed claim that a postal service truck was
involved in an accident at the center several years before the Abrams
incident. Police have been unable to substantiate that it occurred.
As the issue hits the appellate court, the parents are trying in their
own way to move on and to give themselves a sense of purpose.
Both Soto and Wiener actively involve themselves in Sierra’s Light
Foundation, a nonprofit organization started by Soto in memory of the two
children.
Soto is now lobbying for the passage of Assembly Bill 1421, which
seeks to make treatment mandatory for the mentally ill, even those out of
hospitals.
She spoke about the issue on April 16 before the Health Committee for
the Assembly in Sacramento. The bill is scheduled to go before the
Judiciary Committee on May 8.
The foundation’s primary goal, Soto said, is to make schools and
day-care centers safer for children. She said Sierra’s Light is providing
technical support and guidance to Kaiser Elementary and Mariners
Elementary schools in terms of school safety and also providing matching
funds to Harbor View Elementary School to redo its fence.
Wiener is involved with fund-raising and other activities for the
foundation, including its Volunteer Fair on May 17, a talent show in June
and a bowl-a-thon in September.
“It’s helped me a lot to focus on the positive,” she said. “It’s a
great comfort and gives me a sense of accomplishment.”
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