PAGE A2, KEIZERTIMES, OCTOBER 21, 2016
Man pulls gun on Keizer cop, gets cuffed
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A Keizer man is in jail on
charges including attempted
murder after pointing a gun at
a Keizer police offi cer while
attempting to elude a traffi c
stop.
Around 2:30 a.m. Friday,
Oct. 14, Sgt. Jeff Goodman
attempted to conduct a traf-
fi c stop on a red 1997 Honda
Civic after pacing the vehicle
going 46 mph traveling north
on River Road North. The
posted speed is 35 mph, and a
DMV check showed the ve-
hicle’s insurance had been ter-
minated.
Goodman activated his
lights to conduct a traffi c stop
near the intersection of River
Road North and James Street
Northeast. Another vehicle,
which was later determined to
be associated with the suspect
vehicle attempted to interfere
with the stop, but Goodman
was able to get around and
pursue the Civic.
After activating his car’s
siren, the Civic made a right
turn on Che-
suspect raised his
mawa
Road
hand again and
Northeast and
Goodman saw a
then
another
black object in
right into the
the man’s hand
parking lot at
– it was later de-
Safeway.
termined to be a
The driver of
1911 Colt hand-
the Civic turned
gun.
back toward the
Goodman
exit south of
said it appeared
Oregon
State
as though the
Credit Union,
man was at-
Jose Hernandez
before hopping
tempting to fi re
out of the mov-
the gun, but it
ing car as it approached ce- did not discharge and ended
ment barricades in the parking up fl ying out of the suspect’s
lot.
hand.
As the driver exited, he
The suspect grabbed the
turned to Goodman’s vehicle gun and began fl eeing on foot
and squared his shoulder in with Goodman in pursuit.
what Goodman described as As the man attempted to fl ee
a “pistol shooting stance” in a across River Road North, he
probable cause statement.
fell in some bushes where po-
Goodman came to a stop lice later found the handgun.
about 35 yards from the sus-
The suspect ran across Riv-
pect and the vehicle and was er Road and hid under a ve-
stepping out of his patrol car hicle at 120 Chemawa Road
when the Civic driver ran to North where he was found
the rear of the vehicle. The and then taken into custody
without further incident.
Investigating offi cers re-
trieved the handgun from the
bushes with a round in the
chamber, rounds in the maga-
zine and with the safety disen-
gaged.
Jose A. Hernandez was ar-
rested and charged with at-
tempted aggravated murder,
two counts of attempting
to elude, unlawful use of a
weapon and a parole violation.
Because Hernandez was pre-
viously convicted of a felony,
he was also charged with fel-
on in possession of a fi rearm
and felon in possession of a
restricted weapon – the latter
the result of an electronic stun
gun found in the Civic. He is
being held without bail.
Police are still looking for
the owner of the Civic. The
key was jammed in the igni-
tion indicating a shaved key
was used for its operation.
The license plate on the ve-
hicle at the time of arrest was
851GAC.
Winds take
down tree
Today in History
In Washington, D.C. nearly 100,000 people gather to
protest the American war effort in Vietnam. More than
50,000 of the protesters marched to the Pentagon to ask
for an end to the confl ict.
— Oct. 21, 1967
Food 4 Thought
High winds sheared a
large branch off a tree
along the parking lot
of Schoolhouse Square
Monday, Oct. 17. It fell
on a fence around the
current construction site.
“When you reach for the stars you may not quite get one,
but you won’t come up with a handful of mud either.”
—Leo Burnett, advertising executive who created
Tony the Tiger, Charlie Tuna, the Marlboro Man
and the Maytag Repairman. Born Oct. 21, 1891
The same winds knocked
down a handful of trees
in Keizer parks according
to Bill Lawyer, Keizer
Public Works director.
KEIZERTIMES/
Eric A. Howald
The Month Ahead
Through Sunday, October 23
Old Aurora Colony Museum’s 44th Annual Quilt Show.
The AIDS Memorial Quilt, The Quilts of Valor, Coffee
Creek Quilters, and much more! 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily.
Admission $7.50, discounts available. info@auroracolony.
org 503-678-5754.
Tuesday, October 25
McNary High School Fall Orchestra Concert, 7 p.m. at Ken
Collins Theater. Cost: free.
McNary Wrestling Camp, 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. in the MHS
Wrestling Room, located in the upper gym. Camp runs each
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday through Nov. 10. Cost
is $25 for an individual or $40 for a family and includes a
t-shirt.
The Historic Elsinore Theatre presents The Russian Grand
Ballet presents Swan Lake. 7 p.m. Tickets from $25.
Keizer Public Arts Commission meets 6 p.m., 930 Chemawa
Road N.E.
Free admission all day at Hallie Ford Museum of Art, 700
State Street. Hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Thursday, October 27
McNary High School Fall Band Concert, 7 p.m. at Ken
Collins Theater. Cost: free.
Friday, October 28
Log House Garden and Oregon Food Truck Association are
sponsoring Truck or Treat from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. Admittance
fee is $4 for adults, $10 for families, and free for kids 12 and
under. Located at 5655 Windsor Island Road.
Saturday, October 29
The Historic Elsinore Theatre presents Philippines
Historama Perfomance. 5 p.m. Tickets $25-$100. 170 High
Street SE. 503-375-3574. elsinoretheatre.org.
Bowser’s Boo Bash. Dance, eat, sip and help raise money
for Willamette Humane Society, with live and silent action,
5p.m. Keizer Civic Center, 930 Chemawa Road NE. $70
until Oct 21 $80 after. 503-585-5900 whs4pets.org.
Sunday, October 30
The Salem Concert Band, Fall 2016 concert, performs Fiesta
at Willamette University in Hudson Hall, 3 p.m. Tickets:
$20 reserved, $15 general, $5 for students. 503-362-0485
or www.salemconcertband.org.
Enlightened Theatrics presents back to back screenings of
Hocus Pocus at 2 p.m. and The Exorcist at 7 p.m. at Salem’s
Historic Grand Theatre, 191 High Street N.E. Tickets are $5.
503-585-3427 or BoxOffi ce@Enlightened Theatrics.org.
Saturday, November 5
The Salem Concert Band, Fall 2016 concert, performs
Fiesta at Central High School Auditorium in Independence
7 p.m. Tickets: $20 reserved, $15 general, $5 for students.
503-362-0485 or www.salemconcertband.org
Sunday, November 6
All Haydn Concert at Saint Paul’s Episcopal Church, 1444
Liberty St SE at 4 p.m. stpaulsoregon.org 503-362-3661.
Willamette University’s Theatre Department presents
Overture: Music Inspired by Shakespeare, a special event
with the Willamette University Symphony Orchestra, 3
p.m. at Hudson Hall. Tickets are $15. wutheatre.com.
Tuesday, November 8
Election Day.
Saturday, November 12
Keizer All-School Reunion. All students, teachers and
employees of the old Keizer School are invited, 1-4 p.m.,
980 Chemawa Rd. NE. 504-393-9660.
Add your event by e-mailing news@keizertimes.com.
VIDEO,
continued from Page A1
“The mayor came, members
of the Chamber of Commerce
came and other local business-
es, too. We were just received
so well,” Ricker said.
The Schoolhouse Square
building that currently hous-
es Mr. Video will be razed to
make room for a new building
already under construction. A
coffee shop and sandwich shop
will share the new building at
Schoolhouse Square.
Ricker considered locations
along north Lancaster Drive,
he negotiated with property
owners at Creekside Shop-
ping Center for months before
the deal fell through, but he’s
settled on a new location just
down the street in Keizer Vil-
lage Shopping Center, 3826
River Road N. – between
Subway and Kolby’s Restau-
rant Bar & Billiards.
The current location will
remain open until Oct. 30, and
Ricker hopes to be set up in
his new digs for an opening
on Nov. 4. The new space is
considerably smaller, and won’t
fi t his Limeberry business-in-
a-business frozen yogurt shop,
but he hasn’t shuttered it com-
pletely either.
Limeberry has already
closed in the current loca-
tion, but Ricker was salvaging
as much of the “storefront” as
possible earlier this week.
“We’re hoping to fi nd some
place else in town for Lime-
berry, but we have to wait and
see what opens up,” Ricker
said.
While pulling up stakes for
any business is a chore, video
stores’ bread-and-butter are
their catalogues of older titles.
“Video stores are like a
bookstore or a library, most of
the books in the library won’t
get checked out for years and
years, but people go in and
expect to fi nd what they are
looking for,” Ricker said.
Streaming services are great
for some things, but if you
want to binge watch the en-
tire Bruce Willis oeuvre or
marathon all of the Alien mov-
ies, you’re going to need them
in your home collection, or
you’re going to need a video
store.
“I was kind of mapping
things out and we’ll lose about
four shelving units, but we’re
going to have a lot more wall
space,” Ricker said.
Other than Mr. Video, the
closest dedicated video rental
store in the mid-Willamette
Valley is in Woodburn.
Ricker said the business
benefi ts from being something
like a destination store. One
recent new member walked in
after getting a job in Salem, the
person lives in Independence,
Ricker said.
“Maybe 15 to 20 percent of
our business comes from fur-
ther out, but most of it is right
here in Keizer or very close to
it,” he said.
local
weather
sudoku
looking back
in the KT
5 YEARS AGO
Woman hurt
in rollover crash
Kiley Plaza, 20, was driving
north-bound on O’Neil Road
when her Honda Civic drifted
to the right and struck a parked
Scion sport utility vehicle just
north of Leeward Avenue NE.
Her vehicle then rolled onto
the roof. She was transported
to the hospital with non-life
threatening injuries.
Enter digits
from 1-9 into
the blank
spaces. Every
row must
contain one
of each digit.
So must every
column, as
must every
3x3 square.
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N claimed the life of Hilde
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15 YEARS AGO
Report fi nds high
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A new report, from AAA In-
door Air Quality, indicates
that mold and bacteria are in
the air at Keizer City Hall and
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20 YEARS AGO
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Walgreen plans move
to Keizer
Walgreen Co., the nation’s
largest chain drug store, is
planning to come to Keizer
with a new store at the corner
of River and Chemawa roads.
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