Laura Seitz, Deseret News
WEST JORDAN — It's hard to put into words what the loss of a bright-eyed, 6-year-old girl with freckles can do to her family.
One day, Sierra Newbold is dancing and dressing up in "fairy costumes" with her kid sister and the next day, she's gone.
"You don't even know hardly
how to feel or think — it just upsets your whole world," Sierra's
grandmother Frances Newbold said Friday.
"The first day was just so devastating. ... You finally dry up. You run out of tears."
As police investigate what
happened to Sierra before she was sexually assaulted, killed and left in
a canal near her home, her grandmother said she takes comfort in
knowing that whatever cruel acts led to the child's death are over
now.
"We know where she is now and
we're happy that she's out of any misery or pain she could have
experienced. We miss her so much," Newbold told the Deseret News. "She
was a vivacious little girl ... full of life."
That life was remembered
Friday at a viewing in anticipation of Saturday's funeral, and at a
candlelight vigil attracting about 200 people to Sierra's neighborhood
school, only blocks away from the home from which she was taken.
Patty Belleso came to the
vigil with her family "to show support because we have little ones
too," she said. "Nobody deserved that. I don't think it's fair what
happened to her."
The support for Sierra exhibited Friday was also laced with the fear that remains in the neighborhood.
"I know that people are afraid
to let their kids go out, me being one of them," said Sharan Dawn
Kanniainen. "I lock my doors during the day now. I won't let my kids go
out," she said.
Just before 7:30 a.m. Tuesday,
family members called police to report that the girl was missing from
her home at 2383 W. 7095 South. Officers started searching the area and
soon found her dead in a nearby canal.
West Jordan Police Chief Doug
Diamond declined to provide details about her condition, but said there
was "not a significant amount of trauma on the body." An autopsy later
concluded her death was a homicide and that she'd been sexually
assaulted.
"It's an unbelievable thing,"
Newbold said. "We can't hardly get our heads around it. You try to
figure what and you don't get an answer. I can't understand how anyone
can do something like this to a little girl — or anybody."
source: desert news