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"I am positively revolted when I read quotes that would imply any degree of understanding or hint at condoning the taking of my granddaughter's life," says Michael McCarron, 62, of Indianapolis. " ... I'm dealing with a very straight-forward murder case.

"This was not about autism. This was not about a lack of support."


Don't blame autism for the death of Katherine McCarron, says her paternal grandfather.

"I am positively revolted when I read quotes that would imply any degree of understanding or hint at condoning the taking of my granddaughter's life," says Michael McCarron, 62, of Indianapolis. " ... I'm dealing with a very straight-forward murder case.

"This was not about autism. This was not about a lack of support."

On May 13, the 3-year-old Morton girl was suffocated with a plastic bag, allegedly at the hands of her mother, Dr. Karen McCarron, 37. The mother has been under suicide watch at the Tazewell County Jail, where she is being held under $2 million bond and faces two counts of first-degree murder.

Michael McCarron called me this week after having read numerous stories about the case, some of which he says point the finger of guilt in the wrong direction. For instance, though polite, he ridiculed the notion of his daughter-in-law's friends who have portrayed her as distraught over a lack of autism treatment in the Peoria area.

"Katie wasn't in central Illinois (until May)," he calmly says. " .... So what programs central Illinois has or doesn't have ... has not one ounce of applicability to (the death of ) Katherine McCarron."

After Katherine was diagnosed with autism almost two years ago, parents Karen and Paul McCarron searched for the best treatment possible. They found two autism-centric schools in Raleigh, N.C.

Karen McCarron could not easily leave her pathologist's job in Peoria. So she remained in the couple's home in Morton and took care of their daughter Emily, now 2. Helping with child care was Karen McCarron's mother, Erna Frank of Morton.

Paul McCarron, an engineer with Caterpillar Inc., transferred to a company outpost in North Carolina. He rented an apartment outside Raleigh, where he resided with Katherine and her paternal grandmother, Gail McCarron of Indianapolis - Michael McCarron's wife of 38 years.

To move to Raleigh, Gail McCarron had to quit her longtime job as a legal secretary in Indianapolis, her husband says.

"It was a sacrifice," he admits. " ... (But) this was not a chore."

He says the elder McCarrons were glad to help Katherine during her 20 months in North Carolina.

"This was our first granddaughter," says Michael McCarron, who'd already had grandsons. "Autism or not, you don't get any more special than that."

The effects of autism range from slight to severe. Its many manifestations most commonly include difficulty in communication, diminished social interaction and resistance to change.

For Katherine, communication was the biggest problem, Michael McCarron says. She could babble words and phrases - such as "I love you" when he held her - but did not have the verbal skills of a typical girl her age.

"An autistic child is a handful," Michael McCarron says. "They are very difficult to train."

Katherine also had difficulty concentrating. And she often would refuse to go to bed at night, preferring instead to stay up late playing with her toys, often her plastic farm animals.

However, unlike many autistic children, she did not frequently act up, he says. She usually followed a daily routine aimed at improving her communication.

In the morning, her grandmother would feed and dress her. By 9 a.m., she'd get Katherine to school, where the girl worked on communication and cognitive skills. At noon, her grandmother would pick up the girl and return home for lunch, maybe even a nap.

Later, the grandmother would drive the girl to another school for further autism treatment. In mid-afternoon, the grandmother would bring her home, where Katherine would work with a tutor.

At 5 p.m., her father would get home from his job.

"That was big party time," Michael McCarron says.

After the trio would eat dinner, father and daughter often would go for a walk. Back at home, they'd play word games intended to help Katherine's development.

Karen McCarron sometimes would fly to North Carolina to visit her husband and daughter. When finances allowed it, Michael McCarron - the manager of an insurance company - would fly down.

He says Katherine loved nothing more than to be outside, so they'd often head to a nearby park.

"I had wonderful times," he says. "She loved the swing and the motion and the wind. I held my hand (out) and she'd come to it, and she would shriek with delight."

Michael McCarron says the scholastic regimen had Katherine progressing. However, this year Karen and Paul McCarron decided they no longer wanted the family to live apart.

"Twenty months apart, that's a long time," Michael McCarron says.

The couple decided that Katherine and her father would move back to Morton in May.

During the move, Paul and Katherine McCarron stopped with their moving van in Indianapolis to drop off his mother and visit overnight with Michael McCarron.

"She lined up her little dolls and talked to each one of them," Michael McCarron says.

That was two weeks ago. That was the last time he saw Katherine.

Michael McCarron declines to talk about why his daughter-in-law might have killed Katherine.

"I promised the police I wouldn't," he says. " ... That'll come out in court."

However, he says no one in the family saw any warning signs from Karen McCarron.

"There was no foretelling," he says in a gasping rush. "Oh my gosh, I wish there was."

He believes in the need for improved services nationwide to treat autism. But he adamantly refutes the rationalizing of Katherine's death as a result of a lack of autism services.

"When people say, 'I can understand that,' I just want to cover my head," he says. "We're not dealing with desperation here. We're not dealing with 'we have to end this child's pain.'

"Having held that little girl in my arms and have her laugh with me or have her clutch me when I gave her raspberries, I can't understand that."
Over at [livejournal.com profile] autismhub they're having a day of memorial blogging for her. Thank you, Moggy, for posting a list of links. And thanks and double thanks to Wakasplat, for posting the links to begin with.

Date: 2006-05-25 03:01 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lakidaa.livejournal.com
The effects of autism range from slight to severe. Its many manifestations most commonly include difficulty in communication, diminished social interaction and resistance to change.

I like how they actually didn't use the terms 'devastating' or similar. And it's a pretty good little blurb thing.


"An autistic child is a handful," Michael McCarron says. "They are very difficult to train."


Creeeepy.

And she often would refuse to go to bed at night, preferring instead to stay up late playing with her toys, often her plastic farm animals.

...EVERY kid does this. No, really.

Aand I'm done with that.

Date: 2006-05-25 03:28 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lakidaa.livejournal.com
It shouldn't be, certainly, but it's how it's portrayed in the media.

I've read it up, but I'd have to re-read up on it to give you a better opinion than 'I think it has its usage, but it has the big potential of being abused'.

It's more the way he phrased it. Most people say 'difficult to teach'. They don't use train. It makes it stand out.

Date: 2006-05-25 03:40 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lakidaa.livejournal.com
That makes sense.

Thanks. :D

Date: 2006-05-25 03:32 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rarkrarkrark.livejournal.com
"Child Training" is a term used by some conservative Christians for those things that you mention for all children. I don't know if Mr McCarron is coming from that background or not, though.

(I find that creepy too, though)

Date: 2006-05-25 06:15 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] manycolored.livejournal.com
A lot of early childhood teaching is fairly straightforward training. "We don't put strange things in our mouths" and "We wash our hands after we use the potty" and "We use our indoor voices here" are fairly common ones. You get trained in manners and basic survival skills - they're not really something you think about, or else you'll need them long before you'll have the cognitive structures in place to think about them - you just do them by rote. So I HOPE that's what he meant.

Date: 2006-05-25 03:09 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] moggymania.livejournal.com
To be fair, credit belongs to [livejournal.com profile] wakasplat -- when I couldn't find the links at AutismHub, she told me I could use the links at the bottom of her post in Ballastexistenz. :)

Date: 2006-05-25 04:14 am (UTC)
l33tminion: (Default)
From: [personal profile] l33tminion
"I am positively revolted when I read quotes that would imply any degree of understanding or hint at condoning the taking of my granddaughter's life," says Michael McCarron, 62, of Indianapolis. " ... I'm dealing with a very straight-forward murder case.

"This was not about autism. This was not about a lack of support."

...

"When people say, 'I can understand that,' I just want to cover my head," he says. "We're not dealing with desperation here. We're not dealing with 'we have to end this child's pain.'


I'm really glad this made it into the papers.

Date: 2006-05-26 05:05 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] possibilities.livejournal.com
Thanks for posting that. It was very good to read that the girl had at least one person in her life who *got it*.

Date: 2006-05-25 03:01 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lakidaa.livejournal.com
The effects of autism range from slight to severe. Its many manifestations most commonly include difficulty in communication, diminished social interaction and resistance to change.

I like how they actually didn't use the terms 'devastating' or similar. And it's a pretty good little blurb thing.


"An autistic child is a handful," Michael McCarron says. "They are very difficult to train."


Creeeepy.

And she often would refuse to go to bed at night, preferring instead to stay up late playing with her toys, often her plastic farm animals.

...EVERY kid does this. No, really.

Aand I'm done with that.

Date: 2006-05-25 03:28 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lakidaa.livejournal.com
It shouldn't be, certainly, but it's how it's portrayed in the media.

I've read it up, but I'd have to re-read up on it to give you a better opinion than 'I think it has its usage, but it has the big potential of being abused'.

It's more the way he phrased it. Most people say 'difficult to teach'. They don't use train. It makes it stand out.

Date: 2006-05-25 03:40 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lakidaa.livejournal.com
That makes sense.

Thanks. :D

Date: 2006-05-25 03:32 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rarkrarkrark.livejournal.com
"Child Training" is a term used by some conservative Christians for those things that you mention for all children. I don't know if Mr McCarron is coming from that background or not, though.

(I find that creepy too, though)

Date: 2006-05-25 06:15 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] manycolored.livejournal.com
A lot of early childhood teaching is fairly straightforward training. "We don't put strange things in our mouths" and "We wash our hands after we use the potty" and "We use our indoor voices here" are fairly common ones. You get trained in manners and basic survival skills - they're not really something you think about, or else you'll need them long before you'll have the cognitive structures in place to think about them - you just do them by rote. So I HOPE that's what he meant.

Date: 2006-05-25 03:09 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] moggymania.livejournal.com
To be fair, credit belongs to [livejournal.com profile] wakasplat -- when I couldn't find the links at AutismHub, she told me I could use the links at the bottom of her post in Ballastexistenz. :)

Date: 2006-05-25 04:14 am (UTC)
l33tminion: (Hope)
From: [personal profile] l33tminion
"I am positively revolted when I read quotes that would imply any degree of understanding or hint at condoning the taking of my granddaughter's life," says Michael McCarron, 62, of Indianapolis. " ... I'm dealing with a very straight-forward murder case.

"This was not about autism. This was not about a lack of support."

...

"When people say, 'I can understand that,' I just want to cover my head," he says. "We're not dealing with desperation here. We're not dealing with 'we have to end this child's pain.'


I'm really glad this made it into the papers.

Date: 2006-05-26 05:05 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] possibilities.livejournal.com
Thanks for posting that. It was very good to read that the girl had at least one person in her life who *got it*.

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