Advertisement

Mother in Fatal Crash Guilty on Lesser Count

Share
TIMES STAFF WRITER

In a trial that played out emotional themes of motherhood, tragedy, grief and responsibility, a jury found a woman guilty of misdemeanor vehicular manslaughter Friday in the death of her infant son, but acquitted her of more serious charges.

Lesia Smith-Pappas wiped tears as a jury of six men and six women found her negligent for speeding and failing to properly secure her infant son, Alexander, with a seat belt. She faces a maximum sentence of one year in jail, not the 12 years in prison that prosecutors had sought.

The baby, just 3 months and 8 days old, was crushed and died in his car seat when Smith-Pappas rolled the family van while rushing her two other children to school last Aug. 29.

Advertisement

Afterward, as she thanked jurors and shook their hands, Smith-Pappas said of her difficult three-week trial, “I don’t think I should have been here at all in the first place. Kids will be kids.”

Jurors, who deliberated nearly three days, said they were initially divided along gender lines.

“Part of it was a guy thing, gal thing at first,” said jury forewoman Carol Stevenson, as several female jurors clustered around Smith-Pappas and her lawyer on the courthouse steps. “There were certain aspects of this that, being a mother, it was easier to understand.”

Stevenson criticized prosecutors for bringing Smith-Pappas’ two oldest children--Christina, 10, and Nicholas, 8--to court to testify against their mother. Each was injured in the same wreck that took the life of their infant brother.

“I found that hard to take, when your children were on the stand,” Stevenson told Smith-Pappas, adding: “I didn’t think it was appropriate.”

The men and women jurors sat on opposite ends of the jury room as deliberations began, Stevenson said. But as they talked, they reached consensus.

Advertisement

While Smith-Pappas seemed a sympathetic figure in court, “We didn’t just go in there and feel sorry for her,” juror Ed Kitching said. “We went with the law.”

After reading over the complicated jury instructions “20 to 30 times,” Kitching said, jurors agreed they could not find that Smith-Pappas’ negligence was so extreme that she displayed a callous disregard for human life. That element was crucial for the conviction prosecutors sought for the more serious crime of gross vehicular manslaughter.

Jurors also acquitted Smith-Pappas of child endangerment and reckless driving, but convicted her for driving without a license.

The 33-year-old mother of four will be sentenced by San Fernando Superior Court Judge Shari K. Silver on Sept. 12.

The day before, on Sept. 11, a judge in Juvenile Dependency Court is scheduled to decide whether the children will permanently remain with their mother. They were placed in foster homes a week after the accident, and returned home July 2, a month before the trial began.

During the trial, Deputy Dist. Atty. Robert Foltz Jr. contended that Smith-Pappas was criminally negligent for failing to secure her children with seat belts, despite two prior citations for failing to buckle them in. He also alleged she was driving at about 70 mph along Bouquet Canyon Road when she crossed the center line, struck another car and sailed over a 15-foot oleander bush.

Advertisement

He said while he disagreed with the verdict, he understood how jurors had reached it. “The jury did what it could with the difficult instructions they had,” he said. “Certainly you hope parents recognize the seriousness of carting children around without seat belts.”

Wearing a pin with a photograph of Alexander, the infant son killed in the crash, over her heart, Smith-Pappas testified tearfully that she had indeed buckled in her children. She said she became distracted and lost control of the van when her son and daughter unbuckled the seat belt they shared in the front passenger seat because it was too tight.

She also suggested the baby’s lungs may have been crushed by a passerby who improperly performed CPR, or by mistakes made by paramedics and hospital emergency room doctors.

While Foltz continues to view Smith-Pappas as a remorseless woman who blames others for her child’s death, defense attorney Dale Galipo pointed out that she still visits her son’s grave every week and wept on the witness stand during her testimony.

“Any mother is naturally going to feel guilty and always think about what more she could have done, how maybe things could have been different,” Galipo said.

Advertisement