in this case, as they made it clear, if he is released and he is in florida and he violates any of the conditions, he will be and waive his extradition and will be back in jail for the rest of the term. is it your sense that he s ready for this? it sounds like he s going to go down to florida to be with his family. there s a lot of questions about whether he will have some career in television. television executives are lining up to get him for that first interview. welsh listen, if he has a good lawyer and really any good lawyer would say, o.j., if you re out, keep your mouth shut. go to florida, play golf and live your life out. that s going to be the question. i thought one of the interesting questions was, what are you going to be like if the people in the community approach you? how much of his fame is he going to be able to put aside and recognize he has to change? because his words are going to
and instead of telling him that that s not what was there, he brought him up anyway. when o.j. got there, unfortunately he was already worked up and had people with him that were hollering and screaming. there was a lot of commotion going on in a very, very small room. real small room, wasn t it, o.j.? a lot of things happened very quickly. and, unfortunately, if o.j. had just said everybody out of here, bruce and i need to talk for a minute, none of this needed to happen. but that didn t happen. and it took one of the things i want to make clear. it took me two years in a california court, because and
lot of people are yelling bag that stuff up, let s get outta here. during the trial after i had already testified against o.j. and this is why i absolutely believe him. after i had already testified against o.j., i had already said everything i had to say, we happened to pass each other in the hallway and o.j. came up to me and said, can i talk to you for a minute? we had a chance to talk to each other. i told him, i m sorry that i did not get the opportunity to call him and tell him that i had that stuff. those items that belonged to him. i told him i m sorry that i did not take the opportunity to call him. because we had been apart for a long time. we hadn t had a chance to talk for many, many years. and i had been buying stuff from mike gilbert and i wish i had
recreated the o.j. saga, that documentary series that aired, that was so well received. enormous game of thrones type audiences in terms of the number of people watching. there is a fashion nation. maybe the millenials don t get it as much because they weren t around in 95, 96, 97, but they certainly, through the entertainment field and documentaries know what o.j. is all about and they know what happened, what he did, how he fell from grace, how he committed this crime and then went on to live his bizarre life ultimately ending up in jail on an rinky dink armed robbery charge. now will come the truly unsavory part as hollywood falls all over itself to try to get the big score. will they write another book? instead of if i did it, i did it? i don t know. i think that in many ways, sadly, we certainly have not
malcolm and him. ozzie fumo stay with us. sportscaster, jim, your thoughts? well, you know, it s just shocking to hear him say the following words. i wrote this down. no one ever accused me of pulling any weapon on them. i have never pulled a weapon on anyone in my life. it gave me chills. he was found guilty. gave me chills, too. he was found guilty in the civil trial. to say that in front of a parole board. i don t know what the parole board is thinking. you have to wonder if somebody outright lied of him and he was convicted in the civil trial of that. i wouldn t think that goes over very well. you know, i was thinking, criminal justice system works. it worked in this case. o.j. was found not guilty by a jury of his peers. from the day of the high speed bronco chase all the way through that trial, i covered that thing, there was a trail of blood from rockingham to bundy. a trail of blood the whole way. never seen that much physical