Bill Greenwood wrote:
Re, OJ "winning" in court. He won the first case because the prosecution was a little asleep at the start and did not get a change of venue in the trial. OJ got a jury of, if I recall right, 9 or 10 minorities. The case was over right then. No way were these people ever going to vote for conviction of a very popular Black hero. Heck, OJ had even been popular with most white people. There were rumors of his temper and abuse of his wife before. My stock broker was from Santa Monica and told me of these, well before the case. But I don't think OJ was looked down on by anyone then like Mike Tyson is now. Marsha Clark may have thought that Black women on the jury would be sympathetic to the female victim, but in fact, these jurors were first of all, and above all, Black, before they were female. The other big factor of course is that the L A police have a long history of minority abuse and the defense was smart enough to make the police a target, the bad guys, in the case. People did not believe the cops even when the evidence supported most of what they said. Did the cops plant some of the evidence? Perhaps, but I don't think they invented the crime or did it themselves to frame OJ. Someone had to commit the murders, and I don't think the cops did it to frame OJ. So OJ "won" that case, but he lost most people's respect.
In the first case there were bloody footprints made by a rare shoe; a size 12 Bruno Magli. Only a few like that were even sold in the US, much less in LA. OJ denied ever owning any of that "ugly ass shoe". Before the second trial several photographs came out of OJ wearing just those shoes in front of 50,000 people at halftime of a pro football game where he was the on field commentator. Not much doubt he was lying.
So he lost the 2nd case, the civil case,where he was found responible for the killings. If I was a juror, while I am not a big law and order type guy who's always going to side with the prosecution, the state, the cops; in this case I could have voted for conviction with a clear conscience and certainty beyond the legal standard of "reasonable doubt".
The defense tried to concoct a smokescreen about the blood evidence, the DNA, being degraded. But this does not carry validity. You can take some of my blood, my DNA, and leave it on the sidewalk for days, for years, and it may degrade so that it is not readable, BUT it won't become the DNA of OJ or his wife or Ron Goldman.
Well, what I really think about the NMUSAF and the General is...........
Hold on, wait a minute, I'm in the wrong thread. Somehow I ended up in the off topics section by mistake.
