Vegas Prosecution: Close the Book on O.J.

Natalie FinnMon Sep 15, 2:59 PM ET

As O.J. Simpson's trial on armed robbery charges kicked off Monday in Las
Vegas, the prosecutor looking to put the former football star behind
bars—possibly for the rest of his life—urged the jury to make this the
"final chapter" in Simpson's infamous and, in recent years, sordid story.

Simpson has demonstrated "a pattern of arrogance coupled with hypocrisy,"
Clark County Chief Deputy District Attorney Christopher Owens said in his
opening statement. "Ladies and gentlemen, you are the jurors in this case,
and the final story is going to be told by you.

"You will be able to write that final chapter, the chapter of arrogance and
hypocrisy, and that will be the true verdict. The verdict you can feel good
about."

In trying to pin the September 2007 shakedown of two sports memorabilia
dealers at a Vegas hotel on Simpson, Owens connected the alleged crime to a
scheme to avoid paying a 1997 $33.5 million wrongful-death judgment to the
families of ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ronald Goldman, whom
Simpson was acquitted of murdering in 1995.

Owens suggested that the Naked Gun star deliberately hid career memorabilia
and other valuable assets from the Goldmans and Browns in order to back his
claims that he couldn't afford any restitution.

And when memorabilia dealers Bruce Fromong and Alfred Beardsley refused to
return some of those items, Simpson and his cronies, including codefendant
Clarence "C.J." Stewart, armed themselves and went to retrieve the signed
footballs, pictures and other pieces by force, the prosecution contends.

"The audio will show threats, it will show force, it will show demands, and
it will show the taking of property from the victims in this case," Owens
said, referring to the recording made by Tom Riccio, who arranged the
meeting and was later given immunity after turning the tape over to
authorities.

Simpson's team, of course, was ready to tackle all mentions of the
Brown-Simpson-Goldman murder and its aftermath.

"This case, as [Clark County District Judge Jackie Glass] has instructed you
so many times I have lost count, is not about what occurred in California,"
defense attorney Yale Galanter told the nine-man, three-woman jury that was
seated on Friday.

"This case is not about Fred Goldman. It is about what happened in Las Vegas
last year this time and whether crimes were committed…This is not a smear
campaign against Mr. Simpson, nor should it be. This is not about writing a
book and writing a last chapter about Mr. Simpson and his life, nor should
it be. And Mr. Owens knows that."

Simpson and Stewart have pleaded not guilty to a dozen counts of armed
robbery, burglary, kidnapping, assault with a weapon, conspiracy and
coercion for the alleged heist, which took place Sept. 13, 2007, at the
Palace Station Hotel and Casino.

"This was a recovery. This wasn't a robbery," Galanter pressed, calling
Beardsley and Fromong "hustlers" who were "in it for the money."

"They are still in it for money," the lawyer said. "They want to write
books." All the tapes mean, Galanter said, is that Simpson likes to talk.
"He talks to everyone he meets."

Simpson has maintained that he was merely confronting the two dealers to
reclaim items that belonged to him in the first place and that he had no
idea that two of the men with him would be carrying guns.

Four of Simpson's alleged cohorts have pleaded to lesser charges and will be
testifying for the prosecution.

Day one of the trial was interrupted this afternoon when Fromong, who was
hospitalized with heart troubles last year after being thrust into the
spotlight, indicated that he was having chest pains while on the stand.

The jury was sent out and paramedics examined Fromong in the courtroom,
where he remained after they determined he didn't need to be taken to the
hospital.

Fromong's attorney said afterward that his client was "done for the day,"
but would be able to finish testifying Tuesday. He had testified earlier
that one of the men who accompanied Simpson into the hotel room last year
had pointed a gun at him.

"He shouted, 'How could you sell my stuff? I thought you were a good guy.
You stole my stuff,'" Fromong said, referring to Simpson.

(Originally published Sept. 15, 2008, at 4:01 p.m. PT)


-- 
"Usually when people are sad, they don't do anything. They just cry over
their condition. But when they get angry, they bring about a change."
- Malcolm X, Malcolm X Speaks, 1965

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