Skip to: Site menu | Main content

Simpson Trial Rosa Lopez Recess Wrapup - Part 5

2008-06-29

CNN

March 1, 1995

SHOW: NEWS 1:45 pm ET

GUESTS: LEXIS-NEXIS Related Topics Full Article  Related Topics Overview

This document contains no targeted Topics.

BYLINE: JIM MORET

SECTION: News; Domestic

LENGTH: 1171 words

HIGHLIGHT: The prosecution has been granted additional time to assemble its cross examination of defense witness Rosa Lopez. The court recessed today to consider the handling of the witness's testimony.

JIM MORET, Anchor: Welcome back to our special look at the O.J. Simpson trial.  I'm Jim Moret in Los Angeles.  We've just heard portions of yesterday's Court session in which both sides talked about investigator, William Pavelic's interviews with Rosa Lopez and how they affect the trial.  Let's get reaction now from our CNN legal analysts, Greta Van Susteren and John Burris.

John, first to you.  There's an issue of credibility here and I suppose it's really threefold.  One, with the judge.  Two, with the jury and three, with the public.  How- address each if you could with respect to William Pavelic.

JOHN BURRIS, Criminal Defense Attorney: Well, certainly from the investigator's point of view I don't think he had a duty to maintain any of those notes that he took of the statements.  I mean, his obligation was to turn over any statements that he had, audio and otherwise in a timely manner.  Certainly, the credibility issue is for him is, for the Court, there was some misrepresentations made, or at least there appeared to be, about whether he had statements or notes or etc., and he appeared to be cagey about responding to the judge's inquiry before he went on, before he took an oath.

Once he took that oath, then he became a little clearer.  So, from a judge's point of view, he sort of looked at this person as saying, 'You are not being candid with us and you seem to be evasive.' From the public's point of view, of course, he looked like an investigator who had a duty to maintain something.  He was being evasive and that he had destroyed a real piece of evidence.  So I think he's gotten a real bad rap with respect to the public at large.  And certainly, from the Court, he appeared to be evasive.  But in terms of his obligation to keep notes, I think he did not do anything illegal or improper.

JIM MORET: Greta Van Susteren, are we seeing a credibility gap emerging here, both with Bill Pavelic and with the defense team as a whole?

GRETA VAN SUSTEREN, Trial Attorney: I think we're certainly seeing one with the defense team.  It may have been Bill Pavelic who perhaps didn't turn over the statements to his lawyers, but a lawyer is responsible for the entire team and this happened under the watch of Johnnie Cochran and Mr. Shapiro.  So, they really are ultimately responsible.

What I'm surprised about though is that the judge really hasn't zeroed in on exactly what it is that happened.  Why didn't the defense do the inventory and come up with a month ago?  Why are we revisiting this issue?  Was it negligence or was it deceitful?  And we simply don't have that answer yet.  And if I were Judge Ito, I would zero in on that.  And if there is deceit, I would punish the defense lawyers.  Not, O.J. Simpson, but the lawyers.  I'd probably give them a hefty fine so they don't do it again.

JIM MORET: Greta, in the past, in seems that Carl Douglas, one of the defense attorneys, has been chosen to fall on the sword and it looked like yesterday Bill Pavelic was the person chosen to do so.

GRETA VAN SUSTEREN: Well certainly, every time Carl Douglas takes the lectern, there's always sort of a thought that goes through my head 'What has happened now on the defense team in terms of discovery?' But I don't think the defense team really expected that Bill Pavelic would get hauled into Court and have to answer questions.  I think that Mr. Douglas seems to be the appointed man to take all the wrath from the Court, every time there's a problem on the defense team.  I think it was only accidental that Bill Pavelic got pulled in.

JIM MORET: After hearing from both sides on the issue of the audio taped interview, Judge Ito settled on a compromise ruling.  He called Rosa Lopez' lawyer forward to explain.

Judge LANCE ITO, Los Angeles Superior Court: Ms. Hamburger, would you approach please?  All right, good afternoon, counsel.  We've had a few developments transpire, as you know, over the last two days.  The defense has turned over a tape recording of a statement made by your client, Rosa Lopez, in July of last year.  And that tape recording was turned over late this morning and a transcript was just provided by the Court to counsel for both sides.  The prosecution has asked for a continuance of the 1335 until Friday morning so that they can evaluate the tape recorded statement and correlate it with all the other evidence that has been engendered, excuse me- has been created by this situation.

I am probably not going to grant the continuance until Friday.  I am probably going to grant a continuance until Thursday, for this reason.  I do not believe we can complete this conditional examination in one additional day.  I think we're going to go longer than an additional day.  And I'm therefore going to be ordering your client to return back here at 9:00 on Thursday morning, the 2nd of March, and I understand your client is very reluctant to stay.  The Court has already, through the Clerk, made arrangements to change her plane reservations for her flight out of town.  So I maintain my believe that she is, in fact, going to leave the jurisdiction.

My alternative is that if she does not accept my order to return on March 3rd on 9:00 a.m., then having already determined that she is a material witness, I will have to require her to post a substantial bond.  All right, do you want to discuss that with you client?

Ms. HAMBURGER, Rosa Lopez Attorney: May I please, Your Honor.

Judge LANCE ITO: Certainly.

JOHNNIE COCHRAN: March 2nd?

Judge LANCE ITO: March 2nd, which is Thursday.  And the reason for that-.

Ms. HAMBURGER: May I have 10 minutes, Your Honor?

Judge LANCE ITO: Certainly.

Ms. HAMBURGER: Thank you.

Judge LANCE ITO: And the reason for that counsel, let me just explain to counsel.  I think Ms. Clark, that you're entitled to a substantial amount of time and perhaps overnight is not enough.  But I don't believe we're going to complete this conditional examination in one additional day.  And if we go to Friday, then we're going to dribble over into Saturday and Sunday and I have other commitments Saturday that I can't break.  So, that's that.

JIM MORET: After consulting with her lawyer for several minutes, an obviously unhappy Rosa Lopez again addressed the judge.

Judge JIM MORET: Your attorney has indicated that you wish to talk to me about this.

ROSA LOPEZ: Yes, Your Honor.  I want to tell you that I was very honest with you.  You told me come back-.

JIM MORET: We're interrupting that taped portion.  Judge Lance Ito is once again on the bench.  Let's listen in to the Court proceedings as they occur now live.

Judge LANCE ITO: Deputy McNair, let's have the jurors please.

The preceding text has been professionally transcribed.  However, although the text has been checked against an audio track, in order to meet rigid distribution and transmission deadlines, it may not have been proofread against tape.

LOAD-DATE: March 1, 1995

LANGUAGE: ENGLISH

TYPE: Package

O.J. sister-in-law mocks defense claim that he's innocent

2008-06-26

The Boston Herald

October 6, 1994 Thursday

BYLINE: HELEN KENNEDY

SECTION: NEWS; Pg. 8

LENGTH: 452 words

A member of Nicole Brown Simpson's family questioned O.J. Simpson's innocence for the first time yesterday, as Simpson's lawyers continued fighting to throw evidence out of the case.

"If O.J. is so innocent, why are they trying to suppress all the evidence?" sister Denise Brown asked reporters after yesterday's court session.

"He's 100 percent innocent?" she said mockingly. "Keep the evidence then."

Simpson's team battled to throw out all items seized from Simpson's Bronco after it was burglarized in a police tow yard June 15. Superior Court Judge Lance A. Ito will rule on the matter today.

Simpson's team yesterday again accused police detectives of lying about why they entered Simpson's home June 13.

"What was presented at the preliminary hearing was a well-orchestrated tissue of lies," said defense attorney Gerald Uelmen.

The detectives have testified that they jumped the gate of Simpson's estate after repeated calls to the house went unanswered.

But Uelmen brandished a security company transcript showing police were "at the front door" before any phone calls were made to the house.

Prosecutor Marcia Clark dismissed the claim, saying the employees at the security office actually meant the outside gate.

In an odd development, Simpson attorney Johnnie Cochran questioned Detective Tom Lange about his seizure of a pair of Reebok sneakers from Simpson's closet.

Lange said Simpson was present when he took the shoes.

Cochran then asked if Simpson "lifted up a wad of money" from a pile of clothes while he and Lange were alone in the closet.

"No," said Lange, and shook his head.

During the brief exchange, Simpson smiled broadly, leaned forward and looked more animated than he has in any court appearance so far.

When Lange denied seeing any money, Simpson grinned, shook his head and clearly mouthed to Shapiro: "I showed it to him."

The defense then tried to introduce evidence from an earlier police misconduct trial that would show that Detective Mark Fuhrman - who found key evidence against Simpson - is a racist and a liar.

Clark said because one of Simpson's investigators worked on that earlier trial, Simpson's lawyers should have brought up the issue at the preliminary hearing.

The investigator, Zvonko "Bill" Pavelic, worked for Joseph Britten, who sued several officers, including Fuhrman, on charges of police brutality and racism.

Simpson's team offered to put Pavelic on the stand to testify that he only worked on Britten's case in a limited capacity.

Ito decided to postpone the issue until next week.

As Pavelic has a reputation for flamboyant outspokenness, the clash promises to be dramatic.

"I warn counsel that I will call the city attorney, who will impeach Mr. Pavelic," Clark said firmly.

LOAD-DATE: March 16, 2007

LANGUAGE: ENGLISH

PUBLICATION-TYPE: Newspaper

4-Hour Siege Fails To Turn Up Theft Suspect But A Phone Call Does

2008-06-17

Los Angeles Times

October 31, 1986, Friday, Home Edition

BYLINE: By MICHAEL SEILER and EDWARD J. BOYER, Times Staff Writers
SECTION: Metro; Part 2; Page 6; Column 1; Metro Desk
LENGTH: 413 words

Los Angeles police laid siege for four hours at an Echo Park drugstore Thursday -- only to find when they finally entered after dark that there was no sign of a supposed holdup man believed to have been holding five people hostage.

What heavily armed Special Weapons and Tactics team officers discovered were the owner's wife, a clerk and two customers hiding in a storage room.

Later, a suspect was taken into custody at a home in the area.

Police said the incident began shortly before 3 p.m., when a woman employee at Taylor's Pharmacy, 1700 W. Temple St., ran outside to report that the man who had robbed the place of narcotics two days earlier was paying a return visit.

8 People Rescued
The SWAT team responded, eventually rescuing eight people who did not dare walk down the stairs from a physical rehabilitation center on the second floor, because the stairs went right past the drugstore doorway.

The Glendale Boulevard off-ramp of the Hollywood Freeway and streets for blocks around the pharmacy were closed to traffic.

Hundreds of spectators gathered.
While marksmen trained rifles on the store, police negotiators tried to make contact by telephone, but someone kept hanging up on them.

It turned out that one of the people hiding in the storage room was simply trying to plug in a portable phone and did not have much luck.

At last, owner Shelton Lee, 45, wearied of the bathroom in which he had taken refuge, emerged at about 7 p.m.

Then the officers went in.

"No suspect at the ," Capt. Ron Banks reported. "Apparently before we were able to secure the building, the suspect left."

Late Thursday, police booked James J. Drake, 40, for investigation of robbery in the incident.

Received Call From Neighbor
Officers said they were called to Drake's home on Kensington Road in Echo Park by a neighbor. Drake's mother had sought help from the neighbor after her son began acting irrationally, police said.

"He was sweating and talking excitedly -- symptoms of recent drug use," Detective Bill Pavelic said. "We called him from next door and talked him into surrendering."

Drake was taken to Queen of Angels Hospital for treatment of a possible drug overdose. The victims were taken to the hospital and they were able to identify Drake, officers said.

Detectives said it appeared that the man who entered the pharmacy Thursday afternoon had stolen some drugs.

Times staff writer Nieson Himmel contributed to this article.

LANGUAGE: ENGLISH

GRAPHIC: Photo, Members of Los Angeles Police Swat team climbed atop an Echo Park drugstore in which it was believed that an armed man was holding five hostages, above. Lower photo shows LAPD officer watching building from across the street during long police siege.  Robert Gabirel; Boris Yaro / Los Angeles Times

Callers Flood Phone Lines With Simpson Tips With US-Simpson-Slayings

2008-06-11

198 of 244 DOCUMENTS

Associated Press Worldstream

July 28, 1994; Thursday 16:54 Eastern Time

SECTION: International news

LENGTH: 356 words

DATELINE: LOS ANGELES

 From tales about a footloose dog to a burglar's reports of mysterious screams, tips are pouring in on the hot line set up in the O.J. Simpson murder case.

Simpson attorney Robert L. Shapiro said Wednesday that the toll-free telephone line established by the defense had recorded 250,000 calls in a week.

''It's beyond belief,'' Shapiro said.

Simpson has also offered dlrs 500,000 for information leading to the arrest of the ''real killer.''

''We're hearing from every psycho and every crazy person,'' said Bill Pavelic, an investigative consultant working with the Simpson team. ''But if I get one call in a hundred that's a good lead, it's worth it.''

A Santa Barbara woman called police and the hot line suggesting that Nicole Brown Simpson's white Akita could have carried a bloody glove from the murder scene to Simpson's estate two miles (3.2 kilometers) away.

She suggested tests of the glove to see whether the dog's saliva was on it. So far, neither police nor defense lawyers have requested the tests.

A Maryland woman has called the hot line repeatedly, telling of dreams in which she sees another killer. To her frustration, lawyers haven't called her back.

Investigators for the defense and the police are looking into many of the tips in the June 12 slayings of Simpson's former wife and her friend Ronald Goldman.

''There's people that are giving us theories, there's psychics, that kind of thing,'' Detective Dennis Payne said. ''And then there's people who have information. We're checking it all out.''

Some officers said they are concerned defense lawyers will present a huge number of tips to police, then argue that the investigation wasn't thorough if all aren't tracked down.

One caller who identified himself as a burglar said he was casing homes in the neighborhood the night of the slayings. He said he heard a woman scream and saw two white men fleeing the crime scene about the time of the killings.

The burglar said he isn't interested in the reward money.

''I just want to straighten this out,'' he told the Los Angeles Times, speaking on condition of anonymity.

LOAD-DATE: July 28, 1994

LANGUAGE: ENGLISH
Copyright 1994 Associated Press

All Rights Reserved

Simpson Detective Portrayed As Bitter, Vindictive Ex-Cop With Simpson-Slay

2008-06-06

Bill Pavelic gave up a generous pension package when he quit the department 18 months ago after nearly 20 years on the force. He contends he was forced out because he had complained about racism and corruption in the department.

''I was sick and tired of watching innocent people get framed, especially members of minority groups, and that includes African-Americans and Mexicans,''Bill Pavelic, a Croat born in the former Yugoslavia, told The Associated Press. ''I was disturbed about officer-involved shootings, and how they covered up the incidents.''

Bill Pavelic, who has sat in court behind Simpson, was hired to review the police investigation in the case, looking for mistakes, violations of LAPD policy and skeletons in investigators' closets.

Simpson, 47, is charged with murder in the June 12 stabbings of his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson, 35, and her friend Ron Goldman, 25. He faces a Friday arraignment.

Court papers describe Bill Pavelic as angry, bitter and paranoid.

''Bill Pavelic thought there was a big conspiracy among the supervisors at Southwest Detectives and command staff officers of LAPD who were 'out to get him,''' prosecutors wrote in a case in which the defense was considering calling Bill Pavelic as a witness.

In recent days, the Simpson camp has leaked unflattering details about Detective Mark Fuhrman, who testified at a preliminary hearing that he found a bloody glove at Simpson's estate.

The defense was reportedly going to argue that Fuhrman planted the glove. However, an internal police investigation has concluded that scenario is virtually impossible, unidentified police sources told the Los Angeles Times.

Many of Fuhrman's defenders suspect Bill Pavelic was responsible for revealing details to the media of a 1983 lawsuit that portrays Fuhrman as racist and violent.

Bill Pavelic makes no secret of his hatred toward the LAPD, and Fuhrman in particular.

A review of his personnel file suggests, however, that Bill Pavelic enjoyed a successful career. He strongly defended his reputation, pointing to 175 commendations he received.

But his career apparently took a turn for the worse in his latter years, when he started openly criticizing command staff, including former Chief Daryl Gates.

Bill Pavelic retired in 1992 on a service-related disability pension of half pay, claiming his working conditions aggravated his health.

LOAD-DATE: July 21, 1994

LANGUAGE: ENGLISH

LOOKING BACK 1984 OLYMPICS DAY 4 IN L.A.;Plenty of Stars for Stars and Stripes

2008-05-28

 Los Angeles Times
July 31, 2004 Saturday 
Home Edition

BYLINE: Bill Dwyre

SECTION: SPORTS; Sports Desk; Part D; Pg. 5

LENGTH: 478 words

The American Olympic happy days continued, and Richie Cunningham and the Fonz undoubtedly were around to cheer.

ABC suffocated its viewers with celebrating American athletes, and the TV viewers seemed to love it. The Times, reacting to a late-breaking event of some magnitude, headlined the victory by the U.S. men's gymnastics team "The Miracle of L.A."

The team, with Mitch Gaylord seeking additional points by risking his signature move, the Gaylord III, and hitting it, not only won gold for the first time in men's gymnastics, but got an Olympic men's gymnastics medal for the first time in 52 years.

Richard Hoffer, now of Sports Illustrated, waxed eloquent on deadline: "They had flown, flared, floated ... would they ever come down?"

The next day, critics speculated that, had the Soviet-bloc countries competed, the Americans never would have won the gold. It was pointed out, however, that China, which had finished second, had beaten the Soviets along the way.

Life was just as red, white and blue at the swim venue at USC. Five finals were held, and five Americans won.

Rowdy Gaines, one who had been victimized by Jimmy Carter's boycott of the Moscow Olympics, took the 100 freestyle, his time of 49.80 seconds beating the Olympic record of 49.99 set by Jim Montgomery in the '76 Games. Theresa Andrews took the 100 backstroke, then marched over and presented her gold medal to her 20-year-old brother, two years younger than she. He had been paralyzed after a bike accident and she had taken a year off from swimming to help with his care.

The demonstration sport of baseball was contributing greatly to the L.A. committee's bottom line, drawing 52,319 at Dodger Stadium to watch the U.S. team beat Taiwan, 2-1.

The rowing venue at Lake Casitas was having so much trouble with midday wind that some of its events were started at 7:30 a.m.

Vonnie Gros, the U.S. women's field hockey coach, was pleasantly surprised by the lack of smog. She had trained her team in Pennsylvania, and to get ready for Southern California, had asked officials at Ursinus College to back up four cars to the door of the gym and turn on their engines. Ursinus officials had refused.

News leaked out that Lord Killanin, president of the International Olympic Committee until 1980, and the man who had threatened to take the Games from Los Angeles because of lack of public funding until Mayor Tom Bradley called his bluff, had been rescued by an LAPD officer named Bill Pavelic. Killanin, choking on food at an L.A. restaurant, was saved when Pavelic pounded on his back five or six times. Several unidentified members of the LAOOC said they wished they had been there to help.

Sen. Bill Bradley, the former basketball star, was quoted as saying that Athens should be made the permanent home of the Olympics. Twenty years to the day later, the Greeks were finishing the main Olympic Stadium.

LOAD-DATE: July 31, 2004

LANGUAGE: ENGLISH

GRAPHIC: PHOTO: (no caption) 

PUBLICATION-TYPE: Newspaper

INVESTIGATOR HIRED BY O.J. DESCRIBED AS BITTER EX-COP

2008-05-26

SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER

July 22, 1994, Friday , FINAL

SOURCE: P-I News Services

SECTION: NEWS                  

LENGTH: MEDIUM: Pg. B1

LENGTH: 666 words

DATELINE: LOS ANGELES

A top investigator for O.J. Simpson has been portrayed in court papers as a bitter ex-cop with a vendetta against a former Los Angeles Police Department colleague assigned to the Simpson case.

Zvonko Bill Pavelic gave up a generous pension package when he quit the department 18 months ago after nearly 20 years on the force. He contends he was forced out because he had complained about racism and corruption in the department.

"I was sick and tired of watching innocent people get framed, especially members of minority groups, and that includes African Americans and Mexicans," Pavelic told The Associated Press. "I was disturbed about officer-involved shootings, and how they covered up the incidents."

Bill Pavelic was hired to review the police investigation in the case, looking for mistakes, violations of LAPD policy and skeletons in investigators' closets.

Simpson, 47, is charged with murder in the June 12 stabbings of his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson, 35, and Ron Goldman, 25. He faces arraignment today .

Court papers describe Bill Pavelic as angry, bitter and paranoid.

"Bill Pavelic thought there was a big conspiracy among the supervisors at Southwest Detectives and command staff officers of LAPD who were 'out to get him,' " prosecutors wrote in a case in which the defense was considering calling Bill Pavelic as a witness.

In recent days, the Simpson camp has leaked unflattering details about Detective Mark Fuhrman, who testified at a preliminary hearing that he found a bloody glove at Simpson's estate.

The defense reportedly was going to argue that Fuhrman planted the glove.  However, an internal police investigation has concluded that scenario is virtually impossible, police sources told the Los Angeles Times.

Many of Fuhrman's defenders suspect Bill Pavelic was responsible for revealing details to the media of a 1983 lawsuit that portrays Fuhrman as racist and violent.

A review of his personnel file suggests, however, that Bill Pavelic enjoyed a successful career. He strongly defended his reputation, pointing to 175 commendations.

But his career apparently took a turn for the worse in his latter years, when he started openly criticizing command staff, including former Chief Daryl Gates.

Pavelic retired in 1992 on a service-related disability pension of half pay, claiming his working conditions aggravated his health.

On Wednesday, the defense launched a toll-free tip line and a $500,000 reward for "the real killer."

Simpson's lead defense attorney, Robert Shapiro, said hot-line operators were receiving 100 calls a minute. Earlier, an AT&T operator had said technical difficulties were blocking some calls.

"This is done totally outside our office. . . . This is totally O.J.'s thing," Shapiro said yesterday, adding that a message on the hot line had been changed to delete a referral to Shapiro's office for legal representation.

Meanwhile, officials said yesterday that a notebook detailing Nicole Simpson's activities last winter was found in the car of O.J. Simpson's girlfriend and has been turned over to Los Angeles police.

Police in Newport Beach, 40 miles south of Los Angeles, said the notebook was recovered from Paula Barbieri's car Jan. 31 after the vehicle had been stolen and used in four armed robberies.

Newport Beach police spokesman Sgt. Andy Gonis said the notebook was handed over on July 12 to the lawyer of William Wasz, who stole the car, and was now in the hands of Los Angeles police.

Wasz's lawyer, John Stewart, told CNN that the notebook contained a detailed schedule of Nicole Simpson's movements.

"I found the contents very, very interesting as it relates to possible scenarios relative to O.J. Simpson (and) . . . the ongoing prosecution of O.J.," he said.

TV coverage

ABC, CBS, CNN and NBC plan live coverage of O.J. Simpson's arraignment on murder charges today in Los Angeles. The court session also can be seen on Court TV. It is scheduled to begin at 10:30 a.m. PDT.

- The Associated Press
sdh/md
LOAD-DATE: November 24, 1998
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH

Kato Kaelin Chastised for His Testimony

2008-05-19

CNN

March 27, 1995

SHOW: NEWS 11:07 am ET


GUESTS: LEXIS-NEXIS Related Topics Full Article  Related Topics Overview
 
This document contains no targeted Topics.

BYLINE: GREG LaMOTTE

SECTION: News; Domestic

LENGTH: 1102 words

HIGHLIGHT: Prosecutor Marcia Clark has issued a public scolding of Kato Kaelin, who she says has withheld information in his testimony in the O.J. Simpson trial. Kaelin seems to have selective recall in his testimony.

DONNA KELLEY, Anchor: Welcome back to our CNN Morning News.  About 8 minutes after the hour.  It's a new week, and there are some new developments in the O.J. Simpson double murder case.  CNN's Marc Watts is in Los Angeles with the details for us.  Marc?
 
MARC WATTS, Anchor: Donna, the Simpson trial resumes in about one hour with more testimony from O.J. Simpson's former houseguest.  Now, with more on the trial, let's go live to the courthouse and CNN's Greg LaMotte.  Greg?
 
GREG LaMOTTE, Correspondent: Well, Marc, the last time we were in the courtroom, prosecutor Marcia Clark had launched a blistering attack on the world's most fa-mous houseguest, Brian 'Kato' Kaelin.  Clark appeared to be trying to show that Kaelin may have been willing to hide the truth in order to protect O.J. Simpson.
 
Now, Kaelin is a prosecution witness who has been able to support the prosecu-tion's contention that no one knew the whereabouts of O.J. Simpson for at least an hour and a half the night of the killings.  Kaelin is the one who says he heard the three thumps at about 10:40 to 10:45 the night of the killings, and then about 10 to 15 minutes later, saw O.J. Simpson in front of Simpson's home.  Now, near where Kaelin heard those thumps, a blood glove was found that matches one found at the crime scene.  Kaelin says he heard the thumps while talking to a friend on the telephone.  That friend's name is Rachel Ferrara.  She is ex-pected to follow Kaelin on the witness stand and corroborate Kaelin's testimony about hearing unusual noises.  Her testimony is expected to be brief.  We then anticipate hearing from limousine driver, Alan Park.  He says no one answered the phone at Simpson's estate when he arrived to take Simpson to the airport.  Park said only after he saw a 6-foot-tall African-American enter Simpson's front door at about 11:00 p.m. did Simpson then answer the telephone and let the driver into the gated estate.  Joining me this morning is Jim Willwerth with Time Magazine.  Good morning, Jim.
 
JIM WILLWERTH, 'Time' Magazine: Good morning, Greg.
 
GREG LaMOTTE: Your assessment of how Kato Kaelin performed on the witness stand last week?
 
JIM WILLWERTH: Well, I think Kato did a fine job for the prosecution in the sense that he provided the timeline they were looking for.  He made it clear that he cannot be an alibi witness for O.J. in terms of having been in the house that night, and he also saw the blood drops early that morning, which means it would have been pretty hard for the police to plant them later in the day.
 
On the other hand, Kato is being extremely fuzzy in some key areas.  He could have provided a much better timeline.  And a number of Marcia' questions where she said, did you not say to 'Friend X' or 'Friend Y' the next day or that day or the following day that, you know, so-and-so - those friends say, my informa-tion at least is, those friends say he said those things.  So why isn't he say-ing them now?  It's a pretty good question.
 
GREG LaMOTTE: Kaelin also has, certainly, hedged on the issue of O.J. Simpson's demeanor the day of the killings and after he saw him the next day.
 
JIM WILLWERTH: Yeah.  Again, I mean, Kato seems to be developing a selective fuzziness.  He has said a number of things, including one particular thing to friends that O.J. was extremely frazzled that night.  He'd never seen anything like it, he told at least one friend.  And yet, now, on the witness stand, he doesn't seem to be able to remember telling those things to those friends.  Again, what's going on here?
 
GREG LaMOTTE: O.J. Simpson's demeanor certainly changed in the courtroom with Kaelin on the witness stand.
 
JIM WILLWERTH: Well, I think he sees Kato as friendly.  I think he likes Kato.  I think Kato has provided a certain amount of tension relief.  And also, O.J. has to be pleased that Kato doesn't seem to remember some of the things which are quite so incriminating, at least in mood.  And a lot of this trial is about mood and motive and opportunity.  So that O.J. finds himself being depicted in a much, you know, friendlier, a much less frantic way than the prosecution would like to depict him.
 
GREG LaMOTTE: Thank you very much.  That's Jim Willwerth with Time Magazine.  I might add that today will be a shortened day in the courtroom.  Apparently, a juror has a prior commitment that they must attend to - some sort of meeting or appointment that they had - we don't know if that's with a doctor or not.  At any rate, court will be ending today at 12:00 noon Pacific, 3:00 p.m. Eastern.  Marc?
 
MARC WATTS: All right.  Greg LaMotte at the courthouse.  Thanks, much.  We'll see what happens later today in the courtroom.  Besides what Greg mentioned, to-day's proceedings in the Simpson trial will also include a hearing on a defense team request that Judge Ito reconsider his punishment to defense attorneys.  CNN's Charles Feldman reports now, the actions that got the defense attorneys sanctioned are not the only thing troubling other defense lawyers.
 
CHARLES FELDMAN, Correspondent: When O.J. Simpson prosecutor Marcia Clark blew up at defense attorney F. Lee Bailey on the 'ides of March,' she gave voice to something a growing number of defense lawyers already think.
 
MARCIA CLARK, Prosecutor: That shows you what kind of- what we have over here in the way of ethics on this side of the table.  They'll get up and they'll misrep-resent till their heart's content until they get caught, and then they have ex-cuses.  And then they start splitting hairs.  And then they have - well, this means this, and oh, no - that means that.  I felt like we were in Alice in Won-derland-
 
CHARLES FELDMAN: The Simpson defense team has been sanctioned twice by Judge Lance Ito for violating California law - a law that requires defense lawyers to turn over certain information to prosecutors to insure a fairer trial.  Johnnie Cochran and Carl Douglas have been fined $950 each for telling the Court there was no audiotape of investigator Bill Pavelic's interview with Rosa Lopez.
 
F. LEE BAILEY, Simpson Attorney: It's a situation where we told the truth.  We didn't know.  There was no malice there.  Nobody intended to withhold anything.  I mean, when we discovered these things, Bill Pavelic simply forgot to mention that he had a tape.
 
The preceding text has been professionally transcribed.  However, although the text has been checked against an audio track, in order to meet rigid distri-bution and transmission deadlines, it may not have been proofread against tape.

LOAD-DATE: March 28, 1995

LANGUAGE: ENGLISH

Transcript # 901-15

TYPE: Package

Hotline shut down as 'tips' plummet

2008-05-17

Hamilton Spectator (Ontario, Canada)

August 25, 1994 Thursday Final Edition

SOURCE: FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS

SECTION: NEWS; Pg. A8

LENGTH: 320 words

DATELINE: LOS ANGELES

Calls to a hot line created for tipsters with possible leads in the O.J. Simpson murder case have dropped off so precipitously in recent weeks that his attorneys have decided for now to pull the plug on the highly publicized effort, members of Mr. Simpson's defence camp said yesterday.

"Like anything, the initial impact was the biggest," said Robert Shapiro, one of Mr. Simpson's attorneys. "Since then, it's worn off some."

In its first week of operation, the toll-free number generated thousands of calls -- Mr. Simpson's attorneys say they logged more than 250,000 tips within days, a rush so intense that they were forced to install extra lines to capture the recorded comments deluging the hot line.

Many of the calls came from people sympathetic to the football star charged with murdering Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Lyle Goldman. Others sought to cash in on Mr. Simpson's offer of a $500,000 reward for information leading to the arrest of the "real killer or killers."

But in the weeks since that first burst of phone calls, members of Mr. Simpson's team say the quantity and quality of calls have tapered off dramatically. In recent weeks, tantalizing tips mostly have been replaced by wackier offerings and meddlesome wanna-be investigators, Mr. Simpson's representatives say.

"Initially, it was a very good idea," said Bill Pavelic, an investigative consultant working with the Simpson team who recommended that the hot line be shut down. "We got a lot of good leads. But the calls lately have not been as good. We get people who want to tell us how to do things, not people who have information."

Because of that, the service was temporarily disconnected, and Mr. Shapiro said Mr. Simpson's attorneys expect to decide later this week whether to leave it off permanently. Tuesday, callers to the number got a recorded message saying that the number was "temporarily out of service."

LOAD-DATE: October 13, 2002

LANGUAGE: ENGLISH

GRAPHIC: Shapiro

TYPE: News

Copyright 1994 Toronto Star Newspapers, Ltd.

HELP FROM LAPD DETECTIVE

2008-05-02

Los Angeles Times

February 14, 1988, Sunday, Home Edition

SECTION: Opinion; Part 5; Page 4; Column 6; Letters Desk

LENGTH: 394 words

I know how difficult being a police officer is and how an individual can fall through the cracks when there is no one who cares. I am a former New York newspaperman whose paper closed down and I went into public relations for the New York Patrolmen's Benevolent Assn.

My letter has to do with the Los Angeles Police Department, in particular, the Mental Health Evaluation Unit run by Detective Walter J. DeCuir. This is a unit that has outstanding police professionals who care for human life. They help people in trouble get the proper medical attention so that they can take their rightful place in society.

One such police officer is Detective Bill Pavelic, a man who cares and has helped this New York family save our son and assisted us in getting the proper medical attention for him.

My son Thomas, a graduate from a top Ivy League school and who attended New York Medical School, had a breakdown. He was taken into custody while in Los Angeles for driving without a license -- actually one that was suspended because of many traffic violations.

We knew Tom needed help. We knew he needed to be hospitalized, but we didn't know how to do it because of the mental laws being what they are. Pavelic and an attorney we hired, Eric Epstein, a former New York City assistant district attorney, were of tremendous help. The traffic case and other minor charges were handled by the Los Angeles district attorney's office, especially Assistant Dist. Atty. Tom Herman, who, with the help of the court, insisted that as part of the probation, my son receive the proper medical attention.

Tom is now in New York-Cornell Hospital. We now see the light at the end of this long, long tunnel. We are grateful that he is now receiving the help he needs in order to return to society.

But without a caring Police Department, especially Detective Pavelic, this wouldn't be possible. This wonderful human being cared for my wife and I who traveled 3,000 miles seeking help for our son.

Tom was in Central Jail and we refused to bail him out, "hard love."

Pavelic helped us to help our son, and we are going public to thank him and all of the others who helped. I am sure that when my son gets well he'll come back to the city he loves, Los Angeles, and do something to thank the people for their outstanding Police Department.

GEORGE T. DOURIS
New York City
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH
TYPE: Letter to the Editor

Created with ShoutPost