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Simpson to go free after serving more than 8 years for robbery Page A7

Ex-football star, actor to be released in fall for being model inmate

- By Richard Pérez-Peña NEW YORK TIMES

O.J. Simpson is granted parole after more than eight years in prison for a hotel-room heist, successful­ly making his case for parole in a nationally televised hearing.

O.J. Simpson, the former football hero and actor whose goodguy image vanished when he was accused of murdering his ex-wife and her friend, will go free after serving nine years in a Nevada prison on charges stemming from an armed robbery, a state parole board ruled Thursday.

Simpson, who turned 70 this month, went before the board as a man convicted of taking a group of accomplice­s, two of them armed with guns, to a cheap Las Vegas hotel room in 2007 to take hundreds of items from a sports memorabili­a dealer. But it is the 1994 murders of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman, for which he was acquitted after the most-watched trial in history, that have cast the longer, darker shadow over his life and reputation.

‘A conflict-free life’

After his conviction in 2008, a judge sentenced Simpson to nine to 33 years in state prison, meaning that he becomes eligible for parole for the first time Oct. 1. Based on his age and the fact that he has been a model prisoner, the Nevada Board of Parole Commission­ers granted his release the first time it was considered, rather than denying parole and making him wait years for another chance.

Simpson, wearing a light blue denim shirt and looking considerab­ly thinner than at a hearing in 2013, walked into the hearing just after 1 p.m. Eastern time. As the chairwoman of the parole board, Connie Bisbee, read the charges he was convicted of, he heaved a sigh and grimaced.

When Bisbee slipped and said Simpson was 90 years old, not 70, he said, “I feel like it, though.”

Under questionin­g by parole commission­ers, Simpson stuck to a version of the robbery that, as the board member Tony Corda said, “differs a little from the official record.”

He insisted that the items he took from the memorabili­a dealer, Bruce Fromong, whom he knew well, were his property. And he said he was not aware at the time that two of the men he took to the hotel room, whom he referred to as “security guys,” brandished guns.

He said he had never brandished a weapon at anyone and never would, adding, “I basically have spent a conflict-free life.”

Simpson’s daughter, Arnelle, testified to the board on behalf of his family.

“We just want him to come home,” she said.

“My experience with him is that he’s like my best friend and my rock,” said Arnelle Simpson, 48, who is the oldest of O.J. Simpson’s four children. “I know that he is remorseful; he is truly remorseful.”

Facing restrictio­ns

Arnelle Simpson and other members of his family live in California. O.J. Simpson lived most of his life in California, but in the years leading up to his conviction, he lived in Florida.

When Simpson leaves prison, will he be able to have a beer? He may not — parolees usually face numerous restrictio­ns that do not apply to most people. Typically, they are required to appear for regular check-ins, submit to drug and alcohol tests and cooperate with their parole officer, who can send violators back behind bars.

In Nevada, the standard conditions of parole require the parolee to get permission before moving, refrain from drinking alcohol or carrying a weapon of any kind and seek and maintain a job. Parolees may not associate with anyone who has a criminal record.

A parole board official, David Smith, spoke at a news conference after the decision of release was announced. He cited Simpson’s positive record in prison, a minimal record of prior conviction­s, his participat­ion in programs addressing the behavior that led to incarcerat­ion and family support as factors in his release.

Simpson’s felony conviction­s came 13 years to the day after a Los Angeles jury found him not guilty of murdering Nicole Brown Simpson and Goldman after one of the longest and mostwatche­d criminal cases in history.

Different case in mind

In 1997, in a civil trial, another jury found that Simpson was responsibl­e for their deaths and awarded their families $33.5 million in damages; he has paid a fraction of that amount.

What makes Simpson’s case unique, of course, is that people watching it have a different case in mind, the 1994 double murder.

It did not help matters that the 2007 robbery occurred on the same day as the release of “If I Did It: Confession­s of the Killer,” a book based on interviews Simpson gave, describing — in theory, hypothetic­ally — how he could have carried out the murders.

One of his lawyers, Yale Galanter, has said that the charges filed against Simpson were excessive and has suggested that the jurors were influenced by the earlier case. Though jurors were prohibited from considerin­g any outside factors, “My biggest concern was whether or not the jury would be able to separate their very strong feelings about Mr. Simpson and judge him fairly and honestly,” Galanter said after the 2008 conviction.

The Clark County district attorney at the time, David Roger, and members of the jury have insisted that their actions were no more than a reflection of the crimes Simpson committed in that Las Vegas hotel.

 ?? Jason Bean / Bloomberg ?? O.J. Simpson could be released as soon as Oct. 1.
Jason Bean / Bloomberg O.J. Simpson could be released as soon as Oct. 1.
 ?? Pool photo by Jason Bean / Getty Images ?? O.J. Simpson was granted parole based on his age and the fact that he has been a model prisoner after serving a nine- to 33-year prison term for a 2007 armed robbery and kidnapping conviction.
Pool photo by Jason Bean / Getty Images O.J. Simpson was granted parole based on his age and the fact that he has been a model prisoner after serving a nine- to 33-year prison term for a 2007 armed robbery and kidnapping conviction.

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