A CLOSER LOOK -- Judging the mind of the preschool killer
Deepa Bharath
It’s been 1 1/2 years since Steven Allen Abrams plowed his dilapidated
1967 Cadillac into a Costa Mesa playground, killing Sierra Soto, 4, and
Brandon Wiener, 3, and injuring five others.
The horrifying episode will forever remain a chilling part of the
city’s past. The emotional wounds of the parents who lost their children
are still fresh. The incident has etched an indelible impression in the
minds of local law enforcement officials and community members.
But, were the children victims of criminal rage in its crudest and
most frightening form? Or were they caught in the cross-fire between
Abrams and his tormented psyche?
That is a decision 12 jurors are expected to make this week as
deliberations begin today in the sanity phase of Abrams’ trial. They will
determine whether the defendant was legally insane on May 3, 1999 -- the
day of the tragedy.
A long, difficult trial
On Aug. 24, the jury found Abrams guilty of two counts of murder and
several counts of attempted murder.
After the guilty verdict, the trial entered its second stage -- the
sanity phase. The prosecution, led by Deputy Dist. Atty. Debora Lloyd,
has argued that Abrams was aware of his actions. She has maintained that
the defendant’s psychosis was a result of several years of drug abuse,
not mental illness.
Public Defender Denise Gragg has insisted that Abrams suffers from
paranoid schizophrenia and believes he is tormented by “brain wave
people” who wanted to make him a killer. Gragg said Abrams killed the
children to get the brain wave people to “leave him and his family
alone.”
The insanity phase of the trial has lasted about two months. Attorneys
themselves commented during their closing arguments about the length and
the complexity of this portion of the trial -- which involved marathon
testimonies from psychiatrists and psychologists.
The longest was that of prosecution witness Dr. Martha Rogers, who was
questioned by Gragg for almost two days.
Several witnesses have taken the stand during the course of the trial.
Gragg said Friday that she has lost count of the number of witnesses she
has called.
“There should have been at least 30, ballpark,” she estimated.
Both Gragg and Lloyd declined to comment about the details of the
case, saying they cannot make any statements until the entire trial is
completed.
Truth and consequence
If the jury decides Abrams was legally insane when he committed the
murders, he will avoid the death penalty and probably spend the rest of
his life in a mental institution.
If he is found sane, the trial will proceed to the penalty phase --
when jurors will decide if Abrams should be sentenced to death or life in
prison.
The Orange County district attorney’s office is pushing for the death
penalty, said Tori Richards, spokeswoman for the prosecutor’s office. The
district attorney decided about eight months ago to pursue capital
punishment against Abrams.
“It is the district attorney’s policy to seek the death penalty in
such instances of rampage killings that happen in public places,”
Richards said.
Prosecutors had also filed a special circumstances charge in January
alleging that Abrams was lying in wait before he committed the crime.
Abrams reportedly told police he had wanted to “execute” innocent
children in an effort to get revenge against a woman who had spurned his
advances.
If Abrams is found legally insane, he will be put in a mental
institution for an undetermined amount of time, Richards said. He would
remain there until a psychiatrist determines that “he is no longer a
threat to society.”
“At such a time, [the district attorney] could oppose that decision,
saying he’s still insane and go into a trial,” Richards said. “But if we
don’t, he will be set free.”
That is the scenario local police officials and friends of victims’
families say they dread.
Seeking justice
Dave Jenkins, a Costa Mesa resident and friend of the Sotos, said
Abrams must pay for the heinous crime.
“I’d see the justice system as an absolute failure if he ever gets
out,” he said. “I’m not in favor of the death penalty because it’s too
quick. A person who does something like this must spend his life in
prison and think every single day about what he’s done.”
Costa Mesa Police Chief David Snowden the “defense’s attempt to
rationalize Abrams’ behavior is disappointing.
“The accused do deserve their day in court,” he said. “He got that day
in court, and the jury found him guilty. Now it’s time for him to get
what he deserves for killing those children.”
Snowden recalled the horrible day when he sat next to little Sierra’s
body and later broke the news to her parents.
Happy birthday, Brandon
Brandon’s mother, Pamela Wiener, is trying in her own way to find some
closure. She said she will go to the courthouse today to follow jury
deliberations.
“I’ll definitely be there,” she said. “It’s very important to me.”
Both Wiener and Cindy Soto refused to comment about the trial until a
final verdict is made. Both have, however, been involved in Sierra’s
Light, a nonprofit foundation started by Soto to help make preschools and
day-care centers safer for children.
Two weekends ago, Wiener raised $5,700 through a bowl-a-thonfor the
foundation.
“We’re trying to focus on the positive,” Wiener said. “But it’s hard.
I can’t find the words to explain how [Brandon’s death] has affected our
family.”
Tuesday is Brandon’s birthday. It is the day the little boy would have
turned 5. But, Wiener said she will go to the courthouse instead of the
cemetery if the jury does not reach a verdict today.
“Hopefully,” she said, “I’ll go to the cemetery.”
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