Murderpedia has thousands of hours of work behind it. To keep creating
new content, we kindly appreciate any donation you can give to help
the Murderpedia project stay alive. We have many
plans and enthusiasm
to keep expanding and making Murderpedia a better site, but we really
need your help for this. Thank you very much in advance.
Arthur
Wayne GOODMAN Jr.
A three-day manhunt for Goodman ended when police
confronted him in Fort Worth. The Abilene man goaded police while
wielding a .40-caliber handgun before officers shot and killed him.
Later, coroners found a four-page confession and
suicide note in Goodman’s clothing.
“I’m armed and dangerous and ready to die,” the note
read.
ReporterNews.com
Abilene police said when Goodman was shot and killed
Wednesday night by Fort Worth police officers, he was carrying a note in
which he expressed a death wish and confessed to killing four women on
Monday.
"I want to die and don't plan on getting caught. I
plan on being killed by the police. I'm armed and dangerous and ready to
die," Goodman wrote, according to Abilene police Detective Jay Hatcher.
Hatcher refused to read any part of the note that
mentioned Monday's carnage inside an Abilene apartment.
"He's where he wanted to be," Goodman's mother,
Christina, told The Associated Press in a telephone interview.
Arthur Goodman was killed after Fort Worth police
officers saw him leave a house they were watching and followed the car.
"I feel bad because I told the cops where he was at,"
Christina Goodman said. "I took the detective over there Monday or
Tuesday."
She said she helped police because she feared her son
was suicidal.
Goodman, his 16-year-old brother, Vincent, and two
women were in the car. Fort Worth police Lt. Ric Clark said Arthur
Goodman was sitting next to a window in the back seat as officers
approached the car after stopping it on a highway service road. Goodman
pointed a handgun at the officers, and at least two of them opened fire,
Clark said.
Goodman apparently never fired a shot, Clark said.
Christina Goodman said one of the women in the car,
whom she referred to only as "Becky," told a different story.
"They drug my younger son out of the car. (Arthur)
was sitting there, telling them to shoot him. Becky said she held his
hand while they shot him," said Christina Goodman, barely controlling
her sobs.
"He just wanted to die."
Abilene police had issued a capital murder warrant
for Arthur Goodman after the shooting Monday in which his girlfriend,
Sandy Witt, 20, and Penny Estrada, 21, Naomi Martinez, 23, and Erica
Arispe, 21, were shot in the head.
A fifth victim, Larry Hammond, was wounded. He
remained in serious condition at an Abilene hospital.
Police believe Goodman killed Witt because she
refused to testify for him in other cases, including the shooting of 16-year-old
Jimmy Estrada - no relation to Penny Estrada - on Sunday night, Hatcher
said.
"He was in some trouble and was expecting his
girlfriend to testify for him," Hatcher said. "She got mad at him and
told him she was not going to testify for him. This erupted into an
argument and the catalyst for the shootings."
Goodman was in trouble with the law at least from the
time he was 16, when he was convicted of aggravated assault for ramming
an occupied car with a pickup truck in which he was joyriding, according
to family members who believe he was framed.
Goodman was facing trial on charges of shooting a man
in the leg at an Abilene convenience store last year, in addition to
being suspected of shooting Estrada in revenge for an attack on his
younger brother, Hatcher said.
The detective said slugs recovered from the Abilene
shooting scene were from a .40-caliber weapon and that Fort Worth police
recovered a .40-caliber handgun in the car in which Goodman was killed.
Hatcher said ballistics tests will be conducted on the recovered gun.