Home / Full timeline / In the infamous O. J. Simpson trial, the jury declares former NFL player O. J. Simpson not guilty of double murder. Reactions to the decision were mixed.
In the infamous O. J. Simpson trial, the jury declares former NFL player O. J. Simpson not guilty of double murder. Reactions to the decision were mixed.
1995 (Oct 3)
Following an overnight wait so that all the principals in the O.J. Simpson trial could be reassembled, the entire nation watched as the jury rendered its verdict. Despite a mountain of testimony and evidence, the Simpson jurors deliberated for only three hours before reaching their decision - a unanimous verdict of not guilty. Simpson's reaction was one of immediate relief and thanks. The prosecution team, on the other hand, appeared numb with disbelief. During the aftermath, virtually all legal analysts agreed that leading defense attorney Johnnie L. Cochran, Jr.'s genius had been to center the case on two points: 1) the assertion that Simpson - given the testimony of eyewitnesses - did not have enough time to commit the murders, return to his residence, and then take a limousine ride to the airport and 2) the assertion that the racist remarks of police detective Mark Fuhrman were the clue to a much larger conspiracy by the L.A. police department to frame Simpson. Prosecutor Marcia Clark, in her closing arguments, also labeled Fuhrman a racist and then attempted to redirect the jurors' attention to the overwhelming evidence, including DNA blood evidence, that linked Simpson, and no one else, to the murders. In the end, the jurors chose to believe the defense team's version of events and Simpson, imprisoned for 474 days, was declared a free man. According to a Washington Post survey, eight out of ten Blacks thought justice had been served while at least half of all whites thought that it had not. Once again, Los Angeles had become the stage to dramatize that a huge racial divide still separated many Americans. As of December 1995, the Simpson case was still generating enormous interest, including some 36 book deals. One of these, the autobiography of Cochran that a publisher planned to place on bookstands in 1997, was estimated to be worth $4.2 million. Although Simpson had been cleared in the criminal trial, in early 1996 he still faced a wrongful death civil suit filed on behalf of the family of Ronald Goldman and the estate of Nicole Brown Simpson.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.