Parents call Anderson mentally troubled
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Jenny Marder
Kenneth Sean Anderson’s philosophy was that if you can get involved
in sports, you’ll never have to turn to drugs.
It was something he believed in deeply, but at times they were
only words, and easier said than done.
Anderson’s family gathered Tuesday in a private family ceremony to
mourn the loss of their son and brother, who was shot and killed by a
Huntington Beach police officer on June 1 after allegedly threatening
to run over several police officers with his car.
“This has just been a real extreme shock to the whole family, and
everybody’s trying to make some [sense] out of it,” said his mother
Bonnie Parashak. “Our feeling really is that he is now where he
wanted to be, as far as he is in the hands of the Lord.”
Athlete, health nut and nature lover, Anderson was described by
family and friends as loving, hard-working and passionate, but also
short-tempered and moody, with a tendency toward depression.
He was a religious man, with a closeness to the pastor of his
Methodist church. He was a skilled athlete who found pleasure and
solace in all kinds of athletics -- basketball, softball, football,
surfing, snowboarding and skateboarding, she said.
Much of that changed when Anderson was 16 and involved in a
motorcycle accident that sent him into a coma, said Paul Parashak,
Kenneth’s stepfather.
“At that time, doctors said he wouldn’t make it through the
night,” he said. “When he came out of the coma, they said he wouldn’t
live to see 30.”
Anderson lived to be 38, but the accident triggered other problems
-- mental problems, headaches, distorted hearing, unorthodox behavior
and drug abuse.
It changed his personality, his stepfather said.
“A good part of the problem stemmed from the fact that Ken
couldn’t show empathy,” he said. “His emotional demeanor was out of
sorts. He would do things you wouldn’t expect. You’d ask him a
question, a serious one, and he would chuckle.”
Anderson got hooked on heavy-duty pain medication prescribed by
doctors after the accident, and after developing a tolerance for the
painkillers, shifted to other drugs, Paul Parashak said.
His substance abuse problem lasted for two years, after which he
pulled himself out of drugs and into treatment, turning to groups
such as Narcotics Anonymous and Alcoholics Anonymous for help.
As the years went by, other young people grappling with similar
drug problems turned to Anderson for help and guidance. He was always
there for them, his parents said.
He would offer them a place to stay in one of the three spare
rooms of his Huntington Beach home and spend time with them, take
them to meetings and do whatever he could to help them stay clean,
Paul Parashak said.
Once clean, he went back to school, and although it took him nine
years, he finally earned a teaching degree for high school physical
education.
“Between graduating and the time he started student teaching, he
was so involved in trying to get kids to understand that if you can
get involved in sports, you’ll get so much gratification from that,
you’ll never turn to drugs,” his stepfather said.
To raise awareness, he trekked alone across the United States from
the Canadian border to the Mexican border walking, biking and
skateboarding. When the man who had agreed to drive the chase car
bailed at the last minute, Kenneth chose to chase himself. He’d bike
or skate for five or six miles, then double-back for his car, which
doubled his route from 1,500 to 3,000 miles. The journey took him two
and a half months to complete.
“He was trying to emphasize that this was his belief,” Paul
Parashak said. “He believed in it. If he completed it, it said he had
done what he said he was going to do. He never went back on his
word.”
But no matter how hard he tried, Anderson could never shake his
reputation as a troublemaker. With 10 or 12 incidents on his police
record, including attempted armed robbery and assault on a police
officer, his past finally caught up with him. Anderson was arrested
for assault with a deadly weapon and fired from his job after only a
few weeks at Fountain Valley High School.
“I can’t get mad at the principal for getting rid of Ken,” his
stepfather said. “His job is to upgrade his staff. Ken didn’t present
a professional image as far as this is the type of individual I’d
like my son or daughter to emulate.”
Losing the job devastated him and launched him back into drug use.
“I really think Ken was just hurting,” he said. “Even then, he
couldn’t cope.”
Later that spring, on June 21, 2002, Anderson was arrested for
trying to rob three liquor stores at knifepoint. A high-speed car
chase that ended in Irvine. He was held in jail for nine months.
He returned home after his release with no money, no car, hardly
any clothes and many of his belongings stolen, said his mother, who
returned to Huntington Beach from Oregon to help him.
“We begged him to move out. He had had such a hard time with the
police there,” she said. “But Huntington Beach was his hometown. He
surfed there and he loved it.”
He moved in temporarily with the pastor of his church, Don
Reynolds.
“We gave him a set of keys and he never took a thing,” said Lyla
Reynolds, the pastor’s wife. “He was very helpful.”
Anderson helped the family with dishes and brought them gifts of
paintings and plants. He also admitted to Lyla Reynolds that he was
on medication for seizures and that at times, he wore a hearing aid.
“He said ‘I’m not old, but I don’t think straight because of my
brain injury,’” she said.
Anderson had always been close with the pastor, who visited
frequently while he was in jail. The pastor spent whole days at the
courthouse with him and helped arrange for him to be checked into a
halfway house after he was released.
Nine days after his release from jail, he was shot and killed by
Police Officer Corwin Bales after allegedly threatening to run over a
team of police officers with his car.
The incident began when Anderson allegedly stole a cigarette
lighter from an Arco gas station on Beach Boulevard and used it to
light a glass pipe. An Arco cashier confronted Anderson, who
subsequently reacted by re-entering the store, swiping an entire box
of lighters and fleeing in his Toyota Corolla. The cashier was
reportedly so shaken up by the encounter that he quit that night.
A police chase ensued. Anderson was finally cornered in the
Huntington Beach High School parking lot. When Anderson began
accelerating toward an officer on foot and several cruisers in a
threatening manner, Bales shot him through the windshield. He was
pronounced dead at the scene.
His mother doesn’t know why he never checked himself into the
halfway house as he planned, but said she believes that now, he is
“where he always wanted to be.”
“He’s happy and there’s no pain for him, not in his head,
anymore,” she said.
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