By Sean Cruz
Portland, Oregon—
I  awoke that April morning with a terrible feeling, with a sense that  something dreadful was taking place. I was worried about Aaron, who was  living in his mother’s empty house in Payson,  Utah. He hadn’t answered  his cell phone in several days, which happened from time to time and  always caused me worry, and I considered calling the Payson police  department to ask them to do a welfare check on my son.
There  was an unknown element of risk to Aaron in getting the Payson PD  involved, however, as I had little confidence that they could check on a  person in crisis and not make matters worse, one way or another. There  was much history where they had gotten things wrong in the past, this  small-town Mormon police department on the edge of the desert, a story  for another day.
I decided to try to get help from the  Veterans Administration instead of the police, and when I arrived at my  desk in the Oregon Senate that morning, I called Jim Willis, Director of  Oregon’s Department of Veteran Affairs and told him about my worries.  Jim assured me that they could help, that they could contact the Utah  VA, that the VA does welfare checks on veterans in all sorts of crisis  circumstances and that they do so frequently. 
I was  far more comfortable with the notion that my son would get a surprise  visit from soldiers than from armed Mormon police officers, the same  ones who had targeted Aaron for arrest in the past, more stories for  another day. Payson is a small town with an infamous, lurid history,  scene of non-Mormon settlers massacred by Mormons, polygamous horror  stories, child brides marrying middle-aged Mormon men in the shadow of a  powerful church. 
Aaron did not fit in here, nor did  his circle of friends, all rebels against the Mormon order, rebels  without plan or leadership and bereft of resources, the local throwaway  kids, every single one, some dying young from suicide and/or drug  overdose, all sharing the same bleak shrunken vision of their own  potential.
The local police were notoriously hostile to these kids.
Like  any other parent, I was in the habit of worrying about my children  whenever they were out of my sight, which in this ninth year since their  1996 abduction meant that worry was my constant companion, present in  every breath of air, in every pulse through my heart, but today the  worry was very strong and it was difficult to concentrate on my work. We  were deep into the 2005 legislative session, but my mind was in Utah.
My  fears were confirmed the following morning, when I received a call from  the Payson Police Department. A friend of Aaron’s had grown worried  about him and broke into the house, where he found my son lying  unconscious on the floor. 
This officer speaking to me  had answered the 911 call, had found Aaron comatose in his mother’s  house and as we spoke my son was in an ambulance on its way to the  emergency room.
The officer told me that Aaron was  unresponsive. I understood what that meant. He said that Aaron had  apparently been there alone for three days, had not answered the door or  his phone, and one of his friends had broken in and called the police.
He told me that they were unable to locate my son’s mother, so they were calling me. He gave me the hospital’s phone number.
The  first time I called the ER, Aaron was in the elevator on his way up to  that floor, the nurse said, to ICU, and she asked me to call back in 15  minutes.
When we spoke again, Aaron was in ICU, hooked up to the machines, but remained unresponsive. She gave me no cause for optimism.
I  was on a flight to Salt Lake City early the following morning, paid for  with money I had to borrow from friends. I had spent out all of my  savings, leveraged all of my resources keeping Aaron alive over the past  two years, and was now down to living from paycheck to paycheck.
I  spoke into my son’s ear when I arrived at his bedside in the intensive  care unit, “Aaron, it’s your Dad. Your daddy’s here, son,” I told him  again and again. I don’t know if there was enough life left in him to  hear me, but I know that hearing is the last sense to go, and I spoke  into his ear. “I’m here, son, your Dad’s here, I will not leave you….”
I  stayed with him for the next five days, sleeping either in a chair in  his room or on a couch down the hall. I didn’t check into a motel until  after they pronounced my beautiful son dead. Although he was on life  support and technically alive in ICU, his fingers were stiff and his  flesh hard, and I held no illusions about how this nightmare would turn  out.
Hospital personnel met with Aaron’s mother and I  on April 25. Aaron’s heart was strong, but there was no brain activity  and no hope, and we agreed to end life support. Aaron was an organ  donor, so they would need him for a couple of more days while they  figured out what parts they could use to give life to someone else.
I clipped a lock of hair from the back of his head then and said goodbye to my son. 
I left the hospital to see the place where my son had died. 
The  house was on a residential street near the center of town. No one was  there. I saw where the door had been broken, and I walked inside.
The  house was smaller than I had expected, with just two bedrooms on the  main floor. A third room in the basement had apparently been used as a  bedroom by my sons, but it was not up to code, with no fire egress. The  walls and ceiling down there were painted black. It would have been a  horrible place to live as a child, as a teenager. It was like a dungeon,  this place where my children had been forced to live. The toilet in the  basement bathroom had turned completely black. I’ve never seen anything  like it. It must have taken months to get like that.
The  only furniture was a bed and a couch, just stuff his mother had  abandoned when she eloped with her fifth husband and moved out to El  Dorado Hills, California, leaving Aaron behind. Years later, I would  learn that Ben and Gina Foulk own and operate a string of senior care  homes there.
There wasn’t much food in the house, and  little to suggest that it had been a home recently. Cardboard boxes were  stacked here and there, car parts and tools, clothes.
Wherever  Aaron’s body had been lying when he was found had been cleaned up.  There were no prescription bottles anywhere. Aaron would have had dozens  of empty RX bottles. He never threw them out. He was a chain smoker.  All traces of smoking were gone, too. No alcohol present. I was sure  that Aaron had run out of his anti-seizure meds, but his mother had  gotten there ahead of me and tweaked the scene.
I found a note in there, however, two pages long, written in Aaron’s hand on a yellow pad, and it read:
“In my hour of need, NO your not there
and though I reached out for you
you wouldn’t lend a hand.
“Through my darkest hour, grace did not shine on me
it feels so cold, so very cold, No one cares for me!
“did you ever think that I get lonely, did you ever think that I needed love,
did you ever think to stop thinking you’re the only one that I’m thinking of.
You’ll never know how hard I tried to find a space to satisfy you too.
“Things will be better when I’m dead and gone.
“Don’t try to understand, knowing you, I’m probably wrong.
“But oh how I’ve lived my life for you, still you turned away.
Now as I die for you, my flesh still crawls as I breathe your name.
“All this time I thought I was wrong, now I know it was you.
Raise your head, raise your face, your eyes tell me who you think you are.
“I walk, I walk Alone into the promised land, there’s a better place for me,
but its far far away.
“Everlasting life for me in a perfect world, But I Gotta Die first!
So please God send me on my way!
Time has a way of taking time. Loneliness is not only felt by fools.
“Alone I call to ease the pain of yearning to be held by you.
Alone so Alone I’m lost consumed by the pain!
I begged, I begged won’t you hold me again? You just laughed
My whole life was work built on the past, the time has come when all things shall pass
This good thing passed away….
“Don’t remember where I was when I realized life was a game.
The more seriously I took things the harder the rules became.
I had no idea what it’d cost, my life past before my eyes.
I found out how little I accomplished all my plans denied.
So as you read this know my friends, I’d love to stay with you all
Please smile when you think of me, my body’s gone that’s all
If my heart were still alive, I know it would surely break.
And my memories left with you there’s nothing more to say.
Moving on is a simple thing, what it leaves behind is hard
You know the Dead feel no more pain,
And the living all are SCARRED!”
On a third page, Aaron wrote:
“I heard somebody fix today, there was no last goodbyes to say
His will to live ran out, I heard somebody turn to dust
Looking back at what I left, a list of plans and photographs
Songs that will never be sung these are the things I won’t get done
Just one shot to say goodbye, one last taste to mourn and cry
Scores and shoots
The lights go dim, just one shot to do him in.
He hangs his head and wonders why, why the monkey only lies
But pay the pauper, he did choose
He hung his head inside the noose
“Ive seen the man use the needle, seen the needle use the man
I’ve seen them crawl from the cradle to the coffin on their hands
They fight a war but its fatal, It’s so hard to understand
I’ve seen myself use the needle, seen the needle in my hand”
Aaron’s  notes were undated and unaddressed. With all of the changes to the  scene, it would have been impossible to tell whether he had committed  suicide, suffered some kind of overdose, or died from complications  related to his seizure disorder, or through some other chain of events.  The toxicology report had indicated no illegal substances were in his  system, but he had lain there alone comatose in his mother’s house for  three days, time for some metabolization to take place.
Two  days after the end of life support, Aaron’s mother told her story about  the last time she had seen him alive, about how he was sick and  feverish and she had left him alone with a sack of groceries in that  deplorable, ugly house, with some Heavenly Father stories to keep him  company. The following week, at his grave site, she spoke about how she  didn’t think Aaron would live long enough to move to Hawaii, but  reassured the gathering that she had made him aware that Heavenly Father  loved him, and I am still reeling from these disclosures.
The  medical examiner would be unable to determine a cause of death. His  mother wanted no further inquiry, and she and her new deep-pocketed  husband Ben Foulk hired a law firm to prevent my access to Aaron’s  medical records. 
Reading my son’s last writing is  heartbreaking, and five and a half years have gone by since his death,  time when I could not bring myself to write a word about this part of  the story of my son’s last days.
Aaron and I were very  much alike. These notes show that he had a talent for writing and a  willingness to write about very personal issues, about pain itself, that  he was unafraid to reveal himself in a world where many people live in  closets. 
His reference to scarring could have meant  the physical scars on his arms, the self-inflicted knife wounds that he  had carved into himself not long after he had been taken into  concealment in Utah, but could also have referred to the emotional scars  that he and his entire circle of friends shared, living their lives of  rejection in that isolated Mormon enclave, or both. He could have become  a writer.
Although his note was addressed to no one in  particular, there are a lot of people who put Aaron in this place and  kept him there. A well-understood principle of the consequences of a  criminal act is that a person who commits that act is responsible for  every harm subsequent to the original crime, which was the abduction of  my four children and their forced immersion into Mormonism in Utah.
For  that reason, I will name each of those persons known to have  participated in the abduction, a continuing crime with permanent  consequences. These names are all permanently attached to the cause of  Aaron’s death:
Mormons with no relationship to my  children by either blood or marriage: Chris and Kory Wright, Bishop  David Holliday, Bishop Donald Taylor, and Relief Society President  Evelyn Taylor.
Micheletti family members and relations:  Gina and Ben Foulk, Tony and Connie Micheletti and Cindy Anderson, and  former step dad #2 Steve Nielson, the man who slapped my children around  in Payson, Utah.
Those that consider committing the  crime of child abduction need to understand that the consequences of  “taking, enticing, keeping or concealing” a child are permanent. If you  join in the plan, you are responsible for all that follows, until the  end of time.
If you plan to take a child from Oregon, Aaron’s Law is waiting for you now….
To be continued….
Thursday, December 2, 2010
The last days of Aaron Cruz, pt 4: A terrible feeling...a note to mom....
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