OF COURSE HE DID IT!


Denise Brown and Fred Goldman are two of my personal heroes. Brown has started an organization to help abused & battered women in the name of her murdered sister Nicole. Goldman has never ever let up on O.J. in his pursuit of justice on behalf of his murdered son, Ron. (side note: How come Goldman's not called an "obsessed stalker" but when a woman goes to seek justice for crimes committed against her she's called "obsessed" or "scorned"? hmmm...)

O.J. is, in my opinion, a classic sociopath. Granted the majority of sociopaths don't murder (physically) but O.J. has not only completely dissociated mentally from what he did, he is a narcissistic attention whore using his brutal murder of two people to keep himself in the spotlight. He's out playing golf and visiting Hooters while the families of the people he killed (yes, I said it) are still mourning their loved ones.

The fact he wrote this piece of trash speaks volumes about his lack of character. It's hard to believe he isn't totally shunned by society (at least some people have a clue, though) or in a mental institution or under lock and key against death threats. No, this animal walks among us.

Denise Brown & Fred Goldman can hold their heads up in the sunshine. I applaud that after a decade they have not given up and continue to speak the TRUTH rather than glorifying this piece of dung. O.J. however, should be down with his face in the slime, where he belongs.
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MIAMI -- A federal bankruptcy judge Monday awarded 90 percent of the proceeds from the sale of the rights to O.J. Simpson's book "If I Did It" to the family of Ron Goldman, who was slain alongside Simpson's wife Nicole Brown Simpson in 1994.

The remaining 10 percent will go to a trustee for the Simpson estate to pay the former football star's creditors, including multimillion-dollar wrongful death judgments owed the Brown and Goldman families.

Simpson was acquitted of the brutal knife slayings in 1995, but a civil court found him liable for the deaths two years later.

Neither family has collected any money from him, lawyers for both families said.

Last month, the Goldmans won the right to pursue publishing rights of Simpson's alleged hypothetical account of the slayings.

U.S. Bankruptcy Court Judge Jay Cristol approved the division plan subject to the court's supervision, adding that the purchaser of the book rights "must promise the court it will maximize the sale of the asset."

He said the parties to the division could address the court after 18 months if they have any objections to the manner the sale has been handled.

Fred Goldman, Ron Goldman's father, thanked the judge after his ruling, promising through tears to "pursue this in the same manner as we have for 13 years."

Despite taking 90 percent of the proceeds of the sale of the book rights, Goldman's $38 million judgment against Simpson still stands. He agreed, however, to drop his claim to the bottom of the list, meaning other creditors will be paid before he is paid.

Other creditors include the $24 million judgment for the Brown family; $15,000 for a former Simpson attorney; $20,000 for another attorney; $350,000 for the book's ghostwriter and another $300,000 for a pair of law firms.

Although they oppose publication of the book, the Brown family sued for a higher percentage of the proceeds. Attorneys for the Browns argued in court Monday that the deal was unfair to other creditors and that it allowed "the Goldman family to run the show." But in the end, Cristol did not agree.

Initially, both Goldman and the Brown family blasted the publishers of "If I Did It" and said they never wanted the book to be available in stores.

After plans to publish the account were scrapped and the book's publisher was fired, Goldman changed his mind and said he wanted to publish the book himself and receive the bulk of the profits.

"Whether (Simpson) calls it a work of fiction or not, or non-fiction, the fact is that he murdered two people, and I'd like everybody to hear him virtually say it," Goldman said during an appearance last month on CNN's "Anderson Cooper 360."

The Brown family remains opposed to the publication.

"This book should not be published," Denise Brown, Nicole Brown Simpson's sister, told CNN. "I have said this over and over again. It's a manual to commit murder."

The attorney for the Browns left the courtroom without speaking to reporters.

After Monday's hearing, Fred Goldman said in the beginning he agreed the book was "a how-to book," but after reading it decided it was "just an indictment of what this man did."

He said he did not plan to publish the book as Simpson wrote it, but would elaborate on the details of what happened and provide more background information.

David Cook, Goldman's lawyer, said after the hearing that the Goldmans had "sent out feelers" to publishers, but he could not predict the book's future. He said, however, he is "certain" the Goldmans will be able to sell the book rights and do well because a high interest in the case remains.

Earlier, Cook said Goldman is considering retitling the book "Confessions of a Double Murderer."


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