SINCE 1979 • VOLUME 38, NO. 15
SECTION A
MARCH 25, 2016
$1.00
Bi-Mart shooter arrested
after Monday incident
KEIZERTIMES/Craig Murphy
This handgun was left at the scene of a shooting in the Keizer Bi-Mart parking lot on Monday,
March 21. Keizer Police have arrested and charged Kyle Erik Madrid for the shooting.
Suspects
identified in
Goodpaster
shooting
By CRAIG MURPHY
Of the Keizertimes
Some surprising information
came out recently regarding the
murder of Jerrid Goodpaster at
Keizer Station.
A m o n g
those
sur-
prised?
His
father,
Eric
Goodpaster.
Jerrid, 28,
was fatally shot
Calloway
in a Keizer
Station park-
ing lot near
Starbucks on
Valentine’s
Day evening.
No
arrests
have
been
made yet, but
Wilson
detectives
with the Keizer Police Depart-
ment did talk to two persons of
interest in Eugene two days af-
ter the homicide.
Those two were identifi ed
recently by The Register-Guard
newspaper in Eugene, which
got the names and other
information from a court
document that has since been
sealed.
The paper named the two
suspects as Salem's Timothy
Bernard Calloway, 24, and
Portland's Diontay Edward
Wilson, 26. Calloway and
Wilson were arrested in relation
to other crimes but were both
interviewed in regards to the
Goodpaster shooting.
“Calloway and Wilson are
serving time for unrelated
crimes at this time,” KPD
deputy chief Jeff Kuhns said on
Tuesday. “Nobody, including
either of them, has been arrested
for or charged with any crimes
in relation to the Goodpaster
homicide investigation. Our
investigation is ongoing to this
day.”
From the start, KPD offi cials
have stressed Goodpaster knew
the suspects involved with the
shooting and thus the public
wasn't in danger.
“I have stated many times
publicly that we believe we
have identifi ed everyone who
was present when the homicide
occurred,” Kuhns said.
Eric Goodpaster said the lack
of information the family has
gotten from police is frustrating.
“We have gotten very little
Please see SUSPECTS, Page A6
By CRAIG MURPHY
Of the Keizertimes
A 31-year-old male was
captured in connection with
Monday afternoon's shooting
in the Keizer Bi-Mart parking
lot, minutes after the incident.
Jeff Kuhns, deputy chief
with the Keizer Police De-
partment, announced Tuesday
morning Kyle Erik Madrid
had been arrested for the
shooting of Randall Lynn
Anderson, 59.
The shooting happened
shortly after 1:30 p.m. March
21 in the parking lot in front
of the store, located at 3862
River Road North. Medics
with the Keizer Fire District
immediately
transported
Anderson to Salem Hospital.
A hospital spokesperson on
Tuesday said there was no
update available on Anderson's
condition. Kuhns said the
Salem
resident
survived
Koho back
to council
PAGE A3
Kyle Erik Madrid
treatment of serious physical
injuries, but gave no other
update.
At the same time Anderson
was
being
transported,
police reported a white male
suspect in his early 20s was
seen running north along
River Road. A few minutes
later, offi cer Dave Babcock
detained Madrid in JC's
Pizzaria at 4200 River Road
North as several police cars
quickly entered the parking
lot. A second potential suspect
was detained at the One Stop
Easter
activities
PAGE A5
Please see BI-MART, Page A12
Celtics invade social media
By ERIC A. HOWALD
Of the Keizertimes
A group of McNary High School
students has taken on a monumental
task this semester: making high school
cool in the digital realm.
Students in a new digital
marketing class have spent the
past month creating content for
the Celtic presence on Twitter and
Facebook through videos, photos
and infographics, all of it paving the
way for a new website that will soon
replace the existing one.
“We are trying to get as
many people as we can to
go online and like us on
Facebook and follow
us on Twitter, but to
do that we have to
make it as cool as we
can,” said Maddysen
Vandewalker.
Feeding
the
social network beast
and trying to reach
all 2,000 students is
no small task, and it's
paving the way for
surprising lessons
for the students
involved.
“It's really fast-paced,” said student
Andronick Martusheff. “When we are
putting up the news we try to get the
most important stuff out there as fast
as possible to get people interested.”
Vandewalker has discovered just how
much editing of fi lm and video she can
do on her phone.
It's also provided insight into how
social networks function well in terms
of grabbing attention.
“I think a lot more about what
I put online, especially on Twitter
and Instagram,” said Chloee
Calhoun. “I'm more careful
about what I put there,
but I also try to make it
more simple and easy to
understand.”
Students are given
three options when it
comes to creating
content: they can
make a video, create
an infographic, or
write-up a brief
story to accompany a
picture.
“I like doing the
infographics,” Martusheff
said. “I started playing around
with Photoshop a while
ago and liked being able to
create my own thing off a
blank slate.”
Please see
INVADE,
Page A6
Chainsaw
artist
PAGE A8
Second homeless
meeting in Keizer
on March 29
The new Mid-Willamette
Homeless Initiative needed a
new home.
The fi rst meeting of the
task force last month was
held in a meeting room at
the Salem Public Library, but
a crowd of more than 100
people fi lled the room beyond
capacity.
As such, the second
meeting will be held next
Tuesday, March 29 in
council chambers at Keizer
Civic Center, located at 930
Chemawa Road NE. The
public meeting is scheduled
to go from 4 to 6 p.m. Future
meetings will also be held at
the location.
“We were so pleased by
the overwhelming response
to our fi rst meeting,” said
Keizer Mayor Cathy Clark,
one of the task force co-
chairs. “Clearly our broader
community cares deeply, as we
do, about connecting people
with critical services and, of
course, housing resources.”
Task force agenda items
include
presentations
and discussion regarding
affordable
housing
and
strategic planning. Time
is also set aside for public
comment. Written feedback
may be submitted in advance
to hparekh@co.marion.or.us
by noon on March 29.
The
Mid-Willamette
Homeless
Initiative
has
launched a website to share
information and chronicle
MHS relay
team on
world stage
KEIZERTIMES file/Craig Murphy
Salem Mayor Anna Peterson and Marion County Commissioner
Janet Carlson led the first Mid-Willamette Homeless Initiative
meeting Feb. 17. Next week's meeting will be in Keizer.
task force progress. The
website features meeting dates,
agendas and minutes, meeting
materials, key documents,
news articles, as well as
related links and staff contact
information. The address is
homelesstaskforce.net.
“We are excited to offer
a website where people can
quickly fi nd information about
the task force,” said Marion
County Commissioner Janet
Carlson, another of the co-
chairs. “The website offers
everything from agendas and
minutes to research studies
and local resources.”
Salem
Mayor
Anna
Peterson led the Feb. 17
meeting until handing it over
to Carlson. Presentations
related to housing, services
and funding sources were
made by Community Action
Agency, Marion County
Housing Authority, Salem
Housing Authority, West
Valley Housing Authority,
the Department of Housing
and Urban Development and
Rural Oregon Continuum of
Care.
Please see HOMELESS, Page A6
PAGE A10