Simpson on trial again will he go down?

Tom Iron

Mentor
Joined
Oct 25, 2006
Messages
1,597
Location
New Jersey
All guys like oj need is time and more rope to be let out so they can eventually hang themselves. When simpson was let off the hook from killing his wife and the guy, people all thought that he got away with it. But, we never get away with anything in this life. When we see a guy we think got away with something, it's only an illusion. It just took a little time for him to go away. Now he's gone. I guess he'll probably do about half of the fifteen anyway. At his stage of life, that's not a good thing.

Unfortunately, he's very much a poster child for his race. No matter their wealth and circumstances, they have a gift of lousing up a good thing. It's not only blacks in sports either. It's in any line of work they set their hand to. Somehow, in the end, so many of them end up messing up their own lives and their friends and family members lives as well.

Amazing!!!

Tom Iron...
 

johnnyboy

Guru
Joined
Nov 15, 2007
Messages
357
Location
California
i hate OJ but i will thank him for one thing. he has given me a simple way of gauging someone's intelligence for years to come. when i meet someone and want to find out if they are smart or not. all i have to do is ask, "do you think OJ did it?"
 

white is right

Hall of Famer
Joined
Feb 16, 2006
Messages
10,050
Here is an interesting column from the Washington Post. Even Johnny Cochran wanted nothing to do with Simpson.....What Johnnie Cochran Really Thought About O.J.

It was late, nearing midnight, during O.J. Simpson's murder trial in Los Angeles. Simpson's lead attorney, Johnnie Cochran, had promised me an interview but had warned that we'd have to squeeze it in during off-hours. There weren't many off hours during the insanity of the Trial of the Century.

"Meet me at the office late," Cochran said.

How late, I asked.

"Doesn't matter," Cochran replied. "No matter how late you come, I'll be there."

Forty midnights in a row at the office had left the lawyer in a contemplative mood. The spectacle of the Simpson matter had long since ceased to impress or appall. Every bit of legal strategy and media manipulation had been combed over so incessantly that there really weren't many questions left to ask. So I asked the only question I was really curious about.

"Do you think he did it?" Defense lawyers usually recoil from that question. They either go off the record and say, "Of course he did it, but that doesn't matter, that's not my concern," or they issue some vague ritual denial all fluffed up with incantations about the sanctity of our legal system and every man's right to a vigorous defense.

Cochran by this point was well past ritual. So he dished, off the record, of course. Cochran died in 2005, so, by tradition of the craft, those comments are now fair game.

"There's something wrong with him," Cochran said, and he talked about other clients he'd had who somehow managed to persuade themselves that they hadn't done what they actually had done.

Simpson was a big star, a hero to some, a talented person. But, said Cochran, "I wouldn't believe him if he told me the sun was coming up again tomorrow morning."

And then the lawyer went back to work on a defense so wonderfully constructed that it got off a guy who had done a truly terrible deed.


By Marc Fisher | December 6, 2008; 12:17 PM ET
 
Top