O.J. Simpson: Guilty Essay, Research Paper
O.J. Simpson: Guilty
This paper attempts to prove that O.J. Simpson is guilty by giving
evidence from both sides, and statements made by witnesses.
On June 12, 1994, two people were brutally killed. Those two people
were Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman. Nicole was O.J. Simpson’s ex-wife.
O.J. was arrested the next day and charged with double homicide.
O.J. pled innocent to murder chargers against him and went to trial in
criminal court. The trial lasted a year, and caused worldwide media excitement.
There was so much evidence against him, it seemed almost impossible for
him to be that he’d be found innocent. For example, the famous bloody glove
found behind the guest house was proven by DNA testing to have O.J.’s blood and
hair, Nicole’s blood and hair, and Ron’s blood and hair. DNA testing is 99.9
percent accurate. Fibers were also found on the glove that came from O.J.’s
shirt and his Bronco(Trudau, 122).
Other evidence included a bloody footprint which matched O.J.’s shoes,
blood on O.J.’s Bronco door, on the console, on the interior side of the door, a
bloody footprint in the Bronco, bloody socks in O.J.’s house, O.J.’s injured
finger, blood found at Nicole’s condo that matched O.J.’s, and so on(Posner,64).
The defense claimed that the evidence had been planted.
On June 30th, Allen Wattenberg, a knife store owner, testified during
the
On June 12, O.J.’s limo driver arrived to drive O.J. to the airport and saw a
black man, with the same build as O.J. sprinting across the lawn towards O.J.’s
house. Yet when O.J. answered the door, he said he’d been napping(Biema, 56).
O.J. also acted guilty: he wrote a suicide note, and led police on a
chase through L.A. that ended at his Brentwood mansion with his surrender and
arrest.
Despite all this evidence, the jury found O.J. not guilty. By all
accounts, the prosecution did a poor job presenting the evidence. O.J.’s
defense, called ?The Dream Team,? took advantage of the prosecutions
incompetence and created reasonable doubt in the jurors minds(Posner, 62).
O.J.’s time in court is not over yet, however, he is now fighting 2
civil cases, one for the custody of his children, and the other against the
Browns and the Goldmans for ?wrongful death.? The same evidence that was used
in the criminal case is being presented much more effectively in the civil case,
and it’s expected the he will be found guilty. The ?court of popular opinion?
has already found O.J. guilty, and his days as a celebrity and corporate pitch
man are over forever(Posner, 64). And if he is found guilty in his civil trials,
shouldn’t that logically mean that he is guilty of the murders, even though he
was found ?not guilty? on legal technicalities and incompetence.