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Knife found at OJ Simpsons estate, only 20 years late.


Stress

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A construction worker found a knife buried on the perimeter of the former O.J. Simpson estate ... and it's currently being tested by the LAPD in a topkek secret investigation

The story is incredible. A construction worker found the knife years ago -- we have heard several different stories, ranging from "several years ago" to 1998, when the house was demolished.
 
The weapon is a folding buck knife.
 
Law enforcement sources say the construction worker took the knife to the street, where he saw an LAPD cop. He told the officer where he found the knife and the cop took it.
 
Turns out the cop -- who worked in the traffic division -- was off duty at the time, working security for a movie shoot at a house across the street on Rockingham. The officer took the knife home and kept it ... kept it for years. 
 
In late January of this year, after the cop retired from the LAPD, he contacted a friend who worked in LAPD's Robbery Homicide Division (RHD). The cop told the friend about the knife and said he was getting it framed to put on his wall. He wanted his friend to get the DR (Departmental Record) number for the Nicole Brown Simpson/Ronald Goldman murder case, which he planned on engraving in the frame.
 
The friend was indignant, and told his superiors. The brass was outraged and demanded that the retired cop turn the knife over, which he did.








Full article/video,  http://www.tmz.com/2016/03/04/oj-simpson-knife-found-murders-nicole-brown/

 
 
Edited by Stress
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I find it stupid how they can't like re-trial it

It is mainly to protect the innocent.

Imagine being charged for a crime that you didn't commit, and then even after proving your innocence they were still able to re-try the case against you and hope it sticks the next time. It would basically take up your entire life if you always had to worry about being re prosecuted for something you already spent so much time and effort fighting initially. A lot of people don't have the money or resources to go to court with a good attorney the first time let alone multiple times for the same allegations.

But I do feel their should be a exemption to that law, especially in instances like these.

 

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It is mainly to protect the innocent.

Imagine being charged for a crime that you didn't commit, and then even after proving your innocence they were still able to re-try the case against you and hope it sticks the next time. It would basically take up your entire life if you always had to worry about being re prosecuted for something you already spent so much time and effort fighting initially. A lot of people don't have the money or resources to go to court with a good attorney the first time let alone multiple times for the same allegations.

But I do feel their should be a exemption to that law, especially in instances like these.

 

True, it's like stupid, but understandable at the same time. I think if they find a knife buried by his house though. It should be looked into, that shit is dodgy af.

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how long until netflix turn it into a series? i think the bbc already have one out about oj at the moment

Netflix probably won't touch it tbh.

But the makers of American Horror Story have been making a season about the OJ case called American Crime Story, so they might make a second season about it, who knows.

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