I Know My First Name Is Steven (34 page)

BOOK: I Know My First Name Is Steven
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But later that same year personal problems related to Steven's kidnapping and tumultuous return home finally took their toll on Del and Kay's marriage, and they separated. Two years later, however, these loving parents who had shared so much suffering reconciled and moved together to Atwater. Del still does maintenance for a local cannery, and in 1987 he finally saw his Stevie get baptized into the Mormon faith.

Cindy and her husband, Rick, live in Modesto, where she works in a bank and he is a maintenance mechanic for another cannery where Del once worked. They, too, have a young son.

Cary, still single, works as a glazier in Merced.

Jody Stayner, Steven's sister, married a cabinetmaker, Grant, and in June 1986 she had their first child, a boy.

In early 1989, Lorimar-Telepictures produced the miniseries "I Know My First Name Is Steven." At the time Steven was working for the Pizza Hut in Merced, but he was given a leave of absence and served as an adviser for the filming and appeared in the production as one of the policemen who reunited Corky Nemec—the actor who portrayed the teenaged Steven—with his on-screen parents. NBC Television premiered the miniseries to critical acclaim in May of that same year. In August of 1990 it was retelecast by NBC, and by 1991 it had been shown in over three dozen foreign countries, including Australia, Brazil,
Britain, Germany, France, Italy, and Yugoslavia . . . a new record for a miniseries.

Although it meant his return to the public eye, the miniseries gave Steven the opportunity to make a number of talk-show appearances on behalf of his cause: missing and sexually abused children. Also, as Steven told the author, he felt a great sense of relief once the miniseries was televised " . . . 'cause people now know what really happened to me." With the miniseries hoopla over, Steven returned to the Merced Pizza Hut as its new assistant manager.

The afternoon of Saturday, September 16, 1989, Steve ended his shift at the Pizza Hut but hung around with a friend in the back to smoke a couple of marijuana cigarettes. Shortly before 5
P.M.
Steve mounted his new Kawasaki motorcycle for the fifteen-minute ride to his home in Atwater. As he rode north along rain-slick Santa Fe Drive directly in front of Richwood Meats—the meat packing plant where he had worked in 1984—migrant worker Antonio Loera, driving a friend's car with which he was not familiar, pulled in front of Steve and stalled.

A car traveling alongside Steve was able to stop and avoid Loera's car, but Steve kept going, crashed into the driver's door, and was thrown forty-five feet from his motorcycle. He was rushed to Merced County Medical Center, where at 5:35 p.m. he was pronounced dead of massive head injuries. The helmet he normally wore had been stolen three days earlier.

Perhaps equally sad is the fact that Steven's last years continued to be filled with reckless driving. At the time
he was killed he had no driver's license. It had been suspended for the third time in his young life due to his having yet again racked up a number of traffic tickets.

But Steven will be remembered as a very loving, affectionate father to his young, now-orphaned son, Stevie, and daughter, Ashley. A large heart-shaped wreath on his casket read simply "Daddy."

Five hundred people attended Steven's funeral service at the Church of Latter Day Saints' (Mormon) Merced Stake Center on September 20, 1989. The author was there, as were Harold Kulbeth, Jerry Price, Pat Hallford, and scores of radio, newspaper, and TV reporters. And two of the pallbearers were Dennis's old friends from Mendocino County, Damon Carroll, and tall, slender, fourteen-year-old Timmy White.

After the eulogy, Steven's sister Jody delivered an emotional good-bye to her brother, remarking that he had "brought our broken-hearted family back together again" before adding "even though he has passed into another life, we're so very grateful that he went as Steven Gregory Stayner, our brother."

Then she tearfully concluded, "We will always remember you and will never forget you; but remember, this is not good-bye, this is until we meet again."

Kenneth Eugene Parnell was paroled from Soledad Correctional Training Facility at dawn, Friday, April 5, 1985, an early release due to his light sentence and his excellent behavior while in prison. Because there had been numerous death threats, two parole officers
surreptitiously drove him to a boardinghouse in a residential section of Berkeley.

Much to his consternation, Parnell's parole was extended to two years rather than the usual one. His parole officer checked on him "five or six times a week, including Saturdays and Sundays," he could not leave Alameda County; he had to attend regular counseling sessions; and he could not be in the company of children.

On April 5, 1987, Kenneth Eugene Parnell completed his strictly supervised parole and became a free man: he is free to drop out of sight, to travel wherever and whenever he pleases, to live however he wants, and to associate with anyone he chooses . . . even young boys.

Author's Epilogue

Pedophilia—the sexual attraction of a man or a woman to a child—has existed since the beginning of recorded history as a dark blotch in the fabric of adult-child relationships. In fact, of all the criminal acts perpetrated by adults on children, sexual assault of children is by far the least known, least discussed, and least understood. Sadly, though, in a few gut-wrenching cases, these assorted crimes against children have coalesced into sickening, gruesome outrages by Art Bishop (Utah), Ted Bundy (Utah, Colorado, Florida), Arthur C. Goode (Florida, Maryland, Virginia), John Wayne Gacy (Illinois), John Joubert (Nebraska), and others of their ilk whose nauseating crimes are covered year in and year out in our newspapers and magazines and on our televisions and radios.

At the F.B.I. Academy in Quantico, Virginia, Behavioral Unit Agent Kenneth Lanning observed that most pedophiles are gentle and nonviolent with children. The glaring exceptions are those cases which catch our attention, such as the 1980 abduction and brutal murder of John and Revé Walsh's six-year-old son, Adam, apparently committed by homosexual serial
murderer Ottis Toole, who first admitted and then recanted his guilt for the atrocity.

After his son's death, Walsh left his lucrative hotel-management career in south Florida and goaded and badgered the U.S. Congress into founding and funding the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children in Washington, D.C. At Colorado State University, in an address to a conference of law-enforcement officers, social workers, and other professionals who work with missing and sexually exploited children, Walsh movingly told of the disappearance of his son from a Sears store where Adam had gone with his mother; the ensuing futile search for his son, which cost him many thousands of dollars; and his shocking realization that looking for a missing child in the U.S. is not top priority for law enforcement agencies. Walsh also bared his soul as he recounted his and his wife's gut-wrenching horror when a Florida detective called to tell them that Adam's head had been found floating in a canal 120 miles from his home. (The rest of the Walsh's six-year-old son's body never was found.)

Of that day Walsh said: "That was the day I found out in the worst way that there is a lot we don't know about missing children. It has often been called a national tragedy. I say it is a national disgrace. A country with the resources that we have, and what we haven't done for our children is a disgrace. The figures are staggering. Everyone says it is an epidemic. We say it is the tip of the iceberg. We are just starting to see it. It is nothing new. It has always been there. It is something we haven't wanted to deal with . . . something we have wanted to bury our heads in the sand about, and say it only happens to the other guy.

"I think we disadvantage our children by teaching them to respect authority figures. In many cases those authority figures are the people who hurt kids because, in cases of sexual assault, the estimates are that seventy percent of the people that molest children are people that they know and many times [they] are a figure of trust and authority."

He went on to recount a conversation about missing children which he'd had with the Broward County (Florida) Coroner. Walsh said: "He was a doctor and a lawyer and an expert with this type of thing. He said, 'Right now on the morgue tables we have a dozen unclaimed bodies. Four of them are adolescent girls, and, in fact, one of them is only nine years old. The rest of them are between eleven and fifteen. A couple of those girls I have had for six months. I don't want to bury them. I know somebody is looking for them.'

"He said there is no system to exchange information in cases like this. He said we guesstimate that coroners and pathologists have maybe between four and five thousand unidentified dead to bury every year in this country. In any given year, hundreds and hundreds of these are children."

Walsh's fervor rose as he continued: "Lots of people don't love children as much as I do. They use them. They abuse them. They molest them. They use them in child pornography. They use them in child prostitution. They murder them and leave them in fields and streams and in canals
all over
this country.

"I testified before Congress—I don't know how many times; I lost track. But a man begins to choke when he realizes the scope of the problem. The first few times I was asked to testify, I was asked the same
question: What are the statistics? I went to Cornell University's law library and sat there day and night, researching microfilms, trying to garner the national statistics on missing children. I researched the F.B.I. uniform crime reports.
They
keep records of crimes against Americans, I thought. But, in categories for crimes against children, well, there just weren't any there. For instance, in homicides of children, they were lumped into homicides of adults."

After his address, I interviewed Walsh at length about his work and asked his advice to parents about protecting their children. From his extensive experience, he said, "I urge people to take videos of their children, because when the media comes that night [when a child is missing] and says, 'we will put it on TV,' the parents can choose to do that. And that can help to find their missing child. [But] a second aspect of that is, imagine the nightmare of spending the rest of your life searching for your child and never having known that his body is buried in another state. Not because he wasn't entered into the National Crime Information System—that should be done—but because you didn't have the identifiers. . . . Parents can put their children's fingerprints, dental charts, recent pictures, videos, everything in a safe deposit box. But if they have a misconception that this makes their child safe, it is a ludicrous misconception, because this is just a matter of prevention, awareness, and attention."

Concerning adults who work with children, Walsh's ire rose as he remarked: "It is a nightmare that we don't do background checks on these individuals. Big Brothers and Big Sisters say damn well they should
check the backgrounds of their volunteers, even if they might lose some volunteers."

A major concern of Walsh's is the handling of abused children by social service departments, principally their return to abusive parents. "We have tens of thousands of children that were returned by a social service worker that was underpaid, underskilled, undertrained. A family court judge said, 'Let's keep the family intact.' I personally believe those children are a lot better off alive in the foster care system than dead of a broken neck or broken back within their own home. It is as simple as that.

"We have got to get over the old adage that we have to keep the family intact. There is no qualification to become a parent. You couldn't teach school without some kind of degree; you couldn't practice law; you couldn't repair a Mercedes without some type of schooling. I believe in parents' rights to a certain extent, but when you are given the greatest gift of all—the birth of a child—you can turn that child into a Henry Lee Lucas [the partner of his son's murderer, Ottis Toole] mobile murderer, or into a Nobel Peace Prize winner.

"Let's get over that assumption that everybody is a good parent. . . that old assumption by the court system and social services. We have tens of thousands of children in graves that were returned to their parents by social services, or not removed from their homes, because their parents weren't good parents. Who is responsible for those kids? Society!
We
are
all
responsible for all the children, whether they are our own naturally or not. Children are God's special little peo
ple. They need special protection. They certainly can't physically take care of themselves. . . . "

Concerning the criminal justice system's handling of those who murder children, Walsh observed: "If life imprisonment
was
life imprisonment in the United States, then we wouldn't have so many murderers that get out of prison and continue to murder children. The penalties for the murder of children or crimes against children should be stiffened. The death penalty is only applicable in the most heinous of situations. [But] when an individual is sentenced to death, he has gone through the finest criminal justice system in the known history of the world. He has had the benefit of that, and he should be held responsible for his crime."

Also in attendance at the Colorado State University conference was Jay Howell, the first Executive Director of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, and one of his greatest concerns is the use of the word "stranger" when cautioning children.

" 'Stranger,' " he said, "is a word we do
not
advise using with children. Children will tell you that if they see somebody on the way to school everyday—even people who introduce themselves to the child by name—then they are not strangers. They don't understand 'stranger' because it suggests somebody who is weird-looking. The other half of the problem with using that word is that sixty to ninety percent of the people who commit crimes against children are known in some way to the child. You have told the kid to look out for the wrong person! Children just aren't getting the right messages. We would like for them to
get better messages that they can understand . . . messages like, No one should be picking you up, Nobody should be making secrets, Nobody should be taking pictures in the bathing suit areas . . . those kinds of things." And Howell stressed the inherent danger of parents allowing children to wear T-shirts with their names emblazoned on them.

BOOK: I Know My First Name Is Steven
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