Keizertimes. (Salem, Or.) 1979-current, January 12, 2018, Page PAGE A2, Image 2

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    PAGE A2, KEIZERTIMES, JANUARY 12, 2018
Felon, struck by car, ends own
life as police surround apartment
presented by
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Today in History
President George Washington delivers the fi rst State of the
Union address to the assembled Congress in New York City.
When he spoke, it seemed likely the people of the United
States would stand behind Washington’s government and
enjoy the concord, peace, and plenty he saw as symbols of
the nation’s good fortune.
— January 12, 1790
Food 4 Thought
“If you can’t tolerate critics, don’t do anything new or
interesting.”
— Jeff Bezos, founder of Amazon, born January 12, 1964
The Month Ahead
Through Sunday, January 21
Salem’s Riverfront Park is home to the fi rst seasonal ice rink
10 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily. 116 Marion St. NE. Cost is $12 ages 3
to 12 and $15 13 and older for each 90 minute session (includes
skate rental).
Friday, January 12 – Sunday, January 14
Home Builders Association (HBA) Home Show, Jackman-
Long Building, Oregon State Fairgrounds. Hours: Friday, 11
a.m.-7 p.m., Saturday, 10 a.m.-7 p.m., Sunday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
Free parking. Free admission. homebuilders association.org.
Saturday, January 13
US Sen. Jeff Merkley and Rep. Kurt Schrader will hold a town
hall meeting in the commons area of Claggett Creek Middle
School at 9:30 a.m. They will give an update on their work and
take questions from the audience.
Willamette Valley Genealogical Society meets at 12:00 noon in
Anderson Room A of the Salem Public Library (585 Liberty St
SE). For more information, call (503) 363-0880.
Monday, January 15
Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, federal holiday. Banks and
government offi ces closed, including Keizer City Hall.
Tuesday, January 16
Free admission all day at Hallie Ford Museum of Art, 700
State Street. Hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Friday, January 19-Saturday, February 10
Pentacle Theatre presents Brian Friel’s Dancing at Lughnasa.
Performances are at 7:30 p.m. Visit pentacletheatre.org for
show dates and tickets.
Tuesday, January 23
Keizer Public Arts Commission story pole design meeting,
6:30 to 8 p.m. Keizer Civic Center, 980 Chemawa Road N.E.
Target audience: special interest groups (art associations, etc.)
Free admission all day at Hallie Ford Museum of Art, 700
State Street. Hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Friday, January 26
Oregon Symphony in Salem presents Brahms’ First
Symphony. 8 a.m. Smith
Auditorium on Willamette
University campus. Tickets range rom $35 to $50; students,
$10. orsymphonysalem.org.
bedroom [while police had
By ERIC A. HOWALD
the apartment surrounded]
Of the Keizertimes
A man struck by a vehicle holding a handgun,” said Det.
on River Road North Thurs- Chris Nelson of the Keizer
day, Jan.4, walked back to his Police Department.
Nelson said the tenant who
apartment and allegedly took
his own life fearing a return to spoke with police encouraged
Macy to seek medical atten-
prison.
Police closed off portions of tion for a gash he received as
Sandy Drive and River Road a result of being hit by the ve-
North for more than three hicle.
Macy barricaded himself
hours while trying to coax the
inside the apartment and re-
man out of his apartment.
The incident began about 8 fused to come out. KPD es-
tablished a pe-
p.m. Keizer po-
rimeter around
lice responded
the apartment
to the scene
with the as-
of a vehicle-
sistance of the
on-pedestr ian
Salem Police
collision in the
Department
5100 block of
and
Marion
River
Road
County Sher-
North
near
iff ’s Offi ce, and
Carl’s Jr. Call-
attempted to
ers reported a
establish com-
motor vehicle
munication
striking a pe-
with
Macy
destrian who
while apply-
then walked to
Calvin Lloyd Macy
ing for a search
an apartment
warrant.
at 105 Sandy
The Salem Police Depart-
Drive N.
The pedestrian, Calvin ment SWAT and Negotiations
Lloyd Macy, 65, was wanted Team continued to try to con-
on two state-wide felony war tact Macy using a loudspeaker
rants, one for public indecen- and inviting him to call 9-1-1.
cy issued in October 2017 and About 11:30 p.m. an offer was
another for unlawful posses- made to deliver a phone inside
the apartment. At 1 a.m. a ro-
sion of methamphetamine.
Macy had a criminal histo- bot was deployed to deliver a
ry in Oregon that included 15 phone.
Shortly thereafter, police
prior arrests dating as far back
as 1969 to his most recent ar- executed a search warrant and
found Macy unresponsive of
rest in July 2017.
When offi cers approached a apparent self-infl icted gun-
the apartment a tenant exited shot wound. No one else was
and told the offi cers Macy was found in the apartment.
The Marion County Med-
seated on a bed and he had a
handgun in his possession. Ac- ical Examiner’s Offi ce and the
cording to the tenant, Macy Marion County District At-
said he was “not going back torney’s Offi ce responded to
to prison” and refused to exit the scene to assist with the in-
the apartment to speak with vestigation.
Police identifi ed Macy the
police.
“The tenant said Mr. Macy afternoon of Friday, Jan. 5.
The driver of the vehicle
was acting ‘irrational’ and
talking about going back to that hit Macy remained on the
prison. The tenant reported scene and cooperated with the
that Mr. Macy retreated to a police investigation.
Man was convicted of
murdering mother, son
By ERIC A. HOWALD
Of the Keizertimes
Calvin Lloyd Macy’s life
came to a violent end Thurs-
day, Jan. 4, after being struck
by a vehicle while walking
across River Road North to
his apartment on Sandy Drive
North.
Macy died of a self-infl icted
gunshot wound after telling
another resident of the same
apartment complex that he was
“not going back to prison” as
police tried to contact him in
regard to the vehicle-on-pe-
destrian incident.
Macy had a criminal history
in Oregon that included 15
prior arrests dating as far back
as 1969 to his most recent ar-
rest in July 2017, according to
Keizer Police Department of-
fi cials. Convictions for murder,
public indecency, carrying a
prohibited weapon and being a
felon in possession of a weapon
were the most severe.
Macy was convicted of mur-
dering a Salem woman, Susan
Cameron, and her 2-year-old
son, Shawn, in 1981. The pair
went missing in August of 1980
and their bodies were discov-
ered about a week later in Wal-
lace Marine Park. A coroner
later attributed the cause of
death to asphyxiation.
Macy was tied to the crime,
in part, using hair matches from
both him and a dog he owned
at the time. He was convicted
of the crime by a Polk Coun-
ty jury and sentenced to two
concurrent life sentences with
a mandatory minimum of 25
years. Macy fought his prison
sentence in the Oregon Court
of Appeals on multiple occa-
sions with mixed outcomes.
On one occasion, his man-
datory minimum was reduced
Film series
delves into
income
inequality
The Salem Progressive
Film Series is screening The
Divide at Grand Theatre in
Salem on Tuesday, Jan. 16.
In the fi lm, director
Katharine Round, looks at
income inequality in the
United States and the U.K.,
dwelling on the human story
behind the numbers. The
fi lm follows seven people as
it explores what happens to
everyone when the rich get
richer.
After the fi lm, Willamette
University Professor Emeritus
Russ Beaton will engage the
audience in a discussion of the
topic.
Tickets are $5 at the door
and the event begins at 7
p.m. Grand Theatre is located
at 191 High Street N.E. in
Salem.
lookinc
back
in the KT
5 YEARS AGO
Lancuace isn’t
the challence it
once was for Rotary
exchance student
German
native
Pepita
Schmidt-Rave
came
to
America as part of the Rotary
Youth Exchange program. She
struggled with the language at
fi rst, but enjoyed her time in
Keizer. She enjoyed seeing the
differences between America
and Germany. “Everything
here is bigger; the plates, the
cups, everything.”
sudoku
Enter dicits
from 1-9 into
the blank
spaces. Every
row must
contain one
of each dicit.
So must every
column, as
must every
3x3 square.
10 YEARS AGO
Residents may
support library
Friday, January 26 – Saturday, January 27
First Taste of Oregon, Columbia Hall (2330 17th St.) at Oregon
State Fairgrounds. Hours: Friday, 4-10 p.m., Saturday, noon-
10pm. Adults $10, Seniors $8 Children under 6 are free
Designated Drivers $10, Group discounts available, please call.
Saturday, January 27
Cherry City Season 9, Bout 8: Dolls of Anarchy vs Rydell Belles,
7 p.m. at The Mad House, 1335 Madison Street NE.
Saturday, January 27 – Sunday, January 28
2018 Oregon Wedding Showcase, Jackman-Long Building,
Oregon State Fairgrounds. Hours: Saturday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.,
Sunday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Admission is $10; free parking.
oregonweddingshowcase.com.
Sunday, February 4
Blind Boys of Alabama at St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, 2:30 p.m.
The grammy-award winning group bring their unique style
of gospel music to Salem. Tickets are required to attend the
performance, and they’re likely to go fast. The recommended
donation for a ticket is $20. For more information on tickets
contact musicguild@stpaulsoregon.org
Saturday, February 17
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THIS WEEK’S
MOVIE TIMES
Blade Runner 2049 (R)
Sun 7:05
Thor Ragnarok (PG-13)
Fri 4:00, 6:30, 9:00, Sat 4:20,
6:00, 8:30, Sun 3:40, 6:10, 8:25
Star (PG)
Fri 2:05, Sat 12:30, Sun 12:00,
1:50
Only The Brave (PG-13)
Fri 8:00, Sat 4:50
Man Who Invented
Christmas (PG)
Fri 1:50, 6:00, Sat 2:45, Sun 5:00
KEIZERTIMES.COM
Web Poll
Results
When do you think
Waremart will open?
46% – February 1
18% – January 31
Cherry City Roller Derby, Season 9, Bout 9: Dolls of Anarchy
vs Panty Raiders, 7 p.m. at The Mad House, 1335 Madison
Street NE.
Daddys Home 2 (PG-13)
Fri 4:45, 6:50, Sat 2:20, 3:55,
9:25, Sun 2:25, 4:30, 6:30
17% – January 27
Tuesday, February 27
Bad Moms Christmas (R)
Fri 8:45, Sat 7:25, Sun 8:35
9% – January 28
The Lego Ninjago Movie (PG)
Sun 2:55
5% – January 29
Despicable Me 3 (PG)
Fri 2:50
Sat 12:55, 2:05,
Sun 12:30
5% – January 30
Keizer Public Arts Commission fi nal story pole design meeting,
6:30 to 8 p.m. Keizer Civic Center, 980 Chemawa Road N.E.
Open invite.
Saturday, March 10
Cherry City Roller Derby, Season 9, Bout 10: Rydell Belles vs
Thrill Kill Kittens, 7 p.m. at The Mad House, 1335 Madison
Street NE.
Add your event by e-mailinc news@keizertimes.com.
My Litlle Pony (PG)
Fri 3:50, Sat 12:00, Sun 12:50
FOR ALL SHOWTIMES GO TO
NORTHERNLIGHTSTHEATREPUB.COM
to 10 years, but the life sen-
tences were made consecutive
instead of concurrent. Later the
10-year minimum was over-
turned, the 25-year minimum
reimposed, and the sentences
were made concurrent once
more. He was released in 2007
but, by 2017, Macy appeared
to be in a downward spiral ac-
cording to court documents.
In March 2017, Macy plead-
ed guilty to a public indecency
charge that resulted from him
exposing himself to a woman
in public two months prior.
He was sentenced to fi ve years
probation.
Two month later, Macy was
arrested by Salem police after
a woman complained that he
exposed himself to her and be-
gan pleasuring himself after she
woke him up while sleeping in
his van with the door open.
While being checked into
the Marion County Correc-
tional Facility, Macy was found
in possession of a clear, plastic
bag containing methamphet-
amine. His parole offi cer rec-
ommended a 15-day stint in
jail as a result. He was released
from jail on June 28 and failed
to show up for a court appear-
ance in July resulting in a war-
rant being issued for his arrest.
Between the Marion County
warrant for public indecency
and another issued in Clacka-
mas County, Macy was fac-
ing a bail amount of at least
$120,000, said Keizer police
offi cials.
KPD Deputy Chief Jeff
Kuhns said that by the time
police offi cers entered Macy’s
apartment in the early morn-
ing hours of Friday, Jan. 5, he
had likely been dead for hours.
Vote in a new poll every Thursday!
GO TO KEIZERTIMES.COM
Almost half of Keizer residents
would be willing to support a
75-cent property tax increase
to support a public library
in the community, a city
survey showed. The Library
Task Force will be crafting a
ballot proposal to establish a
new library district. Keizer
is the largest city in the state
without a library.
15 YEARS AGO
Teens accused after
meth seized at MHS
Police arrested four Keizer
teens after offi cers uncovered
a scheme to sell methamphet-
amine to students at McNary
High School. Offi cer Dan
Kelley determined that a stu-
dent, 15, had brought almost
an ounce of meth to McNary.
Another student, 17, was found
to have nine bindles of the sub-
stance packaged for sale - be-
lieved to be the largest quantity
of a controlled substance ever
confi scated at the school.
20 YEARS AGO
Teen cornered,
beaten with bat
As many as eight attackers
cornered a 17-year-old boy
and beat him with fi sts and
a baseball bat outside the
Keizer Burger King. The
attack was interrupted when
the manager at Burger King,
Michael Gervis, came out and
chased off the group.