Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

O.J. Simpson estate to battle $33.5 mn wrongful death award

- (AFP)

The executor of O.J. Simpson’s estate will fight to stop families of the late NFL star’s alleged murder victims from receiving funds from a $33.5 million wrongful death judgment that found him liable for the killings, a report said Saturday. Simpson, who died on Wednesday aged 76, was acquitted in 1995 of murdering ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ron Goldman in a court case dubbed “The Trial of the Century.” But a subsequent 1997 civil trial found Simpson liable for the brutal doubleslay­ing and ordered the American football icon-turned-actor to pay $33.5 million to the victims’ families.

The father of Ron Goldman, Fred Goldman, waged a decades-long pursuit of Simpson in order to force him to make good on the settlement. Simpson is believed, however, to have paid only a fraction of the 1997 figure, with a 2021 report stating that the Goldmans had received just under $133,000.

Simpson’s long-time lawyer

Malcolm Lavergne told the Las Vegas Review-journal on Saturday that he was determined to ensure that the Goldman family not receive anything from Simpson’s estate.

“It’s my hope that the Goldmans get zero, nothing,” Lavergne was quoted by the paper as saying. “Them specifical­ly. And I will do everything in my capacity as the executor or personal representa­tive to try and ensure that they get nothing.”

Lavergne apparently was angered that the Goldmans at one point had gained control of the manuscript of Simpson’s book “If I Did It,” and retitled it, “If I Did It: Confession­s of the Killer.”

The Review-journal reported that Lavergne was named as executor of Simpson’s estate in court documents filed Friday, a day after the alleged killer’s

A subsequent 1997 civil trial found Simpson liable for the brutal double-slaying...

family announced his death. Lavergne could not immediatel­y be reached for comment by AFP on Saturday. Lavergne told the Review-journal that the exact value of Simpson’s estate was unclear.

“I can’t make a predicatio­n right now as to what the value of the estate is,” Lavergne said.

The lawyer said Simpson had first been diagnosed “several years ago” with prostate cancer, which went into remission before returning recently. Fred Goldman on Thursday greeted news of Simpson’s death as saying it was “no great loss.”

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