THE BIG REASON WHY O.J. SIMPSON GOT OFF MURDER

They called it the trial of the century. I call it the travesty of all time. Either way you look at it, the O.J. Simpson murder case was exceptionally high profile. Millions of people around the world watched the eleven-month spectacle known as the O.J. trial. It had all the right TV elements—celebrity superstar, the Dream Team defense, allegations of corrupt cops, supposedly compromised witnesses and contaminated evidence, not to mention playing the race card from the bottom of the deck. It ended with O.J.’s acquittal when the jury nullified his indictment. Twenty-five years later, the big reason why O.J. Simpson got off murder is now black and white.

Before examining the big reason why O.J. got off, it’s necessary to look at the overall picture—the preponderance of the evidence—and examine investigation and trial components to see what went wrong. It’s the combination of prosecution errors and defense counsel tactics that turned an open-and-shut homicide case into a three-ring media circus. Ultimately, this shameful chain of events caused jurors to reject convicting an absolutely 100% guilty man.

How I got onto this subject was recently reading (or trying to read) Outrage by Vincent Bugliosi. The 1996 book is subtitled The Five Reasons Why O.J. Simpson Got Away With Murder. You might recall who Vincent Bugliosi is. He’s the power-prosecutor who put away the Charles Manson Family and wrote the book Helter Skelter.

Vincent Bugliosi had no part in the O.J. prosecution. He was commissioned to write a critical book. As a lawyer who prosecuted over a hundred murders in his career, and losing only one, Bugliosi earned the right to critique the O.J. trial. That he did with ferocity in Outrage.

I find Bugliosi’s writing style hard to read. He’s verbose and rambling, bombastic and sarcastic, not to mention arrogant and conceited. Give me a good Bob Woodward book any day, but I did make it through Outrage. I also went down a spiraling research tunnel that started with internet rabbit-holing, and I found more people with equally-great accreditations who had one more point to offer than Bugliosi’s five reasons why O.J. got off the murder charges.

I agree with all five of Vincent Bugliosi’s reasons. Just because I don’t particularly care for his script doesn’t mean he’s wrong on any point. I just think he missed another major point that led to the indictment’s nullification—and he failed to summarize his five points into the one big reason why O.J. Simpson got off murder. Before I list Bugliosi’s five criticisms, the 6th point, and the overall #1 reason, let’s do a quick review of the case history.

The O.J. Simpson Case History

Orenthal James Simpson was a black National Football League superstar. He was also a movie star and product endorser for a major orange juice producer. Over the years, O.J. got the nickname “The Juice”.

O.J. married Nicole Brown, a white woman, in 1985. They were wealthy, had two children, and had a host of celebrity friends. They also had extreme marital challenges—many fights that ended in violence.

Looking back, Nicole Brown-Simpson was the classic victim of battered woman syndrome. The murder investigation identified sixty-two documented incidents where the Simpsons fought. They resulted in his threatening her life, her seeking protection in women’s shelters, and even the police intervening and arresting O.J.

Nicole filed for divorce in February 1992. She cited irreconcilable differences rather than repeated assaults and mental cruelty. Despite the divorce, O.J. kept stalking Nicole. She called a women’s shelter four days before her death, reporting continual harassment from O.J. and that a set of keys for her home were missing.

On June 12, 1994, Nicole Brown-Simpson attended a dance rehearsal for her daughter in Santa Monica, California which is the Los Angeles suburb where they lived. O.J. was there as a legitimate father, and he attempted to reconcile with her. Nicole refused. She then went to dinner at a restaurant where Ron Goldman worked.

Ron Goldman and Nicole weren’t a romantic item. They were friends, and Nicole’s mother accidently left her eyeglasses at the restaurant when the dinner party left. Once Nicole got home, a phone call verified the glasses were left behind and Ron Goldman offered to drop them off at Nicole’s home when he got off work.

Nicole Brown-Simpson and Ron Goldman were found stabbed to death outside Nicole’s home. They were discovered by a neighbor at 12:10 a.m. on June 13, 1994. Autopsies indicated their times of death to be approximately 10:30 p.m. on June 12.

O.J. Simpson was an immediate suspect. The LAPD followed a trail of blood from Nicole’s home to O.J.’s estate—a five-minute drive away. O.J. was already gone. He’d taken a red-eye to Chicago and was in a hotel room when LAPD detectives phoned him to give him the notice that his ex-wife was dead.

O.J. Simpson flew home to Los Angeles. He consented to an interview with detectives in which he denied involvement in Nicole and Ron Goldman’s deaths. He could not offer a verifiable alibi for the murder time, and he gave a weak explanation for a recent cut on his left hand.

The LAPD investigative team identified enough physical evidence to tie O.J. Simpson to the murder scene, as well as tying the victim’s blood to his personal residence. The DA filed a two-count murder indictment against Orenthal James Simpson for the criminal deaths of Nicole Brown-Simpson and Ronald Goldman.

The DA and O.J. Simpson’s lawyer worked out a surrender deal. But, instead of surrendering at the police station, O.J. Simpson pulled off the most famous slow-speed chase in the history of the world. Many millions watched on live TV as O.J. in a white Ford Bronco crawled along a LA freeway—O.J. in the back with a handgun to his head as his buddy drove slowly along with a mass of lights-flashing police cars right behind.

O.J. finally surrendered—without a violent incident. He went into custody while the police searched the Bronco. Besides O.J. leaving three letters which amounted to confessional suicide goodbyes, the police found $8,000 in cash, his US passport, a disguise with a hat and false whiskers, as well as a change of clothing and a .357 revolver. If there ever was evidence of a flight risk, this was it, and O.J. Simpson remained in custody for the next year and a half while his eleven-month farce trial played out.

I’m not going to go into the mass of evidence surfaced in the Brown-Goldman investigation and dealt with in the O.J. Simpson trial. That is far too complex for a blog post. Unfortunately, it was far too complex for the prosecution team to present, and far, far too complex for a jury to grasp—especially when the Dream Team defense did everything they could do to cloud the jurors’ vision.

In Outrage, Vincent Bugliosi identified five reasons why O.J. Simpson got away with murder. I’m convinced he’s right. However, I’m convinced there’s one more significant reason why the jury nullified Simpson’s indictment. But we’ll start with Mr. Bugliosi’s points.

1. Media Crime and Pretrial Coverage Influenced the Jury

I have no doubt whatsoever the massive live-media coverage of the slow-speed, white Bronco chase embedded itself in the nation’s psyche. Especially Los Angelers where it hit close to home as they scurried to overpasses to watch the scene pass by. You just don’t forget something as crazy as this.

I know I didn’t. I watched the performance up in Canada, and I was a murder cop with eighteen years of experience when this nut-show went down. I’d certainly heard of O.J. Simpson from his NFL fame, and I kinda got a kick outa his spoofy character in the Naked Gun movie.

I can’t imagine the impression the chase, arrest, and the wait-up to the trial took on the Los Angeles jury pool. And I can’t imagine anyone able to serve on the jury not hearing of the pre-trial events. Or having a pre-formed opinion about O.J. Simpson, his domestic situation, and the Los Angeles justice system.

2. Venue Change From Santa Monica to Downtown LA

Bugliosi is livid about this in Outrage. He has a good right to be. This was a shady, shady deal. Bugliosi pins this on a political move by the LA County Da, Gil Garcetti, who Bugliosi greases as a political hack of the lowest form.

Bugliosi may be right, or he may be wrong, about DA Garcetti’s character. But the decision to venue change from the suburban crime scene jurisdiction of Santa Monica to the urban downtown core of the City of Angeles was a fatal move. The juror gene pool racial demographics of inner LA compared to outer SM are cheese to chalk. The juror perceptions are even further apart.

O.J. Simpson and Nicole Brown-Simpson lived in upscale Santa Monica because that’s where their peers lived. O.J. was no more inner-city black than I am an Ivy League white. There’s a thing in jury common law that says a person has the right to be tried by peers in their local jurisdiction. (It might even be in the Constitution—yes, just checked.  Amendment 6 covers this for US citizens.) Putting the Simpson case into a downtown LA jury pool, rather than into a Santa Monica peer-pool—a lesser-educated and racially different peer-pool—entirely changed the social dynamics, and this seriously affected the jury panel’s psyche.

3. The Judge Lance Ito Factor

Who can forget the totally-out-of-his league O.J. Simpson trial judge by the name of Lance Ito? This guy had no more business running a major murder trial than I do performing in Carnegie Hall. Man, what a travesty of justice, and he was sitting on the bench through the entire process.

Bugliosi dismisses Lance Ito as a star-struck buffoon—someone who was unfit for Night Court (if anyone remembers the old comedy sit-com where the judge was actually the one with street smarts) or to replace Judge Judy. Good Lord, during the trial Judge Lance Ito would accept fan gifts and invite celebrities back into his chambers.

Bugliosi finds many faults in Lance Ito—justifiably found faults. But the biggest fault he finds in Ito—and a fatal fault for the trial—was Ito allowing the Dream Team defense to gut Detective Mark Fuhrman and drag his entrails through the trial muck as a racist goon who surreptitiously planted false evidence to frame The Juice. This lack of judicial ethics and irresponsible legal jurisprudence did enormous damage to the jurors’ impartial mindset.

4. Horrible Prosecutor Performance

Marcia Clark and Christopher Darden led the O.J. Simpson prosecution. Bugliosi criticizes Clark, a white woman, as being far beyond her experience and competency in handling the OJ case. He suggests that Darden, being a black man, was only there to serve as a token colored man.

I don’t want to pull the race card regarding the black and white prosecution pair as the dream team did, but I think both Marcia Clark and Chris Darden weren’t up for the job. In Bugliosi’s opinion, and mine, Clark and Darden blew it. Big time. Especially in clearly explaining the physical evidence like DNA in the bloodstains so the common juror could understand and accept the reality of how the murders happened and who caused them.

Bugliosi lists dozens of f-ups the prosecutors pulled. They didn’t establish O.J.’s motive by fully exposing the battered woman syndrome. They failed to disclose O.J.’s desperation to avoid capture during the Bronco chase. The jury never heard of the guilt-admission notes and the disguise, let alone of O.J. Simpson’s incriminating statements made to friends and the police. All around, Bugliosi paints a portrait of a weary and beaten pair of prosecutors who just wished the pain would stop.

5. The Prosecutors’ Final Submission

Bugliosi leads his reader through a maze of evidence. He sets the scene for prosecution failure from the onset, and it gets worse as the story unfolds. I kept reading, even though I wished he’d just shut up and tell the goddamn story as Stephen King so wisely advises in his tutorial to writers.

Clark and Darden played right into the race card trap the Dream Team ingeniously set for them. By ingeniously, I don’t mean it was truthfully, morally, or ethically right. It was the defense strategy right from the start, and the prosecution was blind to it.

The prosecution summary—the summation to the jury—agreed that Mark Fuhrman, the racism whipping boy, was a racist, however, that should not detract from the factual evidence showing O.J. was guilty. Jonnie Cochran, of the Dream Team, blew it out of the water by saying Fuhrman was, “A genocidal racist, a perjurer, America’s worst nightmare, and the personification of evil who single-handedly planted all of the evidence in an attempt to frame Simpson for the murders based purely on his dislike of interracial couples.”

Judge Lance Ito let ‘er slide.

——

I completely agree with Vincent Bugliosi’s five points about why O.J. Simpson got away with murder. But I think there’s one more. It’s a major point which, in the culmination of the Bugliosi Five, supports the big reason—the root cause—of why OG Simpson got off murder.

It’s not just the showmanship of the media lead-up with the slow-speed chase. It’s not just the celebrity hype. It’s not just the venue change. It’s not just the Ito factor. It’s not just poor prosecutor performance. And it’s not just the piss-poor summation.

It’s something much deeper that was at work during the O.J. Simpson murder trial.

Racism.

O.J. Simpson was ethnically black. Throughout his professional life, though, O.J. Simpson was essentially white. He worked with white people. He socialized with white people. He married a white woman. And his Dream Team was essentially white—exception being Johnnie Cochran.

O.J. Simpson’s jury was essentially black. There were nine black jurors, two white jurors, and one Hispanic juror on the panel. They were sequestered for 265 days and, if you know of the Stockholm Syndrome, you can imagine the long-term influence that confinement had on the jurors.

After eleven months of sole interaction, the O.J. Simpson jurors returned a not guilty verdict on all counts after less than four hours of deliberation. Their minds were made up, and there was little discussion. Unanimously, the O.J. Simpson jury nullified the indictment charging O.J. with murdering Nicole and Ron.

Null? Nullify? Nullified? Nullification? I’ve used variances of nullification throughout this piece. In my opinion, nullification by the jury is the big reason why O.J. Simpson got off murder.

Null is a legal term. You’ve heard of a contract being “null and void”. Nullify means rejecting the deal and putting an end to it. For jury trials, Merriman Webster dictionary says it means, “Acquitting a defendant in disregard to the judge’s instructions or contrary to the jury’s finding of fact.”

In the O.J. Simpson indictment, where he stood charged with intentionally murdering Nicole Brown-Simpson and Ron Goldman, the evidence was overwhelming that O.J. was 100% guilty. A blind half-wit would conclude that upon impartially hearing the evidence. However, the O.J. Simpson trial jurors unanimously disregarded the facts, and their duty to find the facts and decide to ignore the facts. Their impartial judgment was seriously compromised by the well-played defense race card.

There was a recent undercurrent to the O.J. jury decision, or their decision to nullify the indictment. Rodney King. You might remember the Rodney King trial from 1983 where white police officers were acquitted for beating King, a black man. King’s jury held ten whites, one Latino, and one Asian. Two years later, a reverse racial mixture acquitted or nullified the indictment of O. J. Simpson.

Nullification is an old legal concept. It’s been around for centuries and refers to cases—criminal and civil—where juries side with an accused person (or corporation) and let them off no matter how strong their wrongdoing evidence is. Here’s a definition of jury nullification from Cornell Law School:

Jury Nullification — A jury’s knowing and deliberate rejection of the evidence or refusal to apply the law either because the jury wants to send a message about some social issue that is larger than the case itself, or because the result dictated by law is contrary to the jury’s sense of justice, morality, or fairness. 

Jury nullification is a discretionary act and is not a legally sanctioned function of the jury. It is considered to be inconsistent with the jury’s duty to return a verdict based solely on the law and the facts of the case. The jury does not have a right to nullification, and counsel is not permitted to present the concept of jury nullification to the jury. However, jury verdicts of acquittal are unassailable even where the verdict is inconsistent with the weight of the evidence and instruction of the law.

At its core, nullification occurs when a trial jury reaches an anti-fact-based verdict when they disagree with the law or they disagree that the state should be prosecuting the accused. Indictment nullification also happens when the collective jury wants to make a social statement such as racial inequality or persecution.

There’s nothing to stop a jury from nullifying an indictment. Once it’s in the jury’s hands, and inside the deliberation room, it’s theirs to do what they see fit. They hold no currency. They have no account.

O.J. was black. He murdered two whites. The jury was powerfully black. The system was predominantly white. The big reason why O.J. Simpson got off murder was because of jury nullification due to racism.

20 thoughts on “THE BIG REASON WHY O.J. SIMPSON GOT OFF MURDER

  1. G Ward

    I just came across your blog and was encouraged to read such thought out reasons for why OJ was acquitted against so much evidence to the contrary. Aside from the incompetence of both Ito and the prosecution team it did all come done to jury nullification. Thank you for that crystal clear definition of why a murderer was found not guilty.

  2. Derek Lazar

    Great article, Gary.

    What do you do when all of society is filled with bias, politically charged individuals? Where do they go to select impartial and objective jury members? I guess no one is ever perfectly impartial, but I feel like as society becomes more and more political with deeper divides being drawn that it will become an even more challenging task.

    All we really have holding our society together is faith in institutions including the justice system. We can see with the Antifa and BLM riots in the states that this faith is diminishing for a lot of people, especially the younger crowd. It’s scary stuff and I honestly don’t know what the solution is.

    1. Garry Rodgers Post author

      Thanks, Derek! Nice to see you here and for posting a comment on a subject that really needs to be addressed. Great question about finding objective and impartial jurors. I don’t think it’s possible. I don’t think in the history of jury trials there’s ever been a perfect panel, just like there’s no perfect judge, lawyer, cop, or citizen. I’ve said it a lot over the years that I think the jury panel system is archaic. In fact, I think it sucks. Twelve strangers having to be unanimous with the burden of beyond a reasonable doubt which is a difficult benchmark to define? And this involves the “common person” who is not legally trained or experienced. Even the Supreme Court only requires a majority threshold, and they’re supposed to be the brightest legal minds in the land – and they rarely unanimously agree on major matters that shape our society.

      My suggestion for trials, criminal and civil, is a tribunal panel. There would be one judge who is the trier of law, one judge who is the trier of fact, and one Joe Schmuck (who is not a lawyer) who is the trier of common sense. Common sense which seemed to be the missing ingredient in the OJ case. The deep divide in the US – not just political but racial – is concerning, for sure. I don’t have the answer except to be aware of societal changes (which are constantly happening – always have & always will) and pick your news sources. Unfortunately, there’s no fix for stupid.

  3. JILLIAN BULLOCK

    Garry, I remember that day. I was at work in the break room and all my co-workers (black and white) stood around the TV waiting for the verdict. When it was announced that O.J. was not guilty, the black employees cheered and the white employees looked angry. I quickly went back to my desk incase things got heated among the employees. Later, a black employee stopped by my desk and said to me, “O.J. may be guilty, but he had to get off because how many black people have been beaten or killed by white people, especially cops, and they got off. This was justice for black people. About damn time.” Then, he walked to his office with a big smile on his face. So the nullification you speak about, I understand what that means now and you are correct. Even though I’m African-American, I’ve always believed O.J. was guilty, and I still feel sad for Nicole and Ron’s family.

    1. Garry Rodgers Post author

      Thanks for sharing your experience and thoughts, Jillian. It’s really helpful to hear this. It was in my mind, when I wrote this and hit the publish button, that some people might find the piece offensive. I’m white from a predominately white region, so I have no real concept of what interracial conditions are like in America. I’ve travelled through 37 of your 50 states over the years and have never had an unpleasant experience with anyone – black, white, Hispanic, asian, native, Arabic… no one. So when I put this together, I went for what I thought was the truth which I always try and stand up for. IMO, truth is universal and should not be twisted by race. Thanks again for your comments which I always appreciate!

    1. Garry Rodgers Post author

      Hi Patricia and thanks for your comment. I will never forget the verdict. By about half way through the trial I was pretty sure he’d get off. I still can’t believe they let people as junior as Clark and Darden run the case. It should have been someone senior like the Assistant DA. I do think it would have made a difference – also Judge Ito should have been canned right off the bat. Anyway, thems the circumstances.

  4. Leslie+Kennedy

    Great article Garry! Totally agree with you and still can’t believe he is out and about in Florida… You can see what he is up to on Twitter. Sad world we live in.

    1. Garry Rodgers Post author

      Thanks, Leslie 🙂 Nice to hear you enjoyed it. Sad state of affairs, this guy is. And to think that people give him the time of day by following on Twitter.

      1. LYNN R LAUGHLIN

        As always, well written, Garry! I recall all of this very well, right down to the “slow speed chase”, which would be funny if it didn’t involve the murder of two innocent people. SO much to convict him, right down to the photo that was found (by a tabloid, no less) of him wearing what he had previously referred to as “those ugly ass shoes” that he claimed he didn’t have.. have you seen the short film that was made by someone that day who focused on the garment bag that OJ brought back on the plane with him the day after the murders? Fascinating. OJ’s assistant, who was on the plane with him, hands it quietly to Robert Kardashian, and no one notices…..and Robert walks off with it….after having a long, whispered conversation with the assistant. The garment bag at the trial was noted to be a fairly new Louis Vuitton piece of luggage, appearing used, which the bag the assistant handed off to Kardashian did not appear to be new. I ican find it for you if you’re interested, or, with your research and computer skills, you could probably find it, too. It’s pretty interesting.

  5. Sue Coletta

    Excellent as always, Garry. I nodded the whole way through. During that time, I worked as a paralegal and the whole firm watched the trial every day. It seemed the entire legal community, me included, could’t tear ourselves away from the turpitude of the murders to the Dream Team’s theatrics. The mind-blowing verdict acted as the proverbial cherry atop a sundae of injustice. That idiotic display with the gloves made no sense. Anyone who’s ever owned a pair of leather gloves should know they shrink if you saturate them in water…or blood. Thankfully, karma boomeranged back to OJ.

    1. Garry Rodgers Post author

      Thank you, my BFF and soon-to-be cohost. “The mind-blowing verdict acted as the proverbial cherry atop a sundae of injustice.” You know, Sue, you have a way with words. Ever considered a career in writing? 🙂

  6. Lynn

    Excellent, articulate article from you, as always, Garry. And this one especially resonates with me because I was well into adulthood at the time this took place, in my 40s, to be accurate and I remember sitting on my bed and watching an amazement the slow speed white bronco Chase with what appeared at the time to be an endless stream of police lights in what appeared to be a sort of bizarre parade. I hate to admit it those things that you just couldn’t turn away from even though I on another level, really wanted to do so. I tried reading the Vincent bugliosi book as well and found it difficult to read just as you did and for the same reasons but yes, I also agreed with his reasons for why he felt OJ was found not guilt something that appeared to me to be guilt beyond any reasonable doubt. I believe you are absolutely correct about every word you wrote here, and I also want to add that though I am in the medical profession and not a legal one, it seemed to me at the time and even more so now, that the prosecution team was not up to the task by any stretch of the imagination. Going to send you an email in this regard as well thank you so much for publishing this one of your best!

    1. Garry Rodgers Post author

      Thank you, Lynn. I always appreciate your support and comments. I watched pieces of the trial as it progressed – moreso the news highlights. I was astounded at how poorly the prosecution performed, but I was even more astounded by the…. what’s the word I’m looking for…. sheer and utter incompetence of Judge Ito. He should have been fired after the first week. Yeah, Bugliosi’s book is a tough pill to swallow. He’s a terrible writer, and I wonder why he never came right out and called jury nullification by way of racism.

  7. Deb Gorman

    Wow! And the “man or woman on the street”, such as myself, busy raising kids, didn’t even know a quarter of all of that.

    Why isn’t jury nullification deemed illegal? It seems that in our current climate this tactic would be especially harmful to our legal system.

    1. Garry Rodgers Post author

      Hi Deb and fellow Kill Zoner! Great to see you here. Yes, the OJ trail was one humongous soap opera. It’s too bad the subject matter was real and two innocent victims – Nicole and Ron – weren’t allowed the justice that the system is supposed to provide. I could go on and on about how archaic the jury system is, but I no longer have the energy.

  8. Charles Erickson

    I agree 100% with everything you wrote. The whole trial was essentially a circus, an entertainment show that made millions and millions of dollars for the entertainment news industry. There was no legal proceeding involved, at least nothing with legitimacy. The only good thing I can think of is that Orenthal was too psychopathic to stay out of trouble, and he did eventually do nine years for a lesser offense. Good. I hope he has on his summer wardrobe when he dies, because it’s gonna be mighty warm where he is going.

    1. Garry Rodgers Post author

      Thanks for agreeing with me, Charles. I’m sure I’m going to hear some negative backfeed on this post because racism is a tough subject to handle. However, my tagline is “provoking thoughts” and the thought of OJ getting off still provokes me after a quarter century. Quick note for DyingWords followers. I was a homicide detective with 18 years service when the jury verdict came down. I was with four other very experienced murder cops watching the live shit-show. Before the news, all of us wrote our opinion of what the jury was going to do on a slip of folded paper and put it in a bowl. After the verdict, we opened the papers and it was a five-for-five “Not Guilties”. I’ve never seen such a miscarriage of justice before or again. The whole trial was a f’ing joke.

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