After a deliberation process that demanded 13 hours, the
jury assembled for OJ Simpson’s trial reached its decision, finding the
football star guilty on 12 criminal counts. The trial focused on the accusations
of armed robbery and kidnapping, which happened in a Las Vegas casino hotel
last year. Many believe that the harsh sentence is closely connected to the
acquittal in his widely debated 1995 murder trial.
Simpson attorney Yale Galanter appeared extremely upset with
the ruling, saying that the jury selection was intentionally conducted on
choosing only whites, in order to ensure this outcome. He plans to prepare the
appeal using this aspect. He also believes that his client was convicted as a
payback for the double-murder acquittal.
The jurors, 11 whites and one Latina, stated that Simpson’s
previous issues with the law were not at all a factor in their deliberation and
also dismissed the racial accusations. "We've been painted as an all-white
jury that hates O.J.," said Dora Pettit, one of seven jurors at the news
conference. "That's not true." She also said it is indeed unfortunate
that he faces the same charges as a bank robber and that in her opinion OJ is
just an ordinary man who made a bad decision.
According to the jury’s statement, the case would have had a
whole different outcome if some tapes secretly recorded in a restaurant hadn’t
been included as evidence. The tapes featured Simpson discussing the heist and
also asking his friend Michael Mc Clinton if he was packing his
"piece," even though throughout the trial he denied ever seeing a gun
or demanding the other men to bring one and claimed that his only interest was
to retrieve family heirlooms taken by a former manager.
"It would have been a very weak case," Pettit said
about the missing tapes scenario. Juror David Wieberg as well as the rest of
the jurors agreed to the statement.
Simpson, 61, is facing life in prison and he will be
sentenced by Judge Jackie Glass on Dec. 5. Until then, he will be held at the
Clark County Detention Center.
On Sunday, attorney Yale Galanter said that his client is
"obviously a little depressed, melancholy" but also hopeful at the
chances of an appeal.
Once the verdict was delivered, the Clark County Court
released several documents, including copies of the 27-page questionnaires answered
by the 12 jurors, five of them admitting that they disagreed with the 1995
trial’s verdict. "I know some of the jurors are saying it didn't enter
into their decision. That's beyond belief. It just defies common logic,"
Galanter said.
Simpson's trial in the deaths of his ex-wife Nicole Brown
Simpson and her friend Ronald Goldman was at the time named the trial of the
century, being widely debated by the worldwide media. Co-defendant Clarence
"C.J." Stewart, who was also convicted of the same charges, will play
this defense card, as he claims that he is a victim of the strong public
sentiment against Simpson’s well-known history.