man as early as october. that was his attorney, and he was mentioning a name that many of us may not be familiar with. jeff felix, who apparently wrote this book goordiuarding the ju he s been giving color on what o.j. simpson has been like. paul, let s talk about that life behind bars and how, you know, according to this former, what, correctional officer and others, you know, and part of the reason that he was granted this parole was despite anything you may think of, you know, o.j. simpson prior to december of 08, you know, he s been this model inmate. and that s what the prison system here in nevada has said, flatly, that o.j. simpson has had no disciplinary troubles, that he s been off their radar. they say that s not the case with other inmates. and that was echoed by a former may not, two former guards and also o.j. s good friends who
that let o.j. simpson go, okay? so, that s it. all right. i m going to go back and spend some more time. i m going to go back and spend time with mr. simpson and his family a little bit. i ll be back after it s finished. it s kind of hot out here and hopefully it s hot enough for you to all be gone by then but if you re not, i ll answer some more questions. okay. take care. that was o.j. simpson s lawyer. if you re just tuning in, this is essentially o.j. simpson day and what you have missed what you have missed is the fact that these four nevada carson city, nevada, these four parole board commissioners questioned o.j. simpson, he s been in prison for eight years and some change, because of this armed robbery in this las vegas hotel room. he s been in this promise in lovelock correctional facility since december of 08 and so they ve questioned him, they met for, i want to say, no more than five to ten minutes and all came back and all four of them unanimously said that they wou
beyond a reasonable doubt is that we have a standard in this country where we will let nine people who are guilty go free so that we do not convict one innocent. that s what the definition of beyond a reasonable doubt is. and jeffrey, you accept the jury virkts in other cases. why is this case different? why are people having such a difficult time with o.j. simpson when the jury has an opportunity to review the evidence, you had skilled prosecutors presenting the case, they made a decision. how come people can t accept that decision where we accept jury decisions in thousands of cases every day in this country. here s something no, i accept the jury s verdict. i recognize that was the jury s verdict. but i don t have to agree with it. i disagree with jury verdicts all the time. that doesn t mean that the jury verdicts are wrong. that s just my opinion about them. certainly it is that was the verdict in the case.
a release to the street to go to florida in that way that you re talking about, like a transitional living or a halfway house. but again, as far as the release process, i ll turn that over to the warden to talk with you about. on my handout, i do have my contact information. you re welcome to give me a call. additionally, i also have my e-mail address. you re welcome to e-mail me. we will update our website at parole and probation to include the same information that you have. typically, the division does not speak specifically to one particular offender over another. what we will do is i m more than willing to discuss with you what the general process is for the interstate compact or pre-release. one final one on this, on the transfer to florida, then. based on your experience, captain, in the matrix you provided to it, does it appear that simpson will go to florida? as long as he has a valid plan of supervision, along with
they all seemed to be reading their questions and none of them responded to what he actually said. listening. he was, you know, listening. i mean, the thing i keep fixating on that he said that his claim that he had led a conflict-free life, you know, you don t have to be extremely attentive to this case or to this story to realize that is not a very accurate characterization of, you know, his life. i mean, you know, most people in life do not have convictions for domestic violence. most people don t have an ex-wife with multiple 911 calls saying it s ohi.j. simpson, youe been here before, he s going crazy again. those are not obscure facts, especially since they were alleged allegedly supposedly steeped in this trial. is his lawyer walking over to the microphone. he is. hello, how are you. here s my intention. my intention is to come out and answer maybe a couple of questions for a few minutes and