The Daily Telegraph

OJ dies ‘without penance’

American football star who had a catastroph­ic fall from grace after his trial for a double murder

- By Benedict Smith and Tony Diver

OJ SIMPSON died “without penance” after succumbing to cancer at the age of 76, the family of one of his victims has said.

The former American football star and actor, who was charged with killing his ex-wife Nicole Brown and her friend Ronald Goldman in 1994, died in Las Vegas yesterday. He was acquitted of the double murder but later found responsibl­e for their deaths in a civil case, and was ordered to pay $33.5 million (£26.68million) to Goldman’s family.

It is possible that Simpson’s estate may now be used to pay existing liabilitie­s from the case. Fred Goldman, Ronald’s father, recently alleged that Simpson had paid only a small fraction of the damages and owed $96 million in interest. Mr Goldman told NBC News last night: “The only thing I have to say is it’s just further reminder of Ron being gone all these years.”

A statement issued by the Simpson family yesterday said he “succumbed to his battle with cancer” and “was surrounded by his children and grandchild­ren”. A lawyer acting for Ronald Goldman’s family said Simpson “died without penance”. Mr Goldman said his death was “no great loss to the world”.

By the time of the murder trial, Simpson had been in the public eye for decades. He rose to fame in the 1970s as a running back for the NFL’S Buffalo Bills before becoming an actor with roles in the Naked Gun series.

Both careers were overshadow­ed by the double killing of Brown and Goldman in 1995, which made headlines around the world.

The football star led officers on a twohour car chase when told to turn himself in over the pair’s death, resulting in a live TV spectacle watched by an estimated 95million people.

Hundreds of spectators gathered to watch as his white Ford Bronco drove down the San Diego freeway. The ensuing court case, known as the “trial of the century”, became one of the most highprofil­e legal battles of all time.

Simpson’s “dream team” defence, led by Johnnie L Cochran and Robert Kardashian, accused the Los Angeles police of manufactur­ing evidence against the former athlete.

In one of the defining moments of the trial, Simpson appeared to struggle to pull on a pair of bloodstain­ed gloves the police had found at the crime scene. “If it doesn’t fit, you must acquit,” Cochran told the jury. The defence also argued that the police’s sloppy handling of DNA evidence – which placed Simpson at the crime scene – meant it could have been contaminat­ed or tampered with.

The case split the US along racial lines. In October 1995, one poll showed that 65 per cent of white Americans believed he was guilty, compared with 18 per cent of black Americans.

In the end, the 11-month trial came down to just four hours of deliberati­ons by the largely African-american jury, before they declared Simpson not guilty. Simpson’s courtroom successes were short-lived. In February 1997, he was found liable in a civil court for the wrongful deaths of Brown and Goldman.

In 2006, Simpson sold a book manuscript titled If I Did It to an imprint of Harpercoll­ins, providing a hypothetic­al account of the killings he had repeatedly denied committing.

The copies were pulped and the project cancelled following a public outcry, but Goldman’s family eventually secured the rights to the book to pay off some of Simpson’s liabilitie­s from the civil case. It was eventually published with a redesigned cover that reduced the size of the word “If ”, so it appears to read: “I Did It.” This was paired with the subtitle “Confession­s of the Killer”.

Thirteen years to the day after he was acquitted of the murder of Brown and Goldman, Simpson was convicted of armed robbery in Las Vegas.

He insisted that he was trying to retrieve items from sports memorabili­a dealers that had been stolen following his criminal trial. He served nine years in a Nevada prison before being released in 2017. Simpson had five children: three with his first wife, Marguerite, and two more with Nicole Brown.

OJ SIMPSON, the American athlete, film star and murder suspect, who has died aged 76, was a one-time paragon, celebrated national hero and revered role model; in the course of a few months, following the brutal killing of his second wife in the mid-1990s, he morphed into a monstrous hate-figure and in 2006 was ranked among the 50 Most Loathsome Americans of the Year.

If there was a Shakespear­ean quality about Simpson’s fall from grace, it was indissolub­ly linked to his almost God-like pre-eminence as a black American who, despite his humble origins, had made it to the top, lived the dream and claimed the glittering prizes.

Simpson’s fate at the climax of his criminal trial in 1995 – one of the longest in American legal history – became essential viewing for the American public and drew one of the biggest audiences in the history of television. Polls suggested that most black Americans regarded Simpson as a victim of racism, while more than half of whites considered him guilty.

When the jury found Simpson not guilty of murder, the verdict was widely interprete­d as America’s great black hope beating white man’s justice. Not satisfied with being cleared, Simpson also wanted his adulation back, but in the event he became a social and profession­al pariah.

The impotent rage felt by many white Americans at his baffling acquittal was compounded more than a decade later by what his critics saw as Simpson’s gruesomely detailed confession to double murder in a book to be coyly titled If I Did It but which, in the event, he never actually published. Simpson also starred in a pay-per-view special called Juiced (2003), in which he was seen trying to sell people his infamous white Ford Bronco, saying: “It was good for me – it helped me get away.”

Certainly, from the moment America stopped and watched Simpson’s Bronco crawling down a California freeway, to the verdict and its far-reaching aftermath, the nation – and the world – was held captive by his story. Simpson’s trial for the murder of his ex-wife Nicole and her friend Ron Goldman both riveted and appalled global TV audiences.

It prompted a debate about American justice and the media; commentato­rs accused broadcaste­rs of turning Simpson’s trial into Hollywood hoop-la that, as one British editorial put it, “often bordered on the farcical”. Another condemned Simpson’s trial as “a sick, dire joke”.

In November 1995 he was acquitted in less than four hours on a unanimous jury decision at the end of an extraordin­ary trial that had gripped America for a year. Simpson celebrated his acquittal with a party at his mansion fuelled by 40 cases of champagne.

Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman were stabbed to death outside her townhouse in the wealthy Brentwood district of Los Angeles in June 1994. Simpson was arrested soon after the killings but insisted from the start that he was “absolutely, 100 per cent not guilty”.

Prosecutin­g lawyers produced evidence that included a pair of gloves – one found at the crime scene, the other at Simpson’s apartment. But after Simpson struggled to fit the gloves on, Johnnie Cochran, the most flamboyant of his all-star legal team, told jurors: “If it doesn’t fit, you must acquit.” Prosecutor­s also emphasised his violent relationsh­ip with his ex-wife; she had often complained of being beaten by Simpson, who was jealous of her and other men.

Simpson described Nicole’s bruising injuries as merely the result of friendly “wrassling”, but after what was described as a “rocky marriage”, in 1992 she filed for divorce. After her murder, suspicion immediatel­y fixed on Simpson who, instead of surrenderi­ng to police, fled in his Bronco, disguised and carrying his passport.

After the criminal trial, the families of Ronald Goldman and Nicole Brown Simpson filed a civil court case against Simpson and in 1997 were awarded more than $30 million in compensato­ry damages. The civil jury took six days to reach a verdict and to declare Simpson responsibl­e. He successful­ly challenged paying the award, retained custody of his children and moved to Florida.

The talent agency that had represente­d Simpson for 20 years, and his personal agent, both dropped him as a client. Meanwhile, most of Simpson’s friends had melted away, especially in acutely class-conscious Los Angeles, where he was told that he was no longer welcome at his exclusive golf club.

Orenthal James Simpson was born on July 9 1947 in San Francisco. He had a difficult upbringing: his parents separated when he was five, by which time he had contracted rickets, requiring him to wear homemade braces. At Galileo High School he played for the school American football team, but by 1960 he had joined a San Francisco street gang called the Persian Warriors, and in 1962 was incarcerat­ed at a local youth guidance centre. His high school grades being low, he enrolled at a junior college, but on the strength of his athletic prowess was admitted to the University of Southern California where, in the 1968 Rose Bowl, he was named the game’s most outstandin­g player.

Universall­y known by then as “OJ”, or “The Juice”, Simpson quickly rose to fame as one of the most celebrated running backs in the history of American football. He spent most of his career playing for the Buffalo Bills in New York, finishing his profession­al days with the San Francisco 49ers.

On his retirement from football, Simpson became a successful actor, appearing in the television mini-series Roots (1977) and several successful feature films; he played a dimwitted detective in the Naked Gun trilogy between 1988 and 1994 and, in The Klansman (1974), a man framed for murder by the police. In the same year, he also appeared in the highly popular disaster movie The Towering Inferno.

He was reportedly considered for the lead role in The Terminator before the producers decided he looked insufficie­ntly villainous. But Simpson’s abundant charisma landed him several endorsemen­t deals, notably with the Hertz car hire firm. And as well as his acting, he enjoyed stints as a television sports commentato­r.

The damage to his reputation caused by his criminal and civil trials ruined Simpson’s acting career, and while continuing to draw his football pension he was forced to scrabble for television work. He visited Britain in the late 1990s, and addressed the Oxford Union, where he was heckled by protesting campaigner­s for women’s rights. At the end of an interview with Ruby Wax for BBC One, Simpson pretended to stab her with a banana while mimicking the music from Psycho.

Late in 2006, Simpson earned further opprobrium by planning to publish a book about the murders for which he had been acquitted, but which apparently outlined a scenario predicated on his guilt.

His account, provisiona­lly entitled If I Did It, was withdrawn at the 11th hour by the book’s publisher, Rupert Murdoch. Then in 2007, a Florida bankruptcy court gave the rights to the Goldman family, who published it under the title I Did It: Confession­s of the Killer.

In 2008 he was sentenced to jail after holding up two sports memorabili­a dealers in a room at a Las Vegas hotel then stealing items from them. He was released in 2017.

OJ Simpson’s first marriage, in 1967, to Marguerite L Whitley, ended in divorce after 12 years; in 1985 he married Nicole Brown, whom he had met while she was a 17-yearold waitress, and who divorced him in 1992.

Following his murder acquittal he had a 13-year relationsh­ip with Christie Prody, whom he had met when she was a 19-yearold cocktail waitress; when the relationsh­ip had ended she claimed that she had often feared for her life during it.

Simpson, who had prostate cancer, is survived by two children from his first marriage – a third child drowned in a childhood accident – and by two children from his second.

OJ Simpson, born July 9 1947, died April 10 2024

 ?? ?? OJ Simpson, the former NFL player whose double murder trial was played out on screens across the world, has died aged 76 after ‘succumbing to his battle with cancer’
OJ Simpson, the former NFL player whose double murder trial was played out on screens across the world, has died aged 76 after ‘succumbing to his battle with cancer’
 ?? ?? Simpson, above, during his Hollywood years, on the set of Firepower in 1978 and, right, ‘the Juice’ in action: he rose to fame as one of the most celebrated running backs of all time
Simpson, above, during his Hollywood years, on the set of Firepower in 1978 and, right, ‘the Juice’ in action: he rose to fame as one of the most celebrated running backs of all time
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