O.J. Simpson, the disgraced former
football great, was granted parole Thursday amid his 33-year prison
sentence for an armed robbery that has kept him behind bars in Nevada
since 2008.
“I’ve done my time, I’ve done it as well and respectfully as anyone
can,” the 70-year-old told parole board members via videoconference
Thursday at the Lovelock Correctional Facility, around 90 miles
northeast of Reno.
The board members came to their decision in a unanimous 4-0 vote, to
which Simpson responded emotionally, saying, "Thank you, thank you,
thank you."Simpson appeared in
the hearing room as inmate No. 1027820, dressed in a blue prison
uniform. He will be released in October after serving a minimum nine
years of the sentence.
“Right now, I'm at a point in my life where I want to spend as much time
with my kids and my friends,” Simpson said Thursday.
He said he told the prison wardens upon arrival that he wouldn’t pose a
problem and has “kept his word.”
Simpson – who famously was found not guilty in the killings of his
ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend Ronald Goldman, in 1995 –
went to prison in 2008 over an armed robbery a year earlier involving
two sports memorabilia dealers in a Las Vegas hotel room.
Simpson was convicted of enlisting some men he barely knew, including
two who had guns, to retrieve from two sports collectibles sellers some
items that he said were really his belongings.
"It's kind of mind boggling to me that they [California] returned
property to me that I'm in jail for," Simpson told the four parole board
members Thursday, saying the property included letters from celebrities,
family photos, certificates of accomplishment and more.
Simpson claimed he neither pointed a gun at anyone nor made any threats
during the crime that put him in prison. He also said the men who went
with him to the hotel room received a get-out-of-jail-free card when
they told authorities that Simpson told them to do it.
Simpson added that he apologized to the surviving memorabilia dealer,
Bruce Fromong, who was a friend, and that he accepted the apology.
Fromong testified in O.J.’s favor
Thursday, telling the parole board that “on that day, Simpson was
misguided,” but “I don’t feel like he is a threat to anyone out there.”
Turning to Simpson, Fromong said that if Simpson was released: "Juice,
I'll be here tomorrow for you."
Halfway through the hearing, Simpson’s oldest daughter Arnelle gave an
emotional testimony in support of her father, saying that “no one really
knows what we've been through over these last nine years.
Bruce Fromog says it's time to give Simpson a second chance at parole
hearing
"We just want him to come home. I know in my heart he's been very
humbled throughout this situation,” she said. Arnelle, 48, is OJ's
daughter from his first marriage to Marguerite Whitley.
O.J. Simpson told the board Thursday that an alternative-to-violence
course he took has been the most important lesson behind bars.
Simpson previously asked for leniency in 2013 in front of the same
parole board, saying he had tried to be a model prisoner. He won parole
on some convictions but was left with four more years to serve.
The robbery was a new low for Simpson, whose celebrity spanned sports,
movies, television and advertising before his fall from grace during his
highly publicized murder trial in 1995.
In 1997, he was found liable in civil court for the deaths and ordered
to pay $33.5 million to survivors, including his children and the
Goldman family.
The Goldmans believe Simpson got away with murder in Los Angeles, and
many people felt the stiff sentence handed down in Las Vegas wasn't just
about the robbery.
A Goldman family spokesman told The Associated Press that Ron Goldman's
father and sister, Fred and Kim, wouldn’t be part of Simpson's parole
hearing but felt apprehensive about "how this will change their lives
again should Simpson be released."
By most accounts, Simpson has a clean prison record and is just like any
other inmate, sharing a bunk with a cellmate, working in the gym and
coaching prison sports leagues, according to Los Angeles Times report.
Simpson was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1985 after an
11-year NFL career as running back with the Buffalo Bills and San
Francisco 49ers. A five-time Pro Bowl selection, Simpson also won the
Heisman trophy in 1968 when he played college football at USC.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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