Antelope Valley Press

Simpson keeps fighting in Vegas against judgments

- By KEN RITTER Associated Press

LAS VEGAS — O.J. Simpson will keep fighting recent court orders in Nevada that he owes at least $60 million in judgments stemming from the 1994 killings of his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend, Ron Goldman, his lawyer said Friday.

Attorney Malcolm LaVergne said he intends to ask the Nevada Supreme Court to overturn one judge’s order to pay the slain man’s father, Fred Goldman, and another judge’s order in favor of Paul Dorsey, a Connecticu­t man holding rights to collect the wrongful death claim of Ron Goldman’s mother, Sharon Rufo.

“I will be appealing both of those,” LaVergne said, “and there will be more motions at the trial level.”

The flurry of court activity represents another turn in a more than two-decade fight by Ron Goldman’s parents to collect some $33.5 million that a California civil jury ordered Simpson to pay in 1997, two years after he was acquitted of double murder in what came to be known as “The Trial of the Century.”

New court filings followed a March 31 settlement of Simpson’s 2019 lawsuit against The Cosmopolit­an of Las Vegas, a hotel-casino where he alleged he was defamed by unnamed employees telling a celebrity news site he had been banned from the property in November 2017 for being drunk and disruptive.

LaVergne refuses to say if money changed hands in the settlement.

“They can’t prove there are any settlement proceeds,” he said Friday, promising to litigate “to the very end.”

In court filings, attorneys for The Cosmopolit­an point to a confidenti­ality clause of the agreement and declare the resort “did not give any money or property to Mr. Simpson pursuant to the settlement.”

The Cosmopolit­an previously argued that Simpson couldn’t be defamed because his reputation was already tarnished by his criminal and civil trials in the deaths of his ex-wife and her friend, and by his conviction and imprisonme­nt in Nevada in a 2007 armed robbery case.

Simpson was convicted in Las Vegas in 2008, but has always maintained he and five men confrontin­g two memorabili­a dealers at a casino hotel room were just trying to retrieve personal mementos stolen from him following his 1995 acquittal in Los Angeles. Two of the men had guns.

Attorney Craig Newman, representi­ng Dorsey, pointed Friday to a June 7 court order keeping Simpson on the hook for at least $4.6 million. But Newman acknowledg­ed there can be more court fights — including to determine if Simpson actually received money from The Cosmopolit­an.

Attorney Larson Welsh, representi­ng Goldman, was out of the office Friday and did not immediatel­y respond to emails about a June 3 ruling favoring Fred Goldman.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? O.J. Simpson’s lawyer says he’ll keep fighting recent court orders in Nevada that the former football star owes least $60 million in judgments stemming from the 1994 killings of his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend, Ron Goldman.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES O.J. Simpson’s lawyer says he’ll keep fighting recent court orders in Nevada that the former football star owes least $60 million in judgments stemming from the 1994 killings of his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend, Ron Goldman.

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