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The Murder of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman

The Murder of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman

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What really happened on that June 1994 night in Brentwood when Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman were brutally murdered outside her Bundy Drive condo? Did the “trial of the century” reveal the truth about who killed Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman — or did fame, police misconduct, and reasonable doubt allow justice to slip away?

In this episode, hosts Adrienne Barker and Joseph Lobosco revisit the 1994 Brentwood double homicide of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman, the O.J. Simpson criminal murder trial, the civil wrongful death verdict, and the post‑death fight over O.J. Simpson’s estate. This true crime podcast discussion breaks down the Bundy Drive murders, the LAPD’s handling of the case, the infamous white Bronco chase, and the decades-long legal and moral questions that still divide the public.

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June 12–13, 1994 – Murders on Bundy Drive: Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman are found savagely stabbed outside Nicole’s Brentwood condo after a late-night visit, and LAPD quickly zeroes in on her ex-husband, football legend O.J. Simpson, who has just flown to Chicago.

Late 1970s–1992 – Relationship & domestic violence timeline: How O.J. met teenage waitress Nicole, married her, had two children, and was repeatedly accused of brutal abuse — including the 1989 New Year’s Day incident and Nicole’s chilling claims to friends that he would kill her and “get away with it,” even after their 1992 divorce.

June 13–17, 1994 – Evidence trail & Bronco chase: Detectives find blood at Bundy, Rockingham, and in O.J.’s white Ford Bronco, along with a matching bloody glove, DNA links, rare Bruno Magli shoe prints, and an unexplained hand injury — culminating in O.J.’s failure to surrender and the infamous low-speed white Bronco chase broadcast live nationwide.

January–October 1995 – “Trial of the Century”: The prosecution’s domestic-violence‑to‑murder narrative faces the “Dream Team” defense, which attacks LAPD integrity, highlights Mark Fuhrman’s racist slurs, questions DNA handling, and seizes on the glove demonstration — ending in a lightning-fast not‑guilty verdict that divides the country along racial and cultural lines.

1996–1997 – Civil wrongful death verdict: A Santa Monica jury, applying a lower legal standard, hears a streamlined case, finds O.J. Simpson liable for the wrongful deaths of Nicole and Ron, and awards $33.5 million — a judgment he largely avoids paying as he relocates to Florida and protects assets while the Goldman family later acquires rights to If I Did It.

2007–2017 – Las Vegas robbery & prison time: Simpson is recorded confronting memorabilia dealers in a Las Vegas hotel room, is convicted of armed robbery and kidnapping, sentenced to up to 33 years, serves about nine, and is paroled in 2017 — resurfacing in public life around Las Vegas while the shadow of the 1994 murders never fades.

April 2024–late 2025 – Death & estate battle: After O.J. Simpson dies from cancer at 76, media revive the Bundy Drive murders and the verdict, while Fred Goldman files a new creditor claim; Simpson’s Nevada estate accepts the decades-old judgment (now tens of millions with interest) and begins auctioning assets, even though the Goldmans are unlikely to recover the full amount.

Debate & analysis – Guilt, reasonable doubt, race & domestic violence: the hosts and guest contributors weigh in on whether they believe O.J. killed Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman, examine alternate theories and LAPD misconduct, dissect why the criminal and civil juries reached opposite conclusions, and close with a sobering look at domestic violence red flags, the dangers of leaving, and resources for those in abusive relationships.

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