Closing arguments begin in Abrams sanity phase
Deepa Bharath
SANTA ANA -- Facing the jury, Public Defender Denise Gragg insisted
that it was not drug use but mental illness that drove Steven Allen
Abrams to steer his car into a crowded playground in Costa Mesa.
In her closing argument of the trial’s sanity phase Wednesday, Gragg
attempted to convince jurors that the 39-year-old Santa Ana man was
legally insane -- and therefore ineligible for the death penalty -- when
he drove his Cadillac into the Southcoast Early Childhood Learning Center
on May 3, 1999. His actions killed two children and injured several
others.
On Aug. 24, the jury found Abrams guilty of two counts of murder and
several counts of attempted murder. If the jury finds him to be insane at
the time of the murders, he would avoid execution and probably spend the
rest of his life in a mental institution.
The prosecution, led by Deputy Dist. Atty. Deborah Lloyd, has
consistently argued that Abrams’ psychosis is drug-induced.
On Wednesday, Gragg argued that Abrams’ illness is partly genetic and
that his psychosis is deep-rooted. She pointed out that his aunt was
hospitalized for schizophrenia and that his brother is already exhibiting
symptoms of the illness.
She said there are no clinical tests that prove Abrams used
methamphetamines between 1994 and 1999.
“His past use of methamphetamines could have helped his preexisting
mental condition to surface,” she said, but argued that the drug was not
the lone cause of his condition.
While the public defender addressed the jurors, Abrams sat motionless
with his head lowered, as if he wasn’t even listening to Gragg’s
statements.
Gragg continued, noting that Abrams had talked about his delusions of
“brain wave people,” whom he believed intercepted and manipulated his
thoughts.
His life was “dysfunctional,” although he made it appear normal by
going to work and taking care of his daughter, she said.
“He was in pain,” she said. “He was tormented and consumed by his
delusion. And that affected his relationships. It affected every part of
his life.”
Gragg told the jury that what it boils down to is Abrams’ reasons for
committing his crimes.
She said he wanted to be left alone, so he drove into the playground
to make the “brain wave people” pay for tormenting him, so that he and
his family would not be bothered by “them” again.
“That’s what he wanted to accomplish when he drove into the
schoolyard,” said Gragg. “The motive was not simply anger or revenge.”
Closing arguments will continue today.
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