As it turns out, Simpson was allowed to keep generating memorabilia during his trial, which allowed to afford the "Dream Team" of lawyers — which the doc notes cost him an estimated $50,000 a day.
After the criminal trial verdict any attempt to punish OJ was double jeopardy. Fred Goldman was the father of an adult son he disowned, as Ron was a gay drug addict. But Fred’s heart turned into a cash register when he saw OJ’s wealth. You could hear a James Bond movie theme song playing wh
... it's all according to new court documents filed by Fred Goldman in Nevada in the hopes of collecting from the ex-NFL star in the state where Simpson now lives.
OJ hired the “dream team” because the stakes were higher and it was a murder charge. He was looking at spending the rest of his life in prison in 1997—only his fame kept the DA from asking for the death penalty. This time around, the crime was less severe, it was a different crime, and the DA had him dead to rights.
As it turns out, Simpson was allowed to keep generating memorabilia during his trial, which allowed to afford the "Dream Team" of lawyers — which the doc notes cost him an estimated $50,000 a day.
“He took money that was rightfully going to the government and that would have benefited his client.” The government produced a damning paper trail: Bailey had agreed that any fee he took would first be approved by the presiding judge, and early on he agreed to share a fee of $3 million, split among himself, Shapiro, ...
On Tuesday night, Allen said he takes issue with the fact that the original Dream Team members, as well as the team that won a gold medal in Atlanta in 1996, were paid. "If you think about it, the first two Dream Teams, they got paid," Allen said.
Famed attorney F. Lee Bailey, who defended O.J. Simpson, dies at age 87. F. Lee Bailey, the flamboyant defense attorney best known for his key role in O.J. Simpson's "Dream Team," has died, a long-time colleague said Thursday.
Simpson's team includes Los Angeles criminal defense lawyers Robert Shapiro and Johnnie Cochran, who regularly bill at least $300 an hour and are putting in 10- and 12-hour days on the case.
A Dream Team that, at its peak, cost O.J. an astounding $50,000 every single DAY! And keep in mind that the trial lasted 135 days, not including pre-trial, preparation and more. Obviously O.J. wasn't poor back in 1994.
June 16, 1994Nicole Brown Simpson / Date of burial
The International Olympic Committee, the Games' organizing body, doesn't pay any athletes who participate in a particular Olympiad, or give out prize money for medals. It's akin to how leagues like the NFL and the NBA don't pay players; instead, individual teams in the league are responsible for providing compensation.
Robert George Kardashian (February 22, 1944 - September 30, 2003) was an Armenian-American attorney & businessman. He gained national recognition as O.J.'s friend and defense attorney during his 1995 murder trial.
Robert Shapiro As defense chair, Shapiro was called the "architect" of the Simpson defense for building the high-profile legal team that would later be dubbed the "Dream Team." Shapiro led the defense team through much of the trial before Johnnie Cochran took over as the lead chair.
Twenty-five years ago today, in his closing argument at the sensational O.J. Simpson double-murder trial in Los Angeles, lead defense lawyer Johnnie L. Cochran stood before the jurors and urged them to keep this in mind: “If it doesn't fit, you must acquit.”
O.J. Simpson is surrounded by his Dream Team defense attorneys from left, Johnnie L. Cochran Jr., Peter Neufeld, Robert Shapiro, Robert Kardashian, and Robert Blasier, seated at left, at the close of defense arguments Thursday, Sept. 28, 1995.
Defense attorney Alan Dershowitz (L) confers with defendant OJ Simpson,as lead attorney Robert Shapiro listens, during a pretrial hearing on evidence suppression in the Simpson murder case.
Most importantly, it was left completely up to OJ himself to demonstrate whether the gloves fit or not. If he was able to get the gloves on, he might spend the rest of his life in prison. He needed them to not fit, so the attempt to get the gloves to fit on his hands was laughably weak.
Then, OJ was basically drained financially by the first trial. In fact, some lawyers (such as Alan Dershowitz) have said they still haven't been paid what they are owed, all these years later.
wrote, after a judge ordered it. His legal bills for that trial totaled approximately 10 million dollars. However, he has stiffed his attorneys, and paid them only a small fraction of that.
First, it was ghost-written. OJ Simpson, for all his talents that he did have, was not an accomplished writer. Ghost-writing is a popular method for celebrities to “write” books to capitalize on their fame and notoriety, without actually having to be capable of writing a book themselves.
Instead, in essence, OJ Simpson signed his name to a book that somebody else was paid to write for him. Second, anyone who has read the book can attest, it has very, very little information. Some people wanted to claim that it was some sort of crazy confession.