Neighbors gathered Sunday night for a candlelight vigil to remember a 4-year-old boy allegedly killed by his mother at an apartment complex last week.
Taner Starks, who helped organize the vigil alongside residents of the Cedar Crossing Apartments, said the community needed closure after the tragedy.
“She was always out there with him for the past three years, just always pulling him in the wagon. They were always outside,” Starks said. “We can’t even try to understand it, but we can at least come together to try and heal.”
According to court documents, the boy’s father called 911 Thursday, saying the child’s mother was having a mental health crisis. A dispatcher reported “the female in the apartment may have slit her wrists and he saw his son and he is afraid she may have killed him.”
When police arrived at the 6600 block of Roosevelt Way Northeast around 4:15 p.m., they found the boy in a bathtub in several inches of bloody water, stabbed in the chest.
According to court documents, the mother told officers she “sacrificed” her son because he was doing “odd things” like “licking countertops and jumping around.” She said the boy was autistic.
The 45-year-old woman may face a charge of premeditated first-degree murder, which could carry a life sentence.
But Starks says this is about mental health, and missed warning signs. “Did we see the signs?” Starks asked. “She lost her job, her car broke down. She got her car fixed, and it was just so overwhelming.”
He said the mother was “constantly asking for help,” raising questions about whether mental health resources were truly available.
“Justice would be hospitalization and then maybe talk about whatever prosecution afterwards,” Starks said.
The woman has not yet been formally charged. She is being held in King County Jail on $5 million bail.
The mother’s statement that she “sacrificed” her son suggests severe mental illness possibly involving psychotic delusions, a critical factor in determining criminal responsibility and whether she understood the wrongfulness of her actions at the time of the killing.
The boy’s autism and behaviors his mother described, licking countertops and jumping, represent typical sensory-seeking behaviors common in autistic children, not dangerous or threatening conduct. The mother’s interpretation of these benign behaviors as requiring “sacrifice” indicates profound disconnect from reality.
The accumulation of stressors, job loss, vehicle breakdown, combined with the demands of caring for an autistic child without adequate support systems created conditions where mental health deterioration went unaddressed until it culminated in tragedy.
Neighbors’ awareness that the mother was “constantly asking for help” raises questions about gaps in mental health service delivery, where individuals in crisis seek assistance but cannot access timely intervention before reaching catastrophic breaking points.
The $5 million bail reflects both the severity of the alleged crime and concern about public safety, though psychiatric evaluation will likely determine whether the woman poses ongoing danger or requires hospitalization rather than incarceration.
First-degree murder charges require proving premeditation and intent, which becomes complicated when defendants exhibit clear signs of psychotic breaks or severe mental illness that may have impaired their capacity to form criminal intent.
The Roosevelt Way Northeast location places the incident in North Seattle’s University District area, a neighborhood with mix of residential apartments, students, and families where such violence shocks a community accustomed to relative safety.