Oj Simpson Trial

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O.J Simpson Trials The famous O.J Simpson in 1995 was brought to a trial for the murder of his second ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and friend named Ronald Goldman. O.J Simpson trial received lots of scrutiny due to the severity of the charges that he was facing. In the time frame of these events a live police chase was underway and ninety-five million television viewers observed the police chase in which O.J Simpson was trying to flee from police in the area of Los Angeles. Did O.J Simpson plan the perfect murder or was he really an innocent man that was linked to a heinous murder? On July 9, 1947 Orenthal James Simpson was born. James Simpson he grew up in San Francisco California. In 1952 Orenthal parents separated. He then lived …show more content…

During the investigation all the evidence led police to suspect that the killer was Orenthal Simpson, he was then ordered to surrender on June 17early in the morning Orenthal disappeared but was eventually apprehend later because he made a phone call from his cell phone while on the Santa Ana Freeway. “Although prosecutors had an overwhelming amount of DNA evidence against Simpson, including blood traces of the victims in his car and Nicole’s blood on a pair of his socks, the defense used technical mistakes by the forensics team to suggest contamination of the crime scene and cast doubt on the DNA evidence” (People …show more content…

She had a strong case against Orenthal’s, She provided that the gloves found near the dead bodies were originally from the property of Orenthal Simpson, Clark also provided the results to the DNA tests that clearly associated him to the blood stains that belonged to the victims. 1995 October 3, the jury establish that Orenthal was not guilty of the murder of his Ex-wife and Ronald Goldman.” The Trial of the Century” ended with the acquittal, by an overwhelmingly black jury” (cbsnews). Despite the proceedings that had taken place in court, he was brought to a civil court trial, in 1997 on February he was found Guilty for the murders Ronald Goldman and Nicole Brown Simpson, and Orenthal was ordered to pay each of both families $33.5 million in compensation. In 1999 Orenthal moved to Florida. His home was put into passion of the state to cover the cost of to civil damages. Orenthal was in process of publishing his story If I Did It—symbolism of what it would have been if he really did commit the murders Goldman and Nicole Brown Simpson—, after the book became available the judge awarded the book's privileges to the family of Ronald Goldman. The family of Goldman decided to re-titled the book before it published for the world to see the name soon became If I Did It: Confessions of the Killer; the book was later then published in September 2007. “When

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