BY DON LEACH STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER I was...
BY DON LEACH
STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
I was looking at photo negatives on our Daily Pilot light table
when I heard a call come over the scanner about a car going into a
structure. I figured I should go check it out since it was right down
the street.
It could be an interesting shot, I thought.
It turned out to be much more than that, an event that left me
shaken for all I’d seen and heard.
Our editors were at a meeting so I didn’t tell anyone I was
leaving -- I just walked out the door with my gear. It was late in
the day, the sinking sun cast shadows over the neighborhood. I
remember thinking a car must have gone through a house. Right then,
another call came over the radio saying the car had gone into the
side of a school and a person was still trapped, with people trying
to lift the car. My pulse quickened as I parked, ran up to the scene
and walked past bystanders gathered on the curb.
Already paramedics were frantically working on a small boy who lay
on a backboard as police talked to someone in a gold, older-model
Cadillac.
Someone crashed through the school fence, I thought, hitting some
kids. As I surveyed the scene, police were leaning into the window of
the car, speaking to the driver who still sat in the drivers’ seat.
People stood behind police tape and sat on the curb crying as
teachers hugged and parents ran into the school screaming for
information.
The chaos of screams, cries and sirens just went on and on as
paramedics frantically tried to save the life of Brandon Wiener.
Parents were running into the school letting nothing and no one get
in their way. Sometimes a scream would let out from behind the wall,
and then a scream from behind me directed at the driver. Angry
residents were yelling at Abrams as he sat in the car, screaming at
police to let him go so they could deal with him personally.
When they took him away in cuffs people yelled “murderer” several
times, and a police officer stood nearby to make sure no one made a
run at him as they led him to a waiting car. I kept looking at my
cameras, having nowhere to hide as I stood there among residents,
paramedics, teachers and parents moving back and forth.
An unusual mix of children’s toys and emergency medical equipment
littered the schoolyard. A crew of firemen from Costa Mesa knelt down
next to the body of Sierra Soto in the middle of the yard. They
seemed to be guarding her body and soul to make sure she was not
disturbed in any way in the midst of the ugly scene.
There was nothing left to do. They had done all they could do. I
figured the same and walked back to my car, staring at the ground,
the screams still fresh in mind.
When I returned to the newsroom, I looked at the film, refreshing
my memory of the tragic event. I didn’t care what picture was used,
shock and sadness was all that I felt as reporters and editors came
by to look at the film to learn what had happened.
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