Sue Hartigan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Sorry but I don't believe it, but here it is anyway........
New evidence of plot
to kill Nicole Brown
L.A. County DA's Office
sitting on witness charge?
By David M. Bresnahan
© Copyright 1998, WorldNetDaily.com
Evidence that a conspiracy took place in the murder of
Nicole Brown Simpson, and that a hit man was hired, has
been held quietly without action in the Los Angeles County
District Attorney' Office, according to information provided
by an individual close to the investigation.
A letter from attorney Lawrence M. Longo, who represents
the witness, to Deputy District Attorney Curtis A. Hazell
offers evidence of a conspiracy to kill Nicole Brown. Her
former husband, O.J. Simpson was acquitted of murder
charges in the high-profile case, but was held liable for
damages in her death in a civil case.
Longo said in his letter last month: "It is my understanding
based upon my conversation with you that you might be
interested in information my client could provide in regards
to a solicitation to commit murder of Nicole Brown
Simpson by Robert Kardashian."
Longo's client is William Benson Wasz, who was brought to
Longo by noted author and crime journalist Joseph Bosco.
Bosco was one of the few members of the press to have a
permanent seat in the courtroom throughout the 16-month
Simpson trial, and is considered an authority on the
Simpson case. In his book, "A Problem of Evidence: How
the Prosecution Freed O.J. Simpson," Bosco claims the
prosecution bungled the case.
"Very early after the murder, Mr. Wasz appeared across the
radar screen, and very early both sides put out that he was
just bogus," said Bosco in a phone interview. "So we all
forgot about it. A couple years later I find out the
information both sides put out wasn't true. So I started
visiting Mr. Wasz in prison, and I've been doing so for
about a year. And I've been talking to some of my people at
the District Attorney' Office who are friends of mine."
After Bosco brought Wasz to Longo, the attorney went to
Hazell with offers of information and evidence, which the
leaked letter verifies. The letter also provides details of
the
alleged conspiracy.
"In the fall of 1993, Bill Wasz came into contact with Paula
Barbieri, Robert Kardashian and O.J. Simpson," says the
letter to the DA's Office. "The contact with these
individuals was made at the Roxbury in West Hollywood.
"Just before the New Year, Robert Kardashian met with
Wasz in his home in Encino and offered him an assignment.
The purpose was to follow Nicole and take pictures of her
with any man whom she might meet with romantically. The
surveillance of Nicole took place on January 6th and 7th,
1994. This information was documented in a notebook --
the notebook is currently in the custody of the LAPD. The
three phone numbers in the book belong to O.J.,
Kardashian and Barbieri.
"On about January 14, Bill Wasz met Robert Kardashian
again in his Encino home. At this meeting Kardashian
offered Wasz $15,000 if he would kill Nicole with a
25-caliber bullet to the head."
Kardashian also allegedly told Wasz he was to steal
Barberi's car and use it during the murder. The murder was
to take place at the Rockingham and not at Nicole
Simpson's home on Gretna Green.
"On January 24 at approximately 10 a.m., Kardashian called
Wasz at his room at the Saharan Motel on Sunset Blvd. In
Hollywood, Kardashian told Wasz to steal Barbieri's car
from a parking garage in Beverly Hills between 3 and 4
o'clock while she was having her hair done.
"After Wasz stole Barbieri's car, he drove to a mall in West
Valley where he met Kardashian. While at the mall, Wasz
took an envelope containing $7,500, which was to be partial
payment for the killing."
Asked why the letter might be leaked to the press, Bosco
surmised that someone wanted to sabotage the investigation,
or that well-known political problems in the District
Attorney's Office were to blame.
"That's what I think has happened here, because there's not
a story yet," said Bosco. "If all aspects of that story check
out, you've got a hell of a story."
Longo was out of his office yesterday, but a spokesperson
there verified that the letter in question was genuine and
not
a hoax. No other information was provided, and Longo has
not responded to two messages left with his office.
Two calls were made to Hazell's office. Both times, he was
said to be "at lunch." But a source there also verified that
Hazell is working on the conspiracy issue and that he has
been in communication with Longo. The source, however,
was not aware of Longo's letter. Hazell never returned
phone calls to WorldNetDaily.
The whistleblower who provided a copy of the Longo letter
to WorldNetDaily explained his motivations: "I don't trust
the Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office to
properly investigate this information. They've known about
this for too long without doing anything. It's time for the
truth, whatever it is, to come out."
--
Two rules in life:
1. Don't tell people everything you know.
2.
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