I remember hearing that even his own kids were disgusted with him and distanced themselves from him.
Too bad I didn’t hear this news in that deli in Jersey City where I heard the news of his acquittal and where many of his “supporters” cheered.
If I’d been in JC, I’d have gone out on the streets and whooped it up.
Woo-hoo ping!
What a Travis T. OJustice, he certainly deserves more time than that, the scumbag.
Nicole Simpson and Ron Goldman were unavailable for comment.
Why did the mods move this into chat? It’s NEWS!
Something that's good...this is in Nevada, so I'm imagining that the racial make-up in the prison will not be favorable to O.J.
Cue up the Allman Bros’ “Tied to the Whipping Post.”
Hey! Why did you guys move this to chat? Now we’re going to get 47 more stories in the News section about it - LOL!
Notice the reactions of those in the front and those in the back
In recent years, it has become fashionable for football fans to attend games wearing football jerseys featuring the number of a favorite player. Up until the mid-1990’s, #32 was one of the most popular jersey numbers among USC fans, but for some strange reason, no one wears that number anymore.
There is no justice in this world, none.
But this conviction is closer to fairness than his earlier acquittal.
AT LAST!
LAS VEGAS A broken O.J. Simpson was sentenced Friday to as much as 33 years in prison for a hotel armed robbery after a judge rejected his apology and said, "It was much more than stupidity." The 61-year-old football Hall of Famer stood shackled and stone-faced when Judge Jackie Glass quickly rattled off his punishment soon after he made a rambling, five-minute plea for leniency, choking back tears as he told her: "I didn't want to steal anything from anyone. ... I'm sorry, sorry."...
Glass, a no-nonsense judge known for her tough sentences, imposed such a complex series of consecutive and concurrent sentences that even many attorneys watching the case were confused as to how much time Simpson got.
Simpson could serve up to 33 years but could be eligible for parole after nine years, according to Elana Roberto, the judge's clerk...