EDITOR’S NOTE It is often called the...
EDITOR’S NOTE
It is often called the best photo the Daily Pilot never published.
But no more.
On that fateful May day in 1999, emotion-filled editors and
photographers entered into a debate. Should we run a photo that
contained a tarp covering the dead body of 4-year-old Sierra Soto as
it lay next to a kneeling, somber firefighter, Gregg Steward?
It was a dramatic moment and one that was sure to leave an
indelible memory with our readers. The arguments pro and con went
late into the night.
The answer ultimately that night was no.
The reason was a noble one. We did not want to inflict more pain
on the parents by publishing a photo that showed their dead child on
the front page of their community newspaper.
Many that night disagreed with that verdict. They believed the
photo, shot by longtime photographer Don Leach, should have ran.
There was precedent for such photos being published in the past. Why
should this one be different?
It’s a difficult debate. .
As the five-year anniversary of the preschool murders loomed, the
lobbying began again to publish the photo and let the readers finally
see it. After discussing it with the mother of Sierra Soto, whose
thoughts appear below, we decided to publish the photo.
Again, we believe this is the right decision.
-- Tony Dodero
SIERRA’S MOTHER
Cindy Soto Beckett, said she felt a sense of comfort when she saw
a firefighter sitting near her daughter’s covered body.
“When I saw him sitting there that was the moment I felt OK,” she
said. “I felt comforted that my daughter was not lying there by
herself -- alone.”
She said she was shocked when she saw television footage of that
scene for the first time.
“But it’s OK. I would want your readers to see it because I don’t
want anyone to ever forget that this happened. I don’t want anyone to
forget Sierra.”
THE FIREFIGHTER
Costa Mesa Fire Deputy Chief Gregg Steward, a captain at the time,
watched over Sierra’s body as his colleagues cleared the scene.
“When I was sitting there by her side, I heard her mother, Cindy,
scream,” he said. “I was thinking maybe she wanted to be sitting
where I was sitting, but then I thought maybe she didn’t want to be
there. I felt like I had to be there because her parents couldn’t.”
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