Chicago Sun-Times

‘ Pawn’ takes THEwhite Bronco out on the road

SUV from O. J.’ s slow ’ 94 chase could sell for $ 1M

- Bill Keveney @ billkev USA TODAY

As O. J. Simpson waits to get out of a Nevada prison, the vehicle he made famous could be earning its current owner a big payday in the Silver State.

The white Ford Bronco that carried Simpson during the infamous 1994 slow- speed chase on Los Angeles freeways is the featured item on Monday’s episode of History’s Pawn Stars ( 10 ET/ PT).

For Pawn star and Las Vegas pawnshop operator Rick Harrison, who buys all manner of property on the long- running reality series, the vehicle has a history that attracts and repels.

“I try and stay away from stuff ( connected to) bad people, but it’s so iconic,” he tells USA TODAY. “The O. J. Bronco is really a bizarre part of history. My 14year- old son doesn’t know anything about the ’ 90s ... but he knows about the Bronco.”

Harrison says he was approached by the vehicle’s owner, former Simpson agent Mike Gilbert, who tells him he bought it from Simpson friend and chase chauffeur A. C. Cowlings. In the episode, Gilbert says he previously turned down an offer of $ 500,000 for the vehicle, which he says is a 1992 model driven just 36,000 miles.

The timing may be good for a sale, as Simpson, serving a prison sentence since being convicted in connection with a 2007 Las Vegas armed robbery, recently was back in the news, gaining parole after a hearing that drew millions of viewers. The former NFL star, who was acquitted of the 1994 murders of ex- wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her companion, Ronald Goldman, could be out of jail by October.

Harrison first verified that the Bronco, which is in fact a 1993 model, was the one used in the televised chase, which mesmerized viewers and drew huge ratings.

Harrison says it can be difficult to assess a one- of- a- kind piece of property tied to a specific event, since potential buyers may attach wildly different valuations based on their personal feelings.

At auction, he estimates the Bronco could go for anywhere from $ 300,000 to $ 1 million, a price that limits the number of potential buyers.

“It’s a super- famous car,” he says. “But there’s also a really nasty stigma.”

 ?? A& E NETWORKS ?? Rick Harrison, right, tests the Bronco with Mike Gilbert, left, and Chumlee Russell in Pawn Stars.
A& E NETWORKS Rick Harrison, right, tests the Bronco with Mike Gilbert, left, and Chumlee Russell in Pawn Stars.

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