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- <text id=94TT0906>
- <title>
- Jul. 11, 1994: Justice:Flesh and Blood
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jul. 11, 1994 From Russia, With Venom
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- JUSTICE, Page 26
- Flesh and Blood
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> At the Simpson hearing, the talk was of bloodstains, a knife
- and a sealed envelope
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Lacayo--Reported by Jordan Bonfante and Patrick E. Cole/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> After weeks in which most episodes in the O.J. Simpson case
- have taken place just about anywhere but in court--on the
- freeways, in the headlines, on the Sunday-morning talk shows--it was something of a relief when the preliminary hearing
- started last week in Los Angeles. Even when prosecutors and
- the defense engaged in scholastic squabbles--like the one
- over how many hairs are needed for a forensic test--it was
- difficult to turn away. As millions who tuned into the all-day
- network and cable coverage discovered (there was scarcely anywhere
- else to go), in those meticulous proceedings were the stuff
- of life and death, flesh and blood.
- </p>
- <p> From the start, no one doubted that the prosecution could accomplish
- the simple goal of this hearing: to convince Judge Kathleen
- Kennedy-Powell that there is sufficient evidence to justify
- bringing Simpson to trial. Yet for most people, the real point
- was to learn precisely what evidence the prosecution had assembled.
- As it turned out, there was plenty. In the first two days of
- a hearing expected to continue at least through this week, it
- became apparent that lead prosecutor Marcia Clark and her team
- had gathered some devastating material, including enough scenes
- of blood to splice together a horror film.
- </p>
- <p> Whether all of it finds its way to trial depends on Clark's
- getting past the determined lawyering of defense attorney Robert
- Shapiro. With one challenge in particular--the admissibility
- of bloody evidence gathered at O.J.'s home by police before
- they obtained a warrant--Shapiro could deprive the prosecution
- of some of its deadliest persuaders. As the face-off continues
- this week between a confident prosecution and a relentlessly
- counterpunching defense, much of the struggle will center on
- these issues:
- </p>
- <p> THE WEAPON. Though they went to court without a murder weapon,
- prosecutors left no doubt that they believe they know what it
- was. The owner of a Los Angeles cutlery shop and a salesclerk
- testified that five weeks before the killings, Simpson bought
- a 15-in. stiletto with a 6-in. folding blade; before paying,
- he had it sharpened. To help the courtroom visualize such a
- knife, co-prosecutor William Hodgman displayed glossy photographs
- showing a duplicate of the stiletto that he said Simpson had
- purchased. This was followed by hints that a coroner would offer
- testimony to prove that the knife wounds on the victims came
- from the stiletto. Said Hodgman: "Stay tuned next week."
- </p>
- <p> THE WITNESSES. How persuasive the knife-purchase testimony might
- be in court will depend on what jurors think about the fact
- that Jose Camacho, the cutlery-store salesclerk, was paid $12,500
- by the National Enquirer to repeat his story to them, money
- that Camacho will split with his bosses. Though Shapiro failed
- in an attempt to get Judge Kennedy-Powell to suppress the testimony,
- he could argue to a jury that Camacho and one of his bosses
- had embellished their story or invented it to make it more salable.
- "How can you trust an individual when he or she has a financial
- interest in juicing up a story?" asks Los Angeles criminal lawyer
- James Blatt, who watched the proceedings.
- </p>
- <p> THE BLOOD. Police say they went to Simpson's home after midnight
- on June 13 to tell him of his ex-wife's murder. On arrival they
- spotted bloodstains on the outside of the driver-side door of
- Simpson's Ford Bronco and a trail of blood leading from the
- driveway to the house. When it turned out that O.J. was not
- at home, one of the officers entered the grounds by climbing
- a wall, then admitted the others, who proceeded to search the
- house and grounds. In all, police found 13 places where blood
- was splashed around the car, including a bloodstained footprint
- on the driver-side mat. Inside the house, there was blood in
- the foyer and on the master-bathroom wall. Police also found
- a bloodstained right-hand leather glove that closely resembled
- a left-hand glove--also covered in blood--that was found
- at the murder scene.
- </p>
- <p> All that evidence could be decisive if the prosecution is permitted
- to use it at a trial. It came to light only because of a defense
- motion to suppress 34 items collected by police. Shapiro maintains
- that they were gathered illegally because detectives searched
- Simpson's house for nearly six hours before obtaining a warrant.
- Even the warrant is illegal, he says, because in their effort
- to get it, police claimed that Simpson had fled when in fact
- he had taken a long-planned business trip. Under some circumstances--say, for instance, when police fear that evidence will be
- destroyed--warrantless searches are permissible.
- </p>
- <p> THE ENVELOPE. With a lawyerly touch, Shapiro produced a sealed
- envelope containing evidence that he would not identify. When
- he objected to having it opened at that moment, Judge Kennedy-Powell
- ordered both sides to submit briefs on how they think it should
- be unsealed. What's inside--Simpson's stiletto?
- </p>
- <p> THE TIME. Using some theatrics of her own, prosecutor Clark
- had earlier produced an envelope containing telephone records
- that could settle a controversy over the time of a phone call
- between Nicole Simpson and her mother Juditha Brown--though
- Clark did not immediately disclose the contents. A coroner's
- report says the mother reported that they spoke at about 11
- o'clock on the night of the murder. On the Sunday-morning talk
- shows, that point had been seized upon by F. Lee Bailey--the
- famed defense attorney who is advising Shapiro--to bolster
- the claim that when the killings took place, Simpson was at
- home waiting for a limousine that would take him to the airport
- for his 11:45 p.m. flight to Chicago. Nicole Simpson's father
- says the conversation took place closer to 10 p.m. If this is
- true, the prosecution could argue that Simpson had time to commit
- the killings shortly afterward, and still return home in plenty
- of time for his ride to the airport.
- </p>
- <p> It was mostly to settle the time issue that prosecutors spent
- much of Thursday and Friday constructing a wrenching sequence
- of events that led to the discovery of the bodies. One neighbor
- testified that he heard the "plaintive wail" of a dog beginning
- around 10:20 on the night Nicole Simpson and Ronald Goldman
- were killed. Another told how he was led to the murder scene
- by Nicole's agitated dog, which had blood on its paws. A third
- spoke of seeing blood trailing down from Nicole Simpson's body.
- "I remember," said Bettina Rasmussen, "it was coming down like
- a river."
- </p>
- <p> As the hearing played itself out to adjournment last week, police
- continued to collect evidence, at one point leaving Simpson's
- house with three grocery bags of material and towing away his
- Bentley. The prosecution said it will not produce at the hearing
- what most people expect to be the crucial evidence--the results
- of DNA testing of bloodstains that could prove whether Simpson
- was at the scene of the crime or whether blood from the victims
- was found in his car or at his home.
- </p>
- <p> Shapiro has hinted that he might try to frustrate the introduction
- of DNA test results. Expect it. Last week he threw himself into
- the path of virtually anything that might go before a jury,
- even demanding to see the resume of one witness, Michele Kestler,
- assistant director of the police crime lab, after he challenged
- her authority to say the prosecution required at least 100 of
- Simpson's hairs to match them against hairs in a wool ski hat
- found at the murder scene. The defense offered one hair; the
- judge ruled that prosecutors could have between 40 and 100.
- </p>
- <p> If either the DNA tests or the police discoveries at Simpson's
- house are admitted into evidence, Shapiro may have to rely on
- other strategies. Defense adviser Alan Dershowitz, the ubiquitous
- specialist in appeals (Klaus von Bulow, Leona Helmsley and Mike
- Tyson), suggested one possibility during an appearance on PBS's
- Charlie Rose Show. "Now you're going to see the defense brutally
- attacking these victims," he said. "By the end of this trial,
- nobody's going to have a kind thing to say about the two dead
- people." Last week Dershowitz insisted to TIME his words were
- "a general comment" that could be applied to any trial. If they
- become specific defense strategy, the next stage of this trial
- may move from the relative niceties of court procedure to the
- less orderly tactics of the world outside.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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