baptist service here. can you help us get a baptist service here. i worked with them. we now have an ongoing baptist service that s well attended, i attended religiously, and pun is intended, and i realized in my nine years here that i was a good guy on the street. i m sure when bruce gets here, he ll tell you i was always a good guy but i could have been a better christian and my commitment to change was to be a better christian. areva, we were taulking earlier and you were making the point of all the different times he said he was sorry today when he was questioned by these commissioners and in his full testimony. what else really struck you when you listened to him. well, i wish he had made more conciliatory statements too, but i do think, as i listened to the testimony, he said, repeatedly, that he was sorry. he said repeatedly that he made a bad decision, that it was poor judgment. and i was struck by how he tried to help other prisoners. when we think about the prison system,
guarding the juice guy, you embarrass the make a mockery of the corrections officers over here who are actually doing a really good job and mr. simpson has very positive things to say about the department of corrections. the wardens have treated him great. they actually treated him terrific. this jeff felix is i mean, you see that mullet and how his hair s dyed, right? you don t buy credibility from people who look like that and you should have at least tried to vet the story. for the last year, you could have vetted the story. i m a little bit agitated when i see you maybe i m taking it personally because you were the one on the news repeating everything that jeff felix said, every bit of which is false, every bit of which is unverifiable and untrue but you were doing it this morning. so jeff felix is a fraud. i don t want to take any questions about jeff felix. i don t know what he i ll tell you exactly what jeff felix is. he was here. he worked in the canteen, and mr. simpson,
attention. that s never been a problem for him at all. listen, do you know that jeffery felix is a complete fraud and everything that you said i was watching you earlier this morning when you were giving your testimony can t you tell that that guy is the biggest fraud on the planet? did we lose it? okay. so we lost it. again, he said this is the attorney of o.j. simpson, he was going to be brief but he ll walk back out to the cameras. let s take a pivot from the panel, go to paul outside of lovelock, nevada, outside this correctional center where o.j. simpson has been for eight and a half or so years now. and here s my question. tell me about his life so far. we talk a lot about how he s been this model prisoner and it s my understanding he sort of counseled, you know, multitude of prisoners forgive me. we re going back to the lawyer. you have gone on and perpetrated a fraud for this jeff felix who s supposedly gar
commissioners, you know, did you get the sense that any of them were almost star struck by him and does that affect we know that one was a kansas chiefs fan. i still have to as he pointed out. the guy the parole board member who was wearing the black shirt had a kansas city chiefs tie on. now, it is true that o.j. was a star for the buffalo bills. you re not a chiefs fan. you keep bringing this up. it would have been even more significant had it been a buffalo bills tie or he played at the end of his career or usc where he was a star or at san francisco 49ers where he ended his career, but it was weird to have like, you know, out of all the ties he could have worn, to wear an nfl tie. moving past the tie. i m a little obsessed with the tie. what was the question? were they star struck. oh the fact that this is o.j. simpson that they are questioning. yeah, i mean, i think they seemed nervous. was that a factor in the decision making.