It’s time for tragedy to end
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It’s been nearly five years since a man, Steven Allen Abrams,
barreled his Cadillac onto a Costa Mesa preschool playground, killing
two children and injuring several others, including a school
employee.
And that day -- May 3, 1999 -- remains one of the most horrific in
Newport-Mesa history. It is the day that 4-year-old Sierra Soto and
3-year-old Brandon Wiener lost their lives in an event so tragic it
not only defies, but denies, description.
Abrams now sits locked away in prison for life. The preschool,
Southcoast Early Learning Childhood Center, is long closed. But a sad
legacy of this terrible crime remains in the negligence case filed by
the families of Sierra and Brandon, who now say they want to take
their suit to the state Supreme Court.
Twice now, their lawsuit against Sheryl Hawkinson, who owned the
preschool at the time, and the Lighthouse Coastal Community Church,
where it was located, has failed. Both the superior and the appellate
courts have ruled against the parents, because Abrams deliberately
murdered the children.
As we have in the past, we must take gentle issue with this suit.
We don’t presume to know what emptiness, sorrow and longing Sierra
and Brandon’s loved ones have felt as the days turned into months and
then to years. We would never claim to know what it feels like to
wonder “what if” as birthdays pass uncelebrated. But still, we also
cannot understand how this suit salves the wound or how hearing
Hawkinson judged culpable in the crime would relieve the pain,
however great it is.
We appreciate and honor that the parents want to bring attention
to the issue of safety at preschools. We praise their efforts to do
so through Sierra’s Light, the nonprofit group started after the
tragedy that donates money to schools and other institutions to make
their campuses safer. We wish there were more organizations like the
Brandon Cody Wiener Scholarship Fund, which sponsors a camp for
children who are grieving the loss of a loved one. They are both
great gifts to the community, both lasting tributes to the memories
of Sierra and Brandon.
We do not see similar purpose to continuing the lawsuit, beyond
padding the wallets of attorneys involved. Hawkinson, who suffered a
heart attack during Brandon and Sierra’s memorial service, is simply
another victim of the awful events. She should be forced to relive
them no more than anyone else there that day, no more than anyone
else whose life was altered that afternoon.
Instead of heading to Sacramento for a hearing before the state
Supreme Court, those involved should walk up the steps of the Capitol
and bring their dedication to the cause of safer schools to the
legislators who can make our schools safer. Work with a John Campbell
or a Ken Maddox in the Assembly or urge state Sen. Ross Johnson, who
leaves office this fall, to make a Sierra and Brandon law the proper
culmination to his years of service.
It is time this lawsuit be let go. But it is not yet time to let
go this good cause.
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