Jose Leos calls it a father’s intuition, the odd feeling he got that Friday morning last may.
“A loss of breath,” he said. “I felt anxiety, not even knowing what was going on at the time. I was at work.”
Two hours would go by before he got the dreaded news. His son 6-year-old Aiden had been killed in a road-rage incident on the 55 Freeway, riding in the back seat of his mother’s car. The loss continues to tear him apart.
Leos says he has kept his feelings private until now because he wanted to honor all that his little boy meant to him.
He knew what he wanted to do knew what compassion was just so special.
Leos plans to announce a nonprofit called Lions Share at a golf tournament next month. The goal is to financially help families who’ve been through the same loss.
“If we could get together and share resources one less thing they have to worry about,” he said.
The golf tournament is being organized by Calvary Chapel Academy where Aiden was a student.
His father says that’s where his son blossomed.
“You know how parents should be patient with their kids, he was the other way around,” he said. “He was patient with his parents, for sure. I feel like he taught me, he taught me a lot.”
Jose Leos wears this gold charm with the letter around his neck. But says his heart is where his son lives.