Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

RUNNING BACK TO FLORIDA?

Granted parole, O.J. Simpson could get his wish to head south as early as October

- By Johnny Diaz | Staff writer

Disgraced former football star O.J. Simpson told the Nevada parole board Thursday that he plans to return to Florida, a state he called home for several years before being sentenced in 2008 for a Las Vegas hotel heist.

But could the Heisman Trophy winner return to South Florida? It’s where he lived a relatively quiet life in the suburbs. Hewas known for his love of golfing and eating at chain restaurant­s such as Hooters.

Simpson, 70, could be released fromthe Lovelock Correction­al Center, 93 miles northeast of Reno, as early as Oct. 1. That’s when he will have

completed the minimum of his 9- to 33-year sentence for armed robbery, stemming from his attempt to retrieve some of his sports memorabili­a in 2007.

All four parole commission­ers voted for his release after about a half-hour of deliberati­ons. Theycited his lack of a prior conviction, the low risk that he might commit another crime, his community support and his release plans, whichinclu­de moving to Florida.

“Thank you, thank you, thank you,” Simpson said quietly asheburied hishead in his chest with relief. Ashe rose from his seat to return to his prison cell, he exhaled deeply.

On social media and in news reports, people wondered whether “The Juice” — the former star running back at the University of Southern California, No. 1 pick in the 1969 NFL draft and member of the Buffalo Bills and San Francisco 49ers— might come back to South Florida.

In 2000, five years after being acquitted in the 1994 fatal stabbings of his exwife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend Ron Goldman in Los Angeles, Simpson moved to Kendall. He bought a four-bedroom, four-bath home at 9450 SW 112th St. for $575,000.

He lived there with his children, Sydney and Justin, who were teenagers and attended the nearby Gulliver Schools in Pinecrest.

During his seven years in South Florida, Simpson couldn’t help but draw attention.

Fans shouted out “Juice” when they spotted him at restaurant­s. Theyaskedh­im for photograph­s near his Kendall neighborho­od, between South Dixie Highway andMiami Killian Senior High School.

He also found himself back in the news over several incidents.

In December 2000, Simpson was involved in a traffic dispute with amotorist near his home. A jury acquitted Simpson, who had been accused of reaching into the motorist’s car and pulling off the man’s glasses.

There were 911 calls for domestic incidents involving Simpson’s then-girlfriend, Christie Prody, but no chargeswer­e filed.

In 2001, police and federal agents searched Simpson’shomeas part of a drugring investigat­ion. No chargeswer­e filed.

On July 4, 2002, Simpson was cited for speeding in a powerboat in a manatee zone near downtown Miami.

In 2007, he was arrested on charges including kidnapping and armed robbery of sportsmemo­rabilia in the Vegas hotel incident, where he said he was trying to reclaim some of his property. He and five accomplice­s — two with guns — allegedly stormed a hotel room and seized photos, plaques and signed footballs, some of which never belonged to Simpson, from two sports memorabili­a dealers.

While out on bail, Simpson continued residing in Kendall.

In 2008, he was sentenced to the Lovelock Correction­al Center, where he was InmateNo. 1027820.

Going into his parole hearing Thursday, the Pro Football Hall of Fame athlete’s chances of winning releasewer­e considered good, given similar cases and Simpson’s model behavior behind bars.

While he was in prison, JPMorgan Chase Bank foreclosed on his Kendall house. The property later was purchased by Global Rental E& P, an investment company in Doral, for $513,000 in 2014, according to Miami-Dade Property Appraiser records. Last year, Southern Farms Internatio­nal USA, which has a Weston mailing address, bought the house for $1.2 million.

The 4,148-square-foot home, which has a pool, basketball court and separate guesthouse, has been renovated, according to real estate agent Oscar Ramirez, who listed it seven months ago. The current asking price: $1,299,900.

At the parole hearing, Simpson was asked whetherhe could stay out of trouble if he were released. He replied that that he had learned a lot from an alternativ­escourse hetook inprisonan­dthathe hasalways gotten alongwell with people.

“I had basically spent conflict-free life,” he said.

After saying he hoped to go to Florida, he jokingly told the board: “I could easily stay in Nevada, but I don’t think you guys want me here.”

TheAssocia­ted Press and Sun Sentinel researcher BarbaraHij­ek contribute­d to this report.

 ??  ?? CONVICTED, 2008 He was found guilty in Las Vegas of 12 counts that included felony kidnapping, armed robbery and conspiracy
CONVICTED, 2008 He was found guilty in Las Vegas of 12 counts that included felony kidnapping, armed robbery and conspiracy
 ??  ?? PAROLED, 2017 “I had basically spent a conflict-free life,” he told the board, after completing the minimum of his 9- to 33year term.
PAROLED, 2017 “I had basically spent a conflict-free life,” he told the board, after completing the minimum of his 9- to 33year term.
 ?? JASON BEAN/GETTY IMAGES POOL PHOTO ?? O.J. Simpson arrives for his parole hearing at Lovelock Correction­al Center on Thursday.
JASON BEAN/GETTY IMAGES POOL PHOTO O.J. Simpson arrives for his parole hearing at Lovelock Correction­al Center on Thursday.
 ?? JOHNNY DIAZ/STAFF ?? One of Simpson’s South Florida homes included this house near Pinecrest, bought in 2000.
JOHNNY DIAZ/STAFF One of Simpson’s South Florida homes included this house near Pinecrest, bought in 2000.
 ?? AP/ FILE ?? Simpson made a surprise appearance in Davie at a 2002 practice for the Orange Bowl, in which his alma mater, the University of Southern California, would play, led by quarterbac­k Carson Palmer, left.
AP/ FILE Simpson made a surprise appearance in Davie at a 2002 practice for the Orange Bowl, in which his alma mater, the University of Southern California, would play, led by quarterbac­k Carson Palmer, left.

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