25 Bizarre Things You Forgot About the O.J. Simpson Murder Trial

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Originally appeared on E! Online

How time flies when the world's gone mad.

Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman were killed outside the front door of her Los Angeles condo while her children slept upstairs in June of 1994, a sickening crime that led to one of the defining cultural happenings of the late 20th century: People of the State of California v. Orenthal James Simpson.

The O.J. Simpson murder trial, that is.

Within days after the double murder of O.J.'s ex-wife and her friend Goldman—who was a waiter at the restaurant where Nicole had dined with her family earlier that night and had dropped by to bring the glasses her mother had left behind—a whole new vernacular rocketed into the national consciousness: Brentwood. Rockingham. Bundy. Low-speed chase. Bruno Magli. DNA. Kardashian.

Simpson, who passed away at the age of 76 April 10 following a cancer battle, pleaded "absolutely, 100 percent not guilty" on July 22, 1994. The jury was sworn in on Nov. 9, 1994, and opening statements wouldn't commence until January of 1995.

American Crime Story: The People v. O.J. Simpson: Fact v. Fiction

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By the time the verdict was read on Oct. 3, 1995, the Simpson trial had cost the city of Los Angeles upward of $10 million and was every bit the circus that you may or may not remember.

The basic facts are well-known. Prosecutors thought they had a slam-dunk case thanks to DNA evidence from blood collected at the scene of the crime and at Simpson's home two miles away.

"That trail of blood from Bundy through his own Ford Bronco and into his house in Rockingham is devastating proof of his guilt," Deputy District Attorney Marcia Clark said in her opening statement.

Complicating the People's supposedly open-and-shut case, Mark Fuhrman, the detective who first spotted a blood-spattered glove outside Simpson's estate at 360 Rockingham Avenue that looked like one found near the bodies, had a history of using racist language and had boasted about beating up suspects.

O.J. Simpson Trial, Marcia Clark, Christopher Darden
AP Photo/Vince Bucci

Much to Clark and co-prosecutor Christopher Darden's disbelief, Simpson's defense team, led by Johnnie Cochran, dismantled the jurors' trust in the seemingly irrefutable DNA, and in the police who investigated Simpson—a trust already on shaky ground in the wake of the 1992 acquittal of four white police officers charged with excessive force after they were caught on video beating Rodney King, a Black man, on the side of an L.A. freeway.

And so, in the end, Simpson was found not guilty of murder. But a lot of screwy stuff happened before the world got to that point, nearly 29 years ago. Here's a sampling:

Close Watch

Close Watch


Tinted Window

<p>Tinted Window</p>


The Publishing Industry

The Publishing Industry


Ripped From the Headlines

Ripped From the Headlines


Missing Perspective

Missing Perspective


Facts vs. Fiction

Facts vs. Fiction


Search for an Accomplice

Search for an Accomplice


Cost of Living

Cost of Living


Front Seat Driver

Front Seat Driver

Before Marcia Clark invited Christopher Darden onto her team, he was in charge of investigating Cowlings, who was initially arrested on suspicion of aiding a fugitive. The DA's office ultimately opted not to charge him, citing a lack of evidence.


The Dream Team

The Dream Team


The World's Most Famous Houseguest

The World's Most Famous Houseguest


Man's Best Friend

Man's Best Friend


If the Shoe Fits

If the Shoe Fits


Fixer Upper

Fixer Upper


Remote Control

Remote Control


Candid Camera

Candid Camera


The Race Card

The Race Card


The Glove Debacle

The Glove Debacle


Glove Slap

Glove Slap


Under Attack

Under Attack


Reasonable Doubt

Reasonable Doubt


Battered Reputation

Battered Reputation


Repercussions

Repercussions


Alternate Takes

Alternate Takes


After he was acquitted, Simpson said finding the real killer would be his "primary goal in life."

In what many of Simpson's supporters—and plenty of his detractors, too—figure was a message-sending move, a Nevada judge threw the book at O.J. in 2008 when he was convicted of armed robbery, kidnapping, assault and other charges over a plot to get items he insisted were his back from a memorabilia dealer at a Las Vegas hotel.

Simpson was sentenced to nine to 33 years in prison; he was paroled after nine in 2017 and before his death, he remained in Nevada, golfing and tweeting to his 860,000-plus followers, having joined the site in June 2019.

F. Lee Bailey, who passed away in 2021, told HuffPost's Highline two years earlier he was "frequently" in touch with Simpson. "I'm out in Las Vegas a lot," he said. "He lives a very quiet life there."

(Originally published June 10, 2019, at 3 a.m. PT)