Started By
Message

re: In your opinion, did OJ kill Brown and Goldman?

Posted on 2/14/17 at 1:06 pm to
Posted by Roll Tide Ravens
Birmingham, AL
Member since Nov 2015
42974 posts
Posted on 2/14/17 at 1:06 pm to
quote:

shite I'm not a prosecutor but I could have won this case

quote:
You assume having a jury that is actually using the facts to come to a decision

Fair point but the prosecution team allowed the trial to become a smoke & mirror show


Judge Lance Ito was more to blame for that. The judge is responsible for keeping things in line, the judge decides what evidence can legally be admitted, and the judge has the power to stop all of the speculation and hearsay. Ito was caught up in the celebrity of it all.
Posted by Roll Tide Ravens
Birmingham, AL
Member since Nov 2015
42974 posts
Posted on 2/14/17 at 1:18 pm to
As a soon-to-be law student, I'll use my still limited legal knowledge, and say that I blame the prosecution's failure on two things (other than racial views within the jury):

1) The glove. Chris Darden should have never asked him to try on the gloves. The problem was that due to the blood soaking the gloves, they had drawn up; the gloves had been kept cold to preserve evidence (cold wasn't good for the leather); OJ had to wear latex gloves to avoid harming the evidence on the gloves. These factors made it likely that the gloves would have had no chance of fitting, and the prosecution should have known this. I think Darden thought the gloves could be their big moment, but it back fired.

2) Putting Mark Fuhrman on the stand. The defense employed a racism narrative to raise the possibility that Fuhrman (who found the glove at OJ's house) had planted the glove there and thus, raise reasonable doubt. Fuhrman then testified that he never used the "N word", which was debunked by the tapes of him saying that word. This worked out perfectly for the defense, as it made it clear that Fuhrman was a racist and helped the narrative that he could have planted the glove because of racist motivations.

However, Lead Prosecutor, Marcia Clark, has since raised a good point which is that she had no choice but to put him on the stand. Because he found the glove that was at OJ's house, having other investigators testify instead of him would have raised suspicion that the prosecution was hiding something.
This post was edited on 2/14/17 at 1:19 pm
first pageprev pagePage 1 of 1Next pagelast page
refresh

Back to top
logoFollow TigerDroppings for LSU Football News
Follow us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram to get the latest updates on LSU Football and Recruiting.

FacebookTwitterInstagram