O.J. Simpson will go free nine years into a sentence for kidnapping and armed robbery. A legal analyst predicts Simpson will go on to lead “a pretty seedy existence”
O.J. Simpson was granted parole Thursday, after serving nearly nine years in prison for a 2007 armed robbery in Las Vegas. But the former NFL superstar and movie actor’s future outside of prison may not be so rosy.
Life outside the Lovelock Correctional Facility, a medium security prison in Nevada’s high desert, could well resemble Simpson’s solitary years after he was acquitted in the slayings of his ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend Ron Goldman, legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin said on Thursday.
“I think it will be a lot like life was between 1995 and 2007,” Toobin said. “He was really a pariah. His old life was gone — celebrity pitchman, sportscaster, actor, all gone.”
So what’s next for the 70-year-old, who was known as the “Juice” during his football heyday?
When will Simpson go free?
The next chapter in Simpson’s life could begin as soon as October, the earliest time he could be released, according to David Smith, a spokesman for the Nevada Board of Parole Commissioners.
What will Simpson do?
One option for Simpson, Toobin said, would be to return to a life of memorabilia sales and autograph signings.
“I think it will be a pretty seedy existence,” Toobin said. “He’ll be trying to make money off what’s left of his fame. It’s mostly infamy, not fame.”
Simpson’s involvement in the world of memorabilia sales was what got him a nine-to-33-year sentence for his role in a 2007 incident that unfolded in a Las Vegas hotel room.
Simpson and armed associates allegedly confronted two memorabilia dealers and took pieces of memorabilia from them.
The “Juice” was convicted on charges including kidnapping, armed robbery and assault with a deadly weapon.
The former college and pro football star said at his sentencing that he was trying to reclaim family heirlooms and other personal items that had been stolen from him, and claimed that he was unaware his associates were carrying guns.
What skills has Simpson gained behind bars?
At his parole hearing Thursday, Simpson said that he is a Baptist, and that a few other inmates asked him to help create Lovelock’s first Baptist service.
“I worked with them,” he said. “We now have an ongoing Baptist service that … is well attended. I attend it religiously, and pun is intended.”
“I was always a good guy but could have been a better Christian and my commitment to change is to be a better Christian,” he added.
Simpson also said he recently became commissioner of the 18-team softball league.
“My primary responsibility was rules enforcement and, you know, player comportment,” he said, adding that he decided on removing players from games and suspensions. “I never got any blow back from the guys because they know how to act. I’ve done the best I can and just trying to keep them out of trouble. So my agenda was full here. I’ve been active totally active for as long … I’ve been here. I don’t have much time to sit around and do anything.”
He also completed a number of courses, he said, including one entitled “Alternative to Violence.” “I think it’s the most important course anybody in this prison can take, because it teaches you how to deal with conflict, through conversation,” Simpson said.
“I have been asked many, many times here to mediate conflicts between individuals and groups,” he said. “And it gave me so many tools on how to use it, that you … try to walk these guys through. Not throwing punches at one another.”
O.J. Simpson, the blogger?
Simpson said he completed a computer course that has helped him stay in touch with his four children.
“I took a computer course here not because I was computer illiterate, but I took the computer course because … sometimes I could never get my kids on the phone,” he said. “But if you text them or send something to them on the computer you can get them.”
In June 1967, Simpson, then 19 years old, married his 18-year-old high school sweetheart, Marguerite Whitley. The couple had three children, Arnelle, Jason and Aaren. Aaren drowned in the family swimming pool just before her second birthday in 1979.
Simpson and Brown married in 1985 and had two children, daughter Sydney and son Justin.
In a letter to a friend — which was read in court — Simpson wrote, “Who knows, you may even see a webcast/blog in my future.”
How much is Simpson’s NFL pension worth?
Simpson stands to do better than most who have just been released from prison.
The NFL won’t say how much he’ll get from his NFL pension, and it’s hard to estimate without knowing some key details, such as when he decided to start collecting benefits. But according to the NFL benefits formula, if Simpson waited until age 65 to start drawing his pension, he could receive as much as $100,680 a year — and could have amassed more than $500,000 during the time he was in prison.
If he started at age 55, he would have accumulated $566,000 in benefits up until now, but he’d only get about $47,000 a year going forward.
Simpson also reportedly has made $5 million in contributions to a retirement plan run by the Screen Actor’s Guild, according to USA Today.
Were families of Ron Goldman and Nicole Brown ever compensated?
Simpson was found liable in a 1996 civil trial for the deaths of Goldman and Brown-Simpson, and was ordered to pay $33.5 million in damages — more money than he had. Most of that money has never been collected.
He moved to Florida, where state law prevented his pension and home from being seized to pay the damages. Simpson’s Heisman Trophy was ordered sold and brought in $230,000.
Where will Simpson go?
Simpson told the parole panel that he will likely return to Florida.
“I could stay in Nevada but I don’t think you guys want me here,” he joked.
Simpsons’ friend, Ozzie Fumo, a lawyer and Nevada state legislator, told KLAS-TV that the former running back is “looking forward to the future.”
“He’s a better person than what a lot of people, you know, think he is,” Fumo said. “He’s not going to be golfing everyday. I think the physical part has really taken a toll on his life.”
Toobin predicted that Simpson will return to Florida, where bankruptcy laws will enable him to protect his assets from the Goldman family, and that he will likely continue to surround himself seedy figures from the memorabilia world.
“It’s a far cry from the old life in Brentwood, but it’s a hell of a lot better than being in Lovelock prison,” he said.
“He is a deeply delusional and self-obsessed narcissist, and, you know, good luck to America once he’s out,” Toobin said.