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Sent: Tuesday, November 07, 2006 3:03 PM
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Subject: [73-77olds] O/T Interesting MICKEY THOMPSON story

 Man, I was in my early 20's when this happened. I remember A few friends of
mine grabbed all the mickey T stuff they could get thier hands on thinking
it might be worth money someday. (Remember the old "M/T" valve covers? Stuff
like that.).........Either way GREED and SHADY BUSINESS PARTNERS took a
legendary race car driver and great contributor to the automotive hobby from
us.
When the hobby goes from fun, relaxing and profitable,  to greed and murder,
it's no longer a hobby anymore. Lets hope this never happens again. Anyway,
.....and it looks like justice may finally come. Here's the story........
 
 
PASADENA, Calif. (Nov. 7) - Legendary racer Mickey Thompson and his wife
were gunned down nearly 19 years ago in a hit ordered by an embittered
former business partner, a prosecutor told the jury Monday in a dramatic
opening statement.
 
 


Talk About It: Post Thoughts  
 

Revenge for expensive legal defeats motivated Michael Goodwin to arrange the
killings, said prosecutor Alan Jackson, who showed jurors enlarged
photographs from Thompson's celebrated career and of the couple lying in
blood in their driveway.  
The March 16, 1988, killings were engineered so Thompson, 59, would see his
wife, Trudy, die before he was shot in the head, the prosecutor said.  
"Over and over, the mantra he repeated was the same: 'Please don't hurt my
wife,"' Jackson said, quoting neighbors who heard the couple's cries.  
Goodwin, 61, is charged with two counts of murder with special circumstances
and faces life in prison if convicted.  
Public defender Elena Saris countered in her opening statement that there is
no forensic evidence, no murder weapon, no proof of a payout to anyone.  
"This is the story of a botched investigation and a Hollywood series of
events based on false assumptions," Saris said.  
Thompson competed in numerous auto sports and was the first person to travel
more than 400 mph on land. He was inducted posthumously into the Motorsports
Hall of Fame of America.  
Goodwin's prosecution came about after years of pressure by Thompson's
sister, Collene Campbell.  
Jackson told the jury that Thompson, who was known for staging Motocross
races, went into business at age 55 with Goodwin, who was involved with
Supercross, the intense motorcycle races typically staged on stadium dirt
courses featuring dramatic jumps.  
 
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Murder  
 

"The evidence in this case will show that from day one Michael Goodwin had
bad intentions," Jackson said,"outlining a completely circumstanticl case.  
The prosecutor said Goodwin was once overheard "saying he was going to screw
over Mickey Thompson. But he underestimated Mickey Thompson."  
Jackson said Thompson wasn't highly educated but was brilliant.  
"He was a Rhodes scholar in the school of hard knocks. He wasn't going to
get screwed over," Jackson said.  
Before long, Thompson realized he was being cheated and sued his new
partner, Jackson said. Goodwin was ordered to repay more than $793,000 after
a judge found that he had stolen more than $500,000, the prosecutor said.  
Further lawsuits over the next two years forced Goodwin to declare
bankruptcy, Jackson said.  
"Michael Goodwin was suffering a pattern of losing he could not tolerate,"
the prosecutor said.  
Jackson said a witness will tell how Goodwin once declared: "Before he sees
a dime I'll have him wasted."  
Three witnesses testified that they heard Goodwin make threatening remarks
about Thompson just weeks or months before the couple was gunned down.  
One, former police Cmdr. Bill Wilson, testified that he had introduced the
two men. He said he knew there were problems between them but was stunned
when Goodwin told him: "Thompson is killing me. He's destroying me. He's
taking everything I've got. I'm gonna take him out."  
Wilson said he replied, "Nobody wins that one. Mickey's dead and you're in
prison." When the conversation ended, he said, Goodwin told him he was
joking.  
Goodwin hired two men to go to the Thompsons' house in the gated Los Angeles
suburb of Bradbury, which he had scoped out beforehand, to shoot them and
escape on bicycles, Jackson alleged.  
Saris acknowledged harsh words were spoken between Goodwin and Thompson, but
said "folklore was generated by the media," leading witnesses to come
forward with unsubstantiated allegations. She acknowledged her client had
refused to pay the judgment Thompson won.  
"You might not think of this as honorable behavior," she said, "but it is
not evidence of murder."  
Jackson said Goodwin's behavior before and after the killings was enough to
prove guilt.  
Shortly after the killings, Jackson said, Goodwin liquidated his assets,
sold his home, transferred money to an offshore account in the Caribbean and
bought a $400,000 yacht on which he and his then-wife left the U.S. for
three years.  
 
 
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