Springfield News-Sun

Sentencing

-

he determined that Joseph deserves some degree of mercy and grace, but not much.

The judge said this is one of the most painful cases over which he had presided in his 20 years on the bench.

“We can’t fix this; I can’t fix this. What I would give to fix this,” Rastatter said.

Joseph, through an interprete­r, issued a statement in which he apologized. He said he empathizes with the family, having two kids himself, one of them having been born a few days prior to the crash.

“I have a family, and I left my country to help my family,” Joseph said through an interprete­r. “Instead of helping them, it’s become worse for them.”

Aiden’s brother, Preston Clark, said nothing Joseph says or does will change what happened, and his little brother’s death has changed him drasticall­y.

“I had to carry my little brother in a casket,” Preston Clark said. “Life isn’t supposed to be like that.”

Madelynn Clark said it will be painful to see her brother’s friends at school but not see Aiden. She said it hurts that Aiden won’t be at her wedding or be able to be an uncle when she has children.

“All of this could have been avoided if you had just done the right thing,” Madelynn Clark said.

Nathan Clark, Aiden’s father, spoke about the pain the family has felt since the 11-year-old’s death and once again denounced those who have used Aiden’s name as

a weapon for intoleranc­e. After the bus crash, some community members spoke at Springfiel­d City Commission meetings to express complaints and anger toward immigrants.

Rastatter during his sentencing,

and Clark County Prosecutor Dan Driscoll, addressing reporters after the hearing, echoed this sentiment.

Aiden’s father said in the nine months since he and wife, Danielle Clark, lost their

son, and Preston and Madelynn Clark lost their younger brother, the family has felt incomplete.

“It takes nine months to gradually grow and create the perfect human being,” Nathan Clark said. “It only

took seconds to take his life away on Aug. 22, 2023, when Mr. Joseph recklessly smashed into a Northweste­rn school bus, endangerin­g the lives of 52 innocent children and one amazing bus driver.”

The father said Aiden loved to snuggle and play baseball, and his goal was to sell vegetables at the farmer’s market. He said Aiden no longer gets to do those things, or to bake zucchini bread with his mother.

“We hate that we won’t be able to help Aiden get ready for his bright future,” Nathan Clark said.

Aiden’s father emphatical­ly condemned those who have used the family’s tragedy for political gain or to justify their intoleranc­e. He said Joseph’s and Aiden’s faces are on “the poster of the border security crisis,” which neither of them deserve, though he said Joseph deserves “heavy consequenc­es” for his actions.

“We hate that across this county there is hate fueled by the worst moment of our lives. Our tragedy,” Nathan Clark said. “This hatred is present in this county, this city, this community. Mr. Joseph didn’t start this, but he dumped a lot of fuel on the fire that has consumed many people.”

Despite Joseph’s actions, Nathan Clark said the family does not hate Joseph.

“We hate that you took our life, but we don’t know you, so Mr. Joseph, we can’t hate you,” Nathan Clark said.

According to testimony from crash reconstruc­tion expert Ohio State Highway Patrol Sgt. Jeremiah Smith, as the Honda crossed into the lane of the bus, Northweste­rn driver Alfred “Gene” Collier moved the bus to the shoulder on the asphalt. The Honda continued to cross over and struck the side of the bus, then it traveled south across the roadway, coming to rest in a field.

During the trial, Joseph testified he has a Mexican driver’s license and Ohio ID card, but no Ohio driver’s license. He testified he has temporary protected status and did not get an Ohio driver’s license because he did not have the necessary documents.

After the sentencing, Driscoll said he hopes those impacted can begin the healing process and that the Clark family’s statement against hatred toward the Haitian community takes hold and inspires the “silent majority” who don’t believe in this rhetoric to speak up. He said the case was “without a doubt” the hardest of his career.

“I would ask people today: instead of spreading hate, spread some love. We could use it.”

 ?? BILL LACKEY / STAFF ?? Nathan and Danielle Clark, the parents of Aiden
Clark, fight back tears during the sentencing of Hermanio Joseph in
Clark County Common Pleas Court on Tuesday.
BILL LACKEY / STAFF Nathan and Danielle Clark, the parents of Aiden Clark, fight back tears during the sentencing of Hermanio Joseph in Clark County Common Pleas Court on Tuesday.
 ?? BILL LACKEY / STAFF ?? The family of Hermanio Joseph sits in the gallery during Joseph’s sentencing at Clark County Common Pleas Court on Tuesday.
BILL LACKEY / STAFF The family of Hermanio Joseph sits in the gallery during Joseph’s sentencing at Clark County Common Pleas Court on Tuesday.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Aiden Clark.
CONTRIBUTE­D Aiden Clark.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States