Lying on a hospital bed, 6-year-old Abbey Taylor gave her parents a mission.
She looked up at her father, Scott, and asked if she would be on television.
Abbey loved being in the spotlight, but this wasn't about entertainment. She wanted to be on the news to tell her story so no other kids would be hurt like she had been. While playing in a pool, she was disemboweled by the suction of a faulty drain. Nine months later, after 16 surgeries and a triple organ transplant, Abbey died.
"Our future was laid out for us before we even knew it," said Scott Taylor, who with his wife, Katey, took Abbey's mission to heart. While grieving for their little girl, they built Abbey's Hope, a foundation that works to make swimming pools safer.
After the horrifying loss of a child, some Minnesota parents are using their grief to fuel a drive for change. Inspired by Patty and Jerry Wetterling, who became known nationwide for their advocacy for missing children after their son Jacob was kidnapped in 1989, these parents fight passionately to enact criminal justice reforms, establish tighter safety guidelines or raise awareness and money in their children's names.
No matter how hard it is to tell and retell their stories, they testify before the Legislature and speak in front of cameras because, by doing so, they are keeping their children alive. Working tirelessly amid crushing grief, these parents-turned-advocates can make a difference, though sometimes at a cost to themselves.
"It's not at all uncommon that these families, through their pain and despair, become pillars of strength when it comes to protecting families and kids," said Bob Lowery, vice president of the missing children division at the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.
Laws and organizations linked to children are some of the most recognizable because they capture the sympathy of the public: Amber Alerts, Megan's Law, Mothers Against Drunk Driving. And, of course, the Jacob Wetterling Crimes Against Children and Sexually Violent Offender Registration Act, a 1994 federal law named for the Minnesota 11-year-old whose body was recovered this month, 27 years after he was kidnapped.