Police lend a hand
Ellen McCarty
FOUNTAIN VALLEY -- Police officers presented a shiny red tricycle Tuesday
at City Hall to an 8-year-old girl whose bike was stolen in June.
“She doesn’t know she’s getting a new bike,” said her mom, Rebecca
Startup, before the special ceremony. “It’s going to mean so much to
her.”
The Utah Trike, specially designed to stretch the muscles of cerebral
palsy patients, was parked by a tree in the front yard the day it was
stolen.
“It’s not something a normal kid would enjoy riding,” she said. “It’s big
and heavy -- it would be like lifting a small couch. I don’t know why
anyone would want to steal it.”
Lara was crushed by the loss, her mother said.
“All summer she moped around, and every once in a while she’d turn to me
and say, ‘I miss my bike,’ ” she said. “But economically, we just
couldn’t afford to buy her a new one.”
When Rebecca brought Lara to the police department to report the stolen
bike, Officer Trung Nguyen took the report. He was so moved by Lara that
he took it upon himself to raise $800 to replace the tricycle.
Rebecca adopted her daughter, Lara, and her twin, Andru, from an
orphanage in Romania almost a decade ago after watching the plight of
children there on “60 Minutes.” Soon after the babies were brought to the
United States, Startup realized they had cerebral palsy, a physical
disability that causes the brain to send incorrect signals to muscles.
Andru’s condition is more severe than his sister’s and this year, he
entered the Hyland Home.
“I never would have been brave enough to adopt handicapped children,”
Rebecca said, showing pictures of her 11 children at her Fountain Valley
home Friday. “But Lara’s a character. She knows everyone in the
neighborhood from her adventures on her bike.”
Chief Elvin Miali presented the new bike to Lara on Tuesday. Nguyen’s
wife had a baby that day, Miali explained, so he was unable to attend the
meeting. “This is the same bike, but now it has a lock,” Miali said.
Lara smiled and looked at her mom.
“What do you say?” Rebecca asked her daughter, who replied shyly, “Thank
you.”
Riding her new bike around city hall, Lara gave a thumbs up to the crowd
and said to her mom about the balloons tied to it, “It’s decorated!”
Her big plans for this week: riding her new bike around the block to sell
chocolates for Plavan Urbain School. “Plavan’s colors are black and red,”
she said, adjusting her shiny red helmet. “And so is my bike.”
Rebecca smiled, “It’s really touching,” she said. “She’s so excited.”
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