Sunday, December 19
A baby worthy of your thoughts
 
By Ray Ratto
Special to ESPN.com

 Amidst the cybernightmare of Xmas shopping, the logistical nightmare of Xmas travel and the emotional nightmare of spending Xmas with your relatives, perhaps you can spare a thought between courses of bird and bowl games for Chancellor Lee Adams.

He is the boy born to Cherica Adams and, we presume, Rae Carruth, who has been dealt a particularly terrible hand even before he was supposed to be born. His mother is dead, shot and killed by someone, and his father will be accused of and tried for the crime. Chancellor is famous before his time, and for the worst possible reason.

  There are harder ways to begin one's life, but it is hard to envision them.

Who better to receive a good thought this holiday season? Or for that matter, any season?

By now, you're all caught up on the horrific saga surrounding his birth, caused as it was by the shots that killed his mother. You know how Carruth has been arraigned and charged first with having arranged the shooting and then with having been part of a group that actually performed the deed itself. And now you know that he was caught in Tennessee, hiding in the car trunk of another woman, presumably to avoid capture.

And there is a part of you wondering if, only five years after the ghastliness of the O.J. Simpson murder and civil trials, we are heading for a smaller-scale version of the same.

True, Carruth is not of Simpson's football or celebrity class, nor was Adams a Los Angeles social figure. Even the bizarre chase that resulted in his capture was done without the help of the Los Angeles media air force.

But at some point Carruth will be brought to trial for what most people will agree was a particularly horrible act, the murder of a pregnant woman. In all likelihood, that trial will be televised, and analyzed ad nauseam by Court TV and whatever Charlotte-area and national media outlets can find their way there.

And that is when Chancellor Adams' own nightmare begins.

So far, the child has spent most of his time just trying to stay alive in a Charlotte-area hospital, and there are indications that he might just succeed. To win that battle alone would make him a special child.

But special sometimes is less preferable than normal, and unless we are badly misjudging America's sometimes warped sense of celebrity, normal may be beyond his reach.

There will be the trial. There may well be a custody fight of some length between the Adams and Carruth families for the boy, and there will be the prying eyes and stage whispers of a community that will know him mostly for what he does not have -- a mother, and perhaps a father.

There are harder ways to begin one's life, but it is hard to envision them.

So far, the story has been on some Page Ones, but not exclusively. So far, it has been mostly a disturbing curiosity for a public that long ago lost its innocence about jurisprudence and media.

But as the story has taken more and more grisly twists, one can see the gathering storm that may swallow Chancellor Adams whole, if he and his guardians are not extraordinarily strong.

The Simpson children were caught in their own horrible vortex after the murder of their mother, Nicole, which is technically still unsolved. There was, however, a period in which they grew up as normal, if privileged children. Only they can decide whether they have been blessed or cursed.

Chancellor Adams hasn't been afforded even that luxury. His difficulties began in vitro, and they will continue and likely even magnify as he goes through infancy, toddlerhood and the other stages of life we take for granted in our own children.

And that is why sparing a thought for him is an act of kindness in a season that is supposed to be about that above all else. The story of Chancellor Adams could be a dreadful tragedy, or it could be a triumph of the human spirit. Today, all he has is hope, not only that he can stay alive, but that he can clear the other hurdles as they come.

Ray Ratto of the San Francisco Examiner is a regular contributor to ESPN.com.
 


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 George Seifert is sympathetic toward Cherica Adams' family.
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