Charges Filed In Economy Inn Quadruple Homicide:
By Kathee Baird
February 9, 2015
Springfield, Mo.- A man who has been in custody since late November was charged with four counts of first-degree murder today in connection to a quadruple homicide at a Springfield motel last year.-
A police informant, E.B., says he was in room 149 at the Economy when Scott A. Goodwin-Bey allegedly shot four people on November 15, 2014. The informant told investigators he believed he would have been killed too if he had not bolted from the room.
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Court documents say Goodwin-Bey shot Trevor Fantroy, Danielle Keyes, Lewis Green, and Christopher Freeman because he believed “the victims were informing the police about his drug use,” according to a prosecutor’s request for an arrest warrant.
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Detective Chris Barb writes in the probable cause statement, “During the follow-up investigation, I along with other detectives conducted numerous interviews with possible witnesses and additional residents of the hotel where the homicides occurred. Several of these subjects identified a possible suspect as a black male who went by the nickname of “Auk”. Some of the subjects interviewed claimed to have seen Auk armed with a handgun at the Economy Inn the night before or morning ofthe reported homicides. I received information that the possible suspect identified as Auk drove a white Lincoln Town Car with nice rims or wheels.”
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On November 28th Greene County deputies were dispatched to a Kum & Go in Fair Grove for a report of a subject matching Goodwin-Bey’s description in a white Lincoln that was throwing numerous items from his vehicle into a trash can and was overheard making a comment about having killed his girlfriend. When cops got there, Goodwin-Bey was gone.
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Two days later Springfield Police officers were dispatched the Cenex convenience store located on W. Chestnut Expressway to check on a male subject who had been in the business with a handgun. “The employees reported the involved male, who was later identified as Goodwin-Bey, had been at the business numerous times during the last two days. They each reported Goodwin-Bey would act strange and erratic while in the business and made no sense when he spoke.” Prosecutors say an employee of the store took the gun from Goodwin-Bey when he “approached him with the gun in his hand in a non-threatening manner or grip.” The gun, a Ruger P98DC 9mm which was stolen from Ozark, was turned over to authorities.
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On December 9, 2014, that weapon and 13 spent shell casings from the crime scene were sent to the Missouri State Highway Patrol Crime Laboratory to be examined. Last week investigators received confirmation from the state crime lab that “all thirteen spent shell casings located inside room #149 had been fired by the Ruger 9mm.”
Goodwin-Bey, 47, who has been in jail on a federal weapons violation since his arrest following a traffic stop on November 30th, has a lengthy criminal history. In 1992 he was sentenced in St. Louis for possession of a controlled substance, unlawful use of a weapon and resisting felony arrest. In 1997 he was sentenced to federal prison for conspiracy to distribute cocaine and in state court for unlawful use of a weapon. In 2008 he was again sentenced in federal court for unlawful possession/transport of a weapon.
If convicted, Goodwin-Bey could receive the death penalty or life in prison without the possibility of probation or parole.
Copyright 2015 Stone County Chronicle
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