Why do people think oj simpson is guilty




















With that said, Simpson has remained dogged by a handful of noteworthy indications that the former football star, actor and TV pitchman may have indeed gotten away with murder. Other blood samples were smeared inside on the console, door, steering wheel, and carpeting. To top it off, the spectacle was all caught on tape. His defense later changed that alibi with a series of stories, one of which claimed he was hitting golf balls outside his home.

However, Lopez later confessed during cross-examination that she could not be precisely sure whether or not his Bronco was there. Simpson was reportedly prone to jealous rages evidenced by taped calls from Nicole herself , including allegedly hitting, stalking, and degrading her — all signs that he was quite capable of murder. Simpson: American Crime Story. The jurors had a tough time of it during the trial, being sequestered for eight and a half months and under intense media scrutiny.

Moran also dismissed domestic abuse claims against Simpson, saying it "was a murder trial, not a trial about domestic abuse" and that focusing on those claims were "a waste of time. One of the men on the jury, David A. Aldana told The New York Times reported on by The Baltimore Sun that he voted not guilty because he said that "things just didn't add up" in relation to the evidence they were presented in court.

He also maintained that he can "sleep at night, no problem". A four-night special was released on the trial in shortly after Simpson was granted parole after being sentenced to jail for his role in a armed robbery. The Jury Speaks explored the trial from the perspective of the jury with one juror Yolanda Crawford recalling the moment Simpson tried on the glove. Landing on the other side, Simpson, a product of public housing in inner-city San Francisco, found reinvention as a celebrity.

He became wealthy. He courted the attentions and advice of affluent businessmen. Simpson, his wife, and his babies. And yet, during his trial, whenever I walked the streets of D. Vendors hawked run o. Community activists, for whom Simpson had previously had no use, offered fervent defenses of him.

I found all of this very frustrating. I was 19 years old. The answer, I was sure, would open a new era of black excellence. The support of Simpson was a step backward. It struck me as unintelligent, politically immature, and ill-advised. Two things, it seemed to me, could be true at once: Simpson was a serial abuser who killed his ex-wife, and the Los Angeles Police Department was a brutal army of occupation.

So why was it that the latter seemed to be all that mattered, and what did it have to do with Simpson, who lived a life far beyond the embattled ghettos of L. I vented in the school newspaper. Expending political capital on O. Simpson struck me as exactly the opposite of the correct strategy. Looking back, I realize what eluded me.

I had lived among black people all my life, but somehow I had come to see them as abstractions, not as humans. I had not yet read Ragtime , the E.

Doctorow novel that Simpson claimed to love. After his retirement in , he began doing some acting and dreamed of playing Coalhouse Walker in the film adaptation of the book. Simpson felt the role of Walker, a black ragtime piano player turned revolutionary, matched his life. The parallels are strained—and in any case Simpson lost the role to Howard Rollins.

But Simpson does resemble another character in the book, one whose feats explain the strange bond between Simpson and the black community. Doctorow offers a fictionalized Harry Houdini, whose escapes from straitjackets, bank vaults, piano cases, and mailbags thrill the poor people of the nation. He is jailed in Boston, imprisoned on an English ship, tossed into the Seine in manacles. Each time, he escapes.

The poor are enthralled by Houdini not because he organizes on their behalf, but because his exploits resonate with them: They know that their lives are trapdoored and trip-wired, that they too have been jailed, imprisoned, chained, and tossed into the sea. A Houdini performance was their life in miniature, with one heroic difference—he escaped.

L ong before he led the police on a chase through L. His rare athletic talent freed him from an impoverished childhood, and brought him to USC on a football scholarship in On June 17, , prosecutors ordered Simpson to surrender, but instead he fled in a white Ford Bronco with his friend Al Cowlings, leading police on a slow-speed chase that brought Southern California freeways to a standstill and drew in a network television audience of 95 million Americans.

News helicopters hovered overhead, documenting the chase, and Angelinos gathered on the roadways, and in front of their televisions, to watch in real time. In , Simpson's trial transfixed the country. Defense attorneys claimed Simpson was wrongly accused but prosecutors argued that Simpson was a controlling husband who abused Brown Simpson.

Prosecutors also pointed to blood from the crime scene found in Simpson's car and home, and the fact that he was unaccounted for for more than an hour on the night of the killings. During the trial, the prosecution asked Simpson to put on gloves believed to have been worn by the killer, but they didn't appear to fit properly.

Defense attorney Johnnie Cochran famously told the jury in his closing argument, "If it doesn't fit, you must acquit. On Oct. He has always maintained his innocence. In , a civil jury found Simpson liable for wrongful death in the double murder. In September , Simpson led a group of men into a Las Vegas hotel and casino to steal what he claims was his own sports memorabilia at gunpoint.

In , Simpson was found guilty in the botched robbery and sentenced to up to 33 years in prison. And during the trial and through this proceeding, I got this answer, and it was both.



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