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O.J. Case - A Jury HELL BENT On Revenge

Posted Oct 5th 2008 10:00AM by Madison J. Gray
Filed under: BlackSpin, O.J. Simpson, News

In the case of O.J. Simpson, you all know that there was no way for him to get a fair trial. There was no way those jurors, 12 whites, were going to see this trial without embracing his last trial, 13 years ago. There was no way they had any other intention but to find him guilty and hope that he is sentenced to the maximum penalty.

So what has happened in this trial was an example of a jury playing God with a man's freedom. It wasn't a trial, it was a farce. Even if the Juice did commit robbery and kidnapping, the Constitution guarantees every person in this country the right to a fair trial. That is something he could not get, and something prosecutors ensured that he wouldn't.

Sports Illustrated legal analyst Michael McCann breaks it down pretty well on the next page, but we are still left with the knowledge that if a hateful jury, filled with rage over a trial that happened years ago, takes the bench, you can bet that justice is not what is on their minds. ...

Where Are They Now?

    The O.J. Simpson double-murder trail was called the trial of the century. About 14 years after the case the former NFL great is back in the spotlight and praying for yet another acquittal. But Where's the old cast of characters from O.J. 1.0? Where's Judge Ito, Kato and Al Cowlings? We've got the answers.

    Vince Bucci, AFP / Getty Images

    Daniel Gluskoter, AP

    Al Cowlings, Then
    O.J. Simpson's notorious white Bronco-driving pal led police in a slow-speed chase around L.A. The chase ended at Simpson's mansion in Brentwood. Cowlings claimed Simpson had a gun to his head during the pursuit.

    AP

    Al Cowlings, Now
    The retired football player has been asked multiple times by TMZ.com if he's still friends with the Juice, his answer is always the same. No comment. Simpson pretended to sell off his infamous white Bronco in a hidden camera pay-per-view special that never aired.

    Kirby Lee, WireImage.com

    Brian "Kato" Kaelin, Then
    O.J. Simpson quirky house guest was thought to be a key witness for the prosecution in the case. Kato became a star during the murder trial for his courtroom manner. However, the aspiring actor and surfer-looking dude was the butt of many jokes and became a household name with his 15-minutes of fame.

    Hal Garb/AFP/Getty Images

    Brian "Kato" Kaelin, Now
    Kaelin will be competing on a new FOX reality show this fall where the grand prize is a reality show on FOX. Kato has appeared in numerous comedic skits, movie cameos and TV shows in the years following the trial. He also had a radio show. He's never really reached big-time star status though, but he did make it on to the cover of Playgirl.

    John Sciulli, WireImage

    Christopher Darden, Then
    Darden was the prosecutor who made O.J. try on the murderer's glove in the courtroom. The glove looked way too tight and lead to the infamous words from Johnnie Cochran. Some say this moved killed the prosecution's case against Simpson.

    AP

    Christopher Darden, Now
    In an interview by Oprah Winfrey in 2006, Darden said he still, without a doubt, believes Simpson to be guilty. After the trail he taught law in California before starting his own firm Darden & Associates.

    Frederick M. Brown, Getty Images

    Judge Lance Ito, Then
    Ito became familiar to millions during Simpson's criminal trial. He made the critical decision to allow cameras into the courtroom, saying that the public had a right to witness the media circus, err. trial.

    AP

Community Discussion
+
Simpson Guilty On All Counts
+ O.J. Lynched by All-White Jury
+ O.J. Found Guilty!

1. Was it a mistake for Simpson to have not testified on his behalf?<

Whenever a criminal defendant declines to testify on his or her own behalf, jurors are instructed to not associate the absence of testifying with guilt. Some jurors may nonetheless find it hard to ignore their intuition: that the defendant did not testify because he or she is guilty. To the extent the jury associated Simpson's lack of testifying with guilt, Simpson's legal team seemingly erred. One might go a step further and opine that given Simpson's acting and interviewing skills, he would likely have been well suited to address the judge and jury.

On the other hand, hindsight is 20/20, and the decision to not testify can sometimes prove wise, especially since it prevents the prosecution from cross-examining the defendant. Simpson, of course, did not testify in his murder trial and thus avoided prosecutors' questioning. The strategy worked then.

2. Could the jury have come to a guilty verdict as "payback" for Simpson's not guilty verdict in 1995?

As a legal matter, the jury had no right to find Simpson guilty for crimes relating to the incident in Las Vegas on the basis of a belief that Simpson should have been convicted for the murders of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman. The jury was convened for a specific and limited purpose: to assess whether Simpson should be convicted on 12 counts stemming from the Las Vegas incident. Irrespective of the merits of the jury verdict in Simpson's murder trial, that verdict is final and under the doctrine of double jeopardy, Simpson cannot be retried for murder. In the highly unlikely event it could be shown that this jury viewed the robbery charges as an opportunity to re-write history, Simpson's attorneys would immediately challenge the jury's verdict as faulty.

As a practical matter, Simpson's legal team should have used the jury selection process to exclude potential jurors with actual or potential bias against Simpson. Before a jury is selected, potential jurors are normally questioned by the attorneys and the judge as to their life experience and background, as well as to their knowledge and attitudes on various issues. Through what's called "voir dire," attorneys can challenge the inclusion of potential jurors on the basis of cause-such as if the juror appears biased; attorneys also enjoy a limited number of peremptory challenges in which no justification for exclusion need be given. Presumably, Simpson's attorneys were able to exclude potentially hostile jurors through this jury selection process.

Then again, the jury selection process is famously imprecise and it requires the candor of potential jurors. Though it seems unlikely that a juror would ever admit to convicting Simpson as payback for the past, it also seems unlikely that a juror could entirely dissociate his or her attitudes about what may have been the most famous (or infamous) criminal trial in U.S. history.

3. Could race have played a role in the jury's guilty verdict?

Hopefully not. The jury consisted of nine men and three women, none of whom were African-American. The obvious temptation is to compare the racial composition of this jury with that of the jury impaneled in Simpson's murder trial, which featured nine African-Americans, two Caucasians, and one Latino. Keep in mind, the jury selection process in both cases should have led to the exclusion of potential jurors who expressed attitudes that linked a defendant's race to presumed guilt or innocence.

Then again, some might argue that even if none of the jurors in this case consciously harbored negative attitudes towards African-Americans, they may have been subject to "implicit attitudes," which refer to attitudes that shape opinions, beliefs, and actions in ways that evade conscious detection and thus do not reveal themselves during the typical jury selection process. Implicit attitudes have received considerable attention by legal scholars in recent years, and early findings suggest that such attitudes are often negatively-oriented towards African-Americans. Whether those attitudes played any role in this case is entirely speculative, however.

It should also be stressed that the jury heard from 22 witnesses over 12 days of testimony and took over 13 hours to reach a verdict. It thus appears the jury expended significant energy and thought in reaching the verdict.

4. What will happen at Simpson's sentencing on December 5?

Even if she opts to impose the most lenient possible sentence under discretion, Clark County District Judge Jackie Glass will sentence Simpson to at least 15 years in prison. His conviction alone of first-degree kidnapping with a deadly weapon carries a minimum sentence of 15 years, with the possibility of parole after five years, and a maximum sentence of life of prison with the chance of parole. Judge Glass could run the sentences for each of the 12 charges concurrently or consecutively, the latter of which would be disastrous for Simpson, as he would then serve time for each sentence, one-after-the-other.

Working in Simpson's favor is that judges normally refrain from imposing the maximum possible sentence for first-time offenders and, despite the many controversies surrounding him over the last two decades, Simpson has not previously been convicted of a crime (though he did plead no contest in 1989 to a spousal abuse charge, meaning he neither contested the charge nor admitted guilt). Then again, at age 61, there is a strong probability that, absent a successful appeal and regardless of Judge Glass' leniency, Simpson will spend the remainder of his life in prison.

5. Will Simpson appeal?

Simpson's lead counsel, Yale Galanter, has already pledged that Simpson will appeal. Galanter and other members of Simpson's legal team will likely attempt to identify an alleged error made by Judge Glass in her interpretation of the law or in one of her procedural decisions during the trial. Two common sources of appeal are when a judge overrules a defendant's motion to prohibit the admission of certain evidence or when a judge overrules a defendant's motion objecting to the jury instructions. Interestingly, Judge Glass overruled Simpson's objections to various pieces of evidence and to the jury instructions.

Michael McCann is a visiting law professor at Boston College Law School, a law professor at Vermont Law School and the distinguished visiting Hall of Fame Professor of Law at Mississippi College School of Law.

Where Are They Now?

    The O.J. Simpson double-murder trail was called the trial of the century. About 14 years after the case the former NFL great is back in the spotlight and praying for yet another acquittal. But Where's the old cast of characters from O.J. 1.0? Where's Judge Ito, Kato and Al Cowlings? We've got the answers.

    Vince Bucci, AFP / Getty Images

    Daniel Gluskoter, AP

    Al Cowlings, Then
    O.J. Simpson's notorious white Bronco-driving pal led police in a slow-speed chase around L.A. The chase ended at Simpson's mansion in Brentwood. Cowlings claimed Simpson had a gun to his head during the pursuit.

    AP

    Al Cowlings, Now
    The retired football player has been asked multiple times by TMZ.com if he's still friends with the Juice, his answer is always the same. No comment. Simpson pretended to sell off his infamous white Bronco in a hidden camera pay-per-view special that never aired.

    Kirby Lee, WireImage.com

    Brian "Kato" Kaelin, Then
    O.J. Simpson quirky house guest was thought to be a key witness for the prosecution in the case. Kato became a star during the murder trial for his courtroom manner. However, the aspiring actor and surfer-looking dude was the butt of many jokes and became a household name with his 15-minutes of fame.

    Hal Garb/AFP/Getty Images

    Brian "Kato" Kaelin, Now
    Kaelin will be competing on a new FOX reality show this fall where the grand prize is a reality show on FOX. Kato has appeared in numerous comedic skits, movie cameos and TV shows in the years following the trial. He also had a radio show. He's never really reached big-time star status though, but he did make it on to the cover of Playgirl.

    John Sciulli, WireImage

    Christopher Darden, Then
    Darden was the prosecutor who made O.J. try on the murderer's glove in the courtroom. The glove looked way too tight and lead to the infamous words from Johnnie Cochran. Some say this moved killed the prosecution's case against Simpson.

    AP

    Christopher Darden, Now
    In an interview by Oprah Winfrey in 2006, Darden said he still, without a doubt, believes Simpson to be guilty. After the trail he taught law in California before starting his own firm Darden & Associates.

    Frederick M. Brown, Getty Images

    Judge Lance Ito, Then
    Ito became familiar to millions during Simpson's criminal trial. He made the critical decision to allow cameras into the courtroom, saying that the public had a right to witness the media circus, err. trial.

    AP

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Reader Comments

(Page 1)

1. OJ broke the law. IT is that simple.

little rat at 1:50PM on Oct 5th 2008

2. I dont give 10 sh!ts about OJ but he was found guilty before the trial even began, there was no way in hell any ALL WHITE jury would have been objective but he was the dummy to put himself in a position for them to get a second swipe at him. So long sucker Simpson... Hangman.

Lore at 2:38PM on Oct 5th 2008

3. OJ has fallen. It is that simple. The man got away with murder in 1995, and it went to his head. He thought that meant he could get away with the kind of stuff you see in movies, and he did something else stupid. To say that what happened here "isn't fair" seems kind of funny to me. Was it "fair" to ambush and kill Nicole and Ron? And don't forget, he was CONVICTED in civil court on that count!

No, this is a case of a man who -HAD IT ALL- getting the big head, and thinking he was above the law. It's bad enough when a two time loser in the 'hood pulls a gun, kills someone, and enters the Gates of Hell. To see OJ end his life like this is just pathetic. I guess though, that he should feel lucky that The Juice isn't what he gets in the electric chair. It could have ended up that way. Bye Bye Juice!!

Bob at 3:20PM on Oct 5th 2008

4. I am only here to say that Lauryn Hill has a wonderful new unreleased song out on youtube, "World is a Hustle." LUV IT!!

O! About OJ...Not my busines.! If he didn't understand the way things work in the world by age 61...well, his hard luck. There are no second changes kids.

Joe Adams at 3:25PM on Oct 5th 2008

5. Yes and it is a PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION going on.

OJ had to know that his 15 minutes of Fame is wrapped up. There is a NEW GENERATION of Pro Ballers right now who gets that attention.

We need to focus on STACKIN' Paper seriously.

Xmas is around the corner - UP the block

and we must make changes without DEPENDING on Anyone to protect us except GOD.

Based on that ....

LET ME LET MY PEOPLE KNOW ABOUT THIS ...

http://MOMzOnPoint.com/contact.html
......Average Joe & Jane NEVER Heard of this BEFORE !

Greta Johnson at 3:36PM on Oct 5th 2008

6. Zzzzzzzz... go away OJ... go away...! I'm sure he knew all of this. He put himself in this position. If I were him, I would have disappeared completely after his acquittal, and just lived a relatively simple, un-intrusive life.

WATCH US EXPLODE at 4:09PM on Oct 5th 2008

7. The only reason O.J. was found guilty on all counts was because he was stupid enough to commit another crime after getting away with murder. He is the dumbest person ever created and know he's going to pay for his ignorance.

JeffDaChef at 4:20PM on Oct 5th 2008

8. "We got him," L. Paul Bremer stated when they captured Saddam Hussien. I am glad they got his ass, another Black anglophile bite the dust and I hope many more are to follow. Wish they would have gotting Michael Jackson's ass too. Good riddance!

blckmoses@sbcglobal.net at 4:30PM on Oct 5th 2008

9. "We got him," L. Paul Bremer stated when they captured Saddam Hussien. I am glad they got O. J.'s ass, another Black anglophile bite the dust and I hope many more are to follow. Wish they would have gotten Michael Jackson's ass too. Good riddance!

blckmoses@sbcglobal.net at 4:48PM on Oct 5th 2008

10. OJ FORGOT WHERE HE CAME FROM AND WHO HE WAS. A 60 YEAR OLD MAN TRYING TO ACT LIKE A GANGSTER PULLING OUT GUNS WITH ANOTHER STUPID OLD MAN DESERVES WHAT HE GET!!

I FEEL SORRY FOR THE CHILDREN WHO HAVE TO CARRY HIS LAST NAME. THEY SHOULD CHANGE IT.

LYNN at 5:06PM on Oct 5th 2008

11. Manifestation of racism, all white jury, white judge,
White privilege.

mjane burns at 5:38PM on Oct 5th 2008

12.
To those now complaining the all white jury was hopelessly biased, did you say the same of the nearly all Black jury after the murder trial?

Did you accuse t-h-a-t jury of "playing God?"

Did you write articles decrying the blindingly outrageous injustice of that trial?

Do you ever say or write a single word about how a rabid and savage beast of a human being (amazing that he is human) was set completely free thanks to the callous and depraved indifference of a jury hellbent on injustice, hellbent on closing their ears to the screams of two people as they were murdered in cold blood, hellbent on closing their eyes to the police photographs of two innocent lives shredded like so much cabbage, and hellbent on thumbing their noses at a justice system which gave them a chance to do the right thing, but instead did the worst thing?

I doubt it.

All of America, Black or White, loved O.J. No one wanted to discover he was a killer. But you would have to be a complete imbecile to have concluded he was anywhere near "not guilty" if you saw or listened to that trial in Los Angeles. Same for this latest trial.

As no one forced him to murder two human beings for no reason other than pure hate, and as no one forced him to walk into that hotel room with a gun for no reason other than greed and arrogance, whining about the bias of this jury, real or imagined, seems to miss the point entirely.

It's past time for all people to finally see O.J. for what kind of "person" he truly is. If there is to be any REAL justice, let the Lord (or fate, for you atheists) decide he receives in Nevada's prisons exactly as he gave on the streets of Los Angeles. No more and no less.

Daniel at 5:44PM on Oct 5th 2008

13. Manifestation of racism: White privileged ; institutionalized racism.

mjane burns at 5:46PM on Oct 5th 2008

14. Madison,

"There was no way [the jury] had any other intention but to find him guilty and hope that he is sentenced to the maximum penalty."

The jury deliberated for 13 hours and all they had to talk about was a week's worth of evidence. If their only intention was to find him guilty, they could have saved themselves a lot time.

The jury in OJ's trial for the murder of his ex-wife had months and months of testimony to consider, most of it complex expert testimony, and yet only deliberated for 4 hours before acquitting him.

You tell me--which jury took its obligation under the law more seriously? If either of those two juries were impartial, it was the all-white one.

The "not guilty" verdict in OJ's murder trial should have been the product of responsible and judicious of the facts requiring an extensive period of deliberation. It wasn't. That's a fact, whether you think he was innocent or not.

So forget being outraged an all-white jury convicted a black man who was so consumed by his own arrogance that he committed such a stupid crime in such a stupid way and start worrying about how our community is ever going to live down our embrace of the mostly black jury that willfully ignored their duties under the law because they wanted payback for decades of living with a corrupt and racist LAPD.

If I could make everyone forget about OJ by waving my hand, I would. Let's celebrate the best of our community, not the worst, especially now. What's done is done. We need to wash our hands, look ahead, and hope that in time all will be forgotten.

Maurice

Maurice at 6:16PM on Oct 5th 2008

15. What is simple is, he is the stupidest man on the face of the earth.

urchild at 6:17PM on Oct 5th 2008

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