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Here's a weekend rabbit hole for you: O.J was guilty, but not of the actual murders? (possibly NSFW)
#21
It probably didn’t help that they had a guy who has some actor training emphasize the gloves didn’t fit with use of body language and facial expressions. Like the suspect himself was going to make sure those fit nicely using his own powerr.
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#22
Is it your assertion that OJ committed the murders and the investigators/prosecution botched it?


I believe that's exactly what happened.

He got away with murder.

I don't believe it was first degree murder, but second degree.

Intent is almost always impossible to prove.

Either the suspect/defendant demonstrates it clearly or the prosecution shows sufficient circumstances that allows a jury to believe it reasonable that he/she committed the crime.

The prosecution couldn't pull it off.

As for Fuhrman, he should have just said 'Yeah, I said it. So what.'

Ito make the trial a circus.

And just a split second after the jury announced the verdict, OJ turned to Goldman and gave him a sneer that was the final bit of confirmation for me.

No, I don't think he planned to kill anybody that night, but there's no doubt in my mind that he did.
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#23
DeusxMac wrote:
[quote=Carm]
Didn’t you see/read the speculation about how the leather gloves wouldn’t fit over the latex gloves, especially if they were tight/snug fitting in the first place (golf or driving gloves).
An article: https://www.bustle.com/articles/147445-w...t-lives-on

What happens to fine glove leather when it get soaked and the left to dry naturally?
There was also some reference made to stopping medication.
https://www.nynjcmd.com/o-j-simpson-bloo...-equation/

Those gloves, damning evidence reputed to belong to Simpson, have long been a source of controversy in a trial that recently marked its 20-year anniversary.

However, more has come to light regarding the gloves that has sparked additional controversy. In one of two recent highly-acclaimed documentaries, O.J.: Made in America, Mike Gilbert, Simpson’s agent at the time of his arrest, revealed a discussion the two had regarding the gloves in evidence. If Simpson feared being asked to don the gloves, Gilbert suggested to him that he stop taking the medicine he used for arthritis in his hands. This would cause his hands to stiffen and swell. Simpson reputedly stopped his medication. The implication is that this is part of the reason why when Simpson was asked by the prosecution to try on the gloves, they appeared too small for the defendant’s hands.
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