San Francisco Chronicle

Judge rejects latest attempt to collect judgment

- By Brian Melley Brian Melley is an Associated Press writer.

SANTA MONICA — A judge on Tuesday turned down a legal move that sought to force O.J. Simpson to turn over profits from autographs to satisfy a $70 million-plus civil judgment for the 1994 killings of the former football star’s ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ron Goldman.

Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Gerald Rosenberg denied the request on grounds that Goldman’s father, Fred, cannot identify who is paying Simpson.

Simpson was acquitted of two counts of murder in the 1994 slayings, but a civil court jury found him liable for wrongful death and ordered him to pay $33.5 million, which has more than doubled over two decades.

Fred Goldman has hounded Simpson for years and Cook contends the former football star has never willingly paid a cent of the court order.

“Mr. Simpson has sought to subvert this wrongful death judgment by his abject refusal to pay, much less accept personal responsibi­lity,” Goldman family attorney David Cook said in court papers.

Simpson sold autographs shortly after his release from a Nevada prison in October to pay legal bills and has no interest in signing memorabili­a, one of his lawyers, Malcolm LaVergne, said in court papers.

Goldman and Cook have “attempted to drag Mr. Simpson into court every time they hear a rumor, see something on television, or read in an Internet news posting, a mere vague allegation involving Mr. Simpson’s commercial exploitati­on of himself,” attorney Ronald Slates wrote in court papers on behalf of Simpson.

While most of the court award has been unpaid, Fred Goldman has been able to seize some of the Pro Football Hall of Famer’s assets.

This includes video game royalties and the rights to the book “If I Did It,” a ghostwritt­en account in which Simpson tells how he might have killed his ex-wife and Ron Goldman.

Simpson, 70, served nine years in Nevada state prison for armed robbery and assault with a weapon in an ill-fated bid to retrieve memorabili­a.

 ?? Jason Bean / Associated Press 2017 ?? A civil court found O.J. Simpson liable for two deaths and ordered him to pay $33.5 million, which has more than doubled over two decades. He was a prisoner until last year in Nevada.
Jason Bean / Associated Press 2017 A civil court found O.J. Simpson liable for two deaths and ordered him to pay $33.5 million, which has more than doubled over two decades. He was a prisoner until last year in Nevada.

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