SINCE 1979 • VOLUME 39, NO. 23 SECTION A MARCH 9, 2018 $1.00 Christina Speten's body was found on Valentine's Day 2011. No one has yet been charged. Who killed NO. 39 • VOLUME 38, SINCE 1979 $1.00 JUNE 30, 2017 SECTIO N A BECOMING RNEY TO EPIC JOU GUE BASEBALL LEAGUER’S LEA ER LITTLE ROOKIE IN MAJOR ONE KEIZ LD A 32 YEAR-O WILEY By DEREK mes Of the Keizerti Bibens - Dirkx Austin times six different warmed up bullpen before in the Rangers called to the he was fi nally make his Major in mound to on May 17 League debut Texas. old rookie, As a 32-year- years 11 than who spent more Bibens-Dirkx in the minors, waiting. was used to “I had a smile on my pretty face the much whole time,” Dirkx Bibens- Dirkx his — Austin Bibens- said of fi rst appear- ance in the big leagues, which of the ninth top came in the lead- the Rangers with inning was the perfect ing 9-2. “It try to give time. They always when you you a soft landing and not put make your debut pressure situa- you in a high take a step back tion. I had to pitches off ng after my warmup take everythi the mound to breath and then in, take a deep get back on.” strike on his After a called hit Bibens-Dirkx Bibens-Dirkx, fi rst pitch, elder ABOVE: Austin and for- Phillies outfi , McNary graduate Philadelphia with his second. a mer Keizer Little Leaguer Rangers up Aaron Altherr followed for the Texas irkx in 11 seasons But Bibens-D t on a curveball pitches more than with a strikeou elder Michael after minor leagues. the aul Moseley EGRAM/P the and got outfi STAR-TEL pop out to Saunders to two outs, third right, Bibens-Dirkx, , a catcher. With hit RIGHT: Franco Roland Herrera's baseman Maikel eld to score played on eague Ju- e people “ I want to prov you should say wrong and me a chance.” have given PAGE A Chrissy? A9 CHECK OUT PAGE Keizer has only one unsolved murder, we wanted to know more about the victim windows to prevent people from By ERIC A. HOWALD Not a ‘cold case,’ dormant opening them from the outside and she Of the Keizertimes Editor’s note: We are not using the last names of the women in this interview to protect their privacy and because of their fear of reprisal. Sharon knew something was wrong in the days leading up to discovering her daughter’s body in her Keizer apartment on Feb. 14, 2011. It was in plain sight when she looked in the windows. “Chrissy had sticks she put behind her checked them every night,” said Sharon. “When I looked in her window, the stick was sitting on the window sill.” Christina “Chrissy” Michelle Speten was 43 when her mother and one of Christina’ friends found Christina dead of blunt force trauma to the head and under a blanket inside her apartment on Orchard Court North in west Keizer. While Keizer Police Department doesn’t consider her death a “whodunit,” not enough evidence has ever presented itself to charge anyone with her murder. “There are people who we think know what happened and those people don’t want to be Please see WHO, Page A8 FOR BO GO By ERIC A. HOWALD Of the Keizertimes From the beginning, the murder of Christina Speten was never a “whodunit,” said Det. Tim Lathrop, of the Keizer Police Department. Lathrop said the investigation has led to people who they were believed involved in the murder, but never enough concrete evidence leading to charges. “The thing is that we need enough probable cause to charge someone. If we charged someone and didn’t have that evidence and they go to trial, we might lose our chance,” Lathrop said. “A lot of time, time is on our side. People get frustrated about the time it takes, but if we have the proper evidence we get a conviction.” Speten was found dead in her west Keizer apartment on Feb. 14, 2011. Police were summoned to the scene after her mother enlisted a friend to crawl in a window at the apartment and check to FREE OFFER You think you know. Please see CASE, Page A6 MHS honored for all-in on AVID By DEREK WILEY Of the Keizertimes McNary took a giant step in becoming the fi rst AVID National Demonstration High School in Oregon. On Feb. 23, Keizer’s high school was informed it was be- ing named an AVID School- wide Site of Distinction, put- ting it in select company with only three other high schools in the state. “We tell our kids that get- ting a diploma from McNary High School means more be- cause of the experiences that you get here that you are not going to get at any other 6A high school,” principal Erik Jespersen said. “We are going to be the fi rst national dem- onstration school at the high school level and as a result of that the things that kids are going to get as an experience of going through McNary is going to be unbelievable.” MHS submitted metrics from the 2016-17 school year to document school-wide growth and performance in order to become an AVID site of distinction. Sixty percent of teach- ers must be AVID-trained. At McNary, that num- ber is 61 and doesn’t count the 19 teach- ers that went to the AVID summer institute last year to bring the total to over 70 percent. Another summer at the institute and McNary could be at 80 percent. “Three years ago I told our staff in a meeting in the choir room, if you have not ever been to a summer insti- tute and you desire to go, we will fi nd a way, and we have,” Jespersen said. “We haven’t turned away anyone. We’ve had a great partnership with Nike. They’ve KEIZERTIMES/Derek Wiley been tremendous. McNary High School AVID students took part in a fi lming project that will be used at other schools in They’ve helped pay December. The Keizer high school was named an AVID Site of Distinction in February. for a lot of these trainings.” 83 percent who use WICOR. at least one course of rigor— shows you’re above the aver- Seventy percent of teachers While 100 percent of Mc- AP or dual enrollment. Sev- age school that has AVID and must routinely use WICOR Nary’s leadership team is enty-two percent of students clearly we are,” said Jespersen, (Writing, Inquiry, Collabora- on the AVID site team, the took pre-collegiate exams and who is even more proud of tion, Organization and Read- benchmark is 50 percent. more than 73 percent of se- other numbers that have come ing) in their classroom in- Nearly 85 percent of McNary niors applied to college. from McNary using AVID struction. McNary has nearly juniors and seniors enrolled in “This is something that Please see AVID, Page A6 SINCE 1979 • VOLUME 38, NO. 50 SEPTEMBER SUV EVENT 15, 2017 $1.00 Skate park wo rk breathes w life into loc al ne scene KEIZERT our of parks talks with members of the Keizer IMES/Eric A. Howald Monday, Sept. City Council 11. and By ERIC A. HOWALD Of the Keizerti the kids doing mes tricks like that Saturday, Sept. 9, is a day in years,” Johnson eagerly that Robert told city councilo rs and remember for Johnson will board members during parks a while. After overseei a tour of parks Monday , group of voluntee ng a huge Johnson stopped Sept. 11. rs removin his wood chips from the Big g pulled into the parking car and Toy, watch the Keizer lot to parks supervis the was on his way or use of kids and adults make past Carlson home driving facility. the newly-rehabbed Within a few when somethi Skate Park he was minutes outside his car ng unexpec happened. ted with people taking using the park “I saw this head the fi rst time for in a the ramps when pop up over “This park while. someone did had become a trick off the center diamond a scooter park because It was the fi . scooters rst time I've are the only the seen ones Please ’s actions co uld end with deporta tion of MHS grad see SKATE, By ERIC A. HOWALD Of the Keizerti mes Page A8 Lady Celts start 4 -1 PAGE A11 New pastor PAGE A4 School dist rict fears regardin works to quell g end of DAC A SALES See page B8 for more details To be sure, read KT families that Our stance are concerned. is that w Design b Keizer 3555 River Road N, Keizer (503) 463 - 4853 www.skylineforddirect.com