Yuma Sun

O.J. Simpson is freed, with no word on where he went next

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LAS VEGAS — Officials at a remote Nevada prison where O.J. Simpson was set free early Sunday after nine years for armed robbery arranged the former football and Hollywood star’s deadof-night departure to avoid public scrutiny.

It worked. Simpson signed release paperwork just before midnight and disappeare­d into the darkness minutes into the first day he was eligible for release. Through efforts by prison officials to keep the time and place secret, there were no journalist­s outside the prison gates to capture the moment.

Though publicity-prone in the past, Simpson was neither heard from nor seen publicly as the day wore on — apparently taking the advice of people in his inner circle that he avoid the spotlight.

Simpson was released at 12:08 a.m. PDT from Lovelock Correction­al Center in northern Nevada, state prisons spokeswoma­n Brooke Keast told The Associated Press. She said she didn’t know the name of the driver who met him and took him to an undisclose­d location.

Keast recorded and released a brief video on social media in which Simpson is told to “come on out” and he responds “OK” after walking through an open door and toward a parking lot bordered by desert scrub brush.

“I don’t have any informatio­n on where he’s going,” said Keast, who also took photograph­s showing Simpson — in blue jeans, denim jacket, eyeglasses, ball cap and white sneakers — signing documents about 10 minutes before midnight. He left the prison with four or five boxes of possession­s in the car, she said.

Tom Scotto, a Simpson friend who lives in Naples, Fla., said by text message an hour after the release that he was with Simpson. But Scotto did not answer texts asking where they were going or whether members of Simpson’s family were with them.

Along with Simpson’s sister and oldest daughter, Scotto had attended the July parole hearing at the same prison where Simpson went after his conviction for a botched 2007 heist at a Las Vegas hotel room — prison time he avoided after his 1995 acquittal in the killings of his ex-wife and her friend.

The 70-year-old Simpson said at the hearing that he wanted to move back to Florida, where he lived for nearly a decade before he was sent to prison in 2008. That return did not appear imminent.

Florida’s Correction­s Department “has not received any transfer paperwork from Nevada” about Simpson that would be required for him to live in the state and be monitored there, spokeswoma­n Ashley Cook said Sunday.

Though Florida’s attorney general has urged correction­s officials to object to Simpson’s return, the department previously has said it would be required to accept a transfer if it met certain criteria.

“We understand we may have to take him, if he was a model prisoner. And two of his children live here, so that’s his hook for coming to Florida,” state Attorney General Pam Bondi said. “If we have to accept him, I certainly want conditions placed on him.”

Simpson’s attorney, Malcolm LaVergne said recently that Simpson looked forward to reuniting with his family, eating steak and seafood and returning to Florida. Simpson also planned to get an iPhone and get reacquaint­ed with technology in its infancy when he began his sentence, his attorney said.

Simpson told the parole board that he led a “conflictfr­ee life,” an assertion that angered many who believe he got away with killing his ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend, Ronald Goldman, in Los Angeles in 1994. He was acquitted the following year . In a statement released through a family spokesman, Goldman’s parents said they respected the parole board’s decision to release Simpson, but that it was “still difficult for us knowing he will be a free man again.”

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