Goodwin Found Guilty in Murders of Racer By LINDA DEUTSCH, AP Special Correspondent do***ent.write(getElapsed("20070104T200113Z"));1 hour agoUPDATED 51 MINUTES AGO PASADENA, Calif. - Michael Goodwin, a once high-living motorsports promoter, was convicted of two counts of murder Thursday in the 1988 killings of Mickey Thompson and the racing legend's wife. The jury also found that special cir***stance allegations of lying in wait and multiple murder were true. The prosecution has said it will not seek the death penalty. Goodwin, who was accused of planning the murders and hiring hit men to commit them, only shook his head slightly back and forth when the verdicts were read. Goodwin was a former business partner of Thompson, a racer who pursued land-speed records on the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah and drove everything from dragsters and funny cars to midgets, and was a major figure in popularizing off-road contests. The killing of Thompson and his wife, Trudy, seemed to be the ultimate "cold case," but it did not die because of the efforts of Thompson's sister, Collene Campbell, who insisted that investigators pursue the case for more than 18 years. In the beginning, it seemed to be the perfect crime. Two unknown ***ailants on bicycles penetrated the gated confines of Thompson's home, shot him and his wife as they left for work, then escaped through a wooded area where a car could not have traveled. Neighbors described hearing screams and seeing two men pedaling away. One neighbor actually tried to shoot at them but was too far away and too late to do any good. The men were never seen again. As years p***ed without strong evidence, the case was considered closed. But Thompson's sister, a former mayor of San Juan Capistrano with wide political connections, pressed authorities to reopen the murder case and look at Goodwin as a suspect. Eyewitness identifications didn't help much. The only witness to see the killings was a 14-year-old girl who testified at the trial. As an adult she claimed her memory of events was good, but defense attorneys questioned that. A couple who claimed to have seen Goodwin casing the area with binoculars before the killings did not come forward until 13 years after the crime when they saw a TV show about it that they said triggered their memories. At the six-week trial, Goodwin's attorney presented testimony from a psychologist who said memories fade quickly and suggested that a 13-year-old identification would not be trustworthy. Lacking direct evidence, the prosecution put on a strong cir***stantial case, alleging that Goodwin arranged the March 16, 1988, slayings of Thompson, 59, and his 41-year-old wife as revenge for a soured business deal. They showed that Goodwin and Thompson entered into a partnership to stage motocross racing events _ a business that failed. The partnership disintegrated into a bitter legal battle and Thompson, who claimed he was cheated, won a legal judgment of more than $700,000 against Goodwin. They showed that Goodwin, 61, liquidated his ***ets around the time of the killings, bought a $400,000 yacht and sailed off with his then-wife to spend three years in the Caribbean and elsewhere. Goodwin was arrested in 2001 when he returned to the United States and has been held without bail. His lawyer contended he was innocent and that the killings occurred during a robbery attempt. The defense contended Goodwin was a victim of false ***umptions and of TV shows that created a "folklore" and prompted people to come forward with unsubstantiated accounts. Numerous witnesses gave accounts of Goodwin threatening to kill Thompson, saying Goodwin confided he planned to "waste him," "take care of him" and see him dead before he would pay him a dime. One witness reported hearing Goodwin say: "I'll kill him. ... I can get it done for 50 grand." His own attorney acknowledged that Goodwin may have been "a jerk," but said he was not a killer. During every day of the trial, Thompson's sister sat in court with her husband, Gary Campbell, and stared at Goodwin. "This has been a long endurance race for justice," she said when the trial began. "We don't plan to drop out till we get to the finish line."
good to see this finaly come to a close though it's realy too bad it ever happened in the first place. imagine all the things Mickey may have still accomplished had his life not been cut short.
It seems that justice, sometimes, actually works. Hats off to the sister who stood up for her brother. RIP, Mickey and Trudy.
kustombuilder - "good to see this finaly come to a close" Sadly, I doubt "closure" is too near. Goodwin has a ****locker full of money, and hey - it is California after all. I bet appeals, etc, will go on for years. MT was no saint for sure, but he (nor Trudy) deserved to die like that. You're absolutely correct to wonder about what else he may have done. A very special person indeed.
I never liked Goodwin, I remember seeing him in the 80's on TV with motocross & saying" what a ***hole!! I never trusted white people with Afros!! He'll die in jail, state invested too much to let him walk on a appeal. He ain't OJ JimV