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By
Jennifer Sullivan for the Seattle Times
In many ways, Ashton Smith was a typical teenager.
The 16-year-old wanted to learn to drive, yearned
for more
independence. He desperately wanted to make more
friends, his mother,
Roseanne Smith, said recently.
But clouding the typical teenage desires was Ashton's
autism, which
made many of these things difficult. Roseanne
Smith said she tried to help
her son through some of the problems that plague
teens who have Asperger
syndrome.
They bitterly fought over the past year, with
police responding four
times to the Mountlake Terrace apartment they
shared. The most recent
time, on May 17, about three weeks before the
teen disappeared, police said they
arrested a juvenile boy at the apartment. They
declined to say whether it
was Ashton.
Smith conceded her son had been depressed in the
past. She said he
once attempted suicide. But she insisted he had
overcome his depression.
Whether these problems played a role in Ashton's
death is part of a
police investigation that began as a runaway case
and now is being treated
as a homicide.
The Snohomish County Medical Examiner's Office
yesterday confirmed a
body found in a wooded lot near his Mountlake
Terrace apartment was that
of Ashton.
Officials said he died of a single, small-caliber
gunshot wound to
the head, apparently from a handgun found next
to the body.
While the Medical Examiner's Office has not determined
whether
Ashton was slain or committed suicide, Lynnwood
Police Cmdr. Paul Watkins said
police are handling the case as a homicide for
the sake of evidence
preservation.
"Realistically, it (homicide) is nothing
more than a term," Watkins
said yesterday.
Ashton was last seen on the night of June 9 in
the cabana area of
his apartment complex in the 5400 block of 212th
Street Southwest in Mountlake
Terrace. Last week, while police were searching
for Ashton, his mother
discovered that a .22-caliber handgun she kept
in a locked safe had been
taken from her bedroom.
She feared that Ashton had taken the gun.
Police yesterday declined to say whether that
was the handgun found
near his body. Mountlake Terrace Police Sgt. Craig
McCaul said the gun is
being tested to see who fired it and whether it
belonged to Roseanne
Smith.
Police say no suicide note was found near the
body or in Ashton's
home.
In trying to determine what happened in the final
hours of Ashton's
life, police are examining the teen's behavior
over the past few months as
well interviewing his parents.
McCaul said between May 4, 2002, and May 17 of
this year, officers
responded to four 911 calls made from the Smiths'
apartment. He said all
of them were reports of "domestic disputes"
between Ashton and his mother.
Questioned after Ashton's disappearance, his father,
Wesley Smith,
told police the teen was depressed and possibly
suicidal.
But Roseanne Smith, who is divorced from Ashton's
father, said her
son had been doing better over the past few months.
Unlike many children who
have Asperger syndrome, Ashton didn't take medication,
she said, because
he didn't need it.
She recently said they argued, mainly over issues
related to Ashton
wanting more independence. She attributed the
arguments to the growing
pains experienced by many teenagers.
Asperger syndrome is a high-functioning form of
autism,
characterized by regimentation or repetitiveness.
Those with the syndrome tend to follow rigid,
predictable patterns, according to Geraldine Dawson,
a University
of Washington psychologist and director of the
school's Autism Center.
She said children who have Asperger syndrome have
much better
language and cognitive abilities than most children
diagnosed with "classic
autism."
Chris Cowles, a clinical psychologist at Children's
Hospital and
Regional Medical Center in Seattle, said teens
with the syndrome often are
depressed because they "are well aware of
their disorder or how they are
different."
Helen Powell, who runs the Seattle-based Asperger
Support Network,
said, "Imagine being different, really quite
different, but being
intelligent enough to know you are different."
Powell, whose 17-year-old son has Asperger, said
teens with the
syndrome often "get teased unmercifully."
"They don't have the skills to deal with
being teased," she said.
"They are so naive socially. They are the
perfect victim."
Cowles said many teens yearn for independence
from their families
but want "acceptance and recognition"
from their peers.
Copyright © 2003 The Seattle Times Company
SAReport@envirolink.org
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