If I Did It
Here is how. Newsweek got a hold of O.J. Simpson’s book that was recently scrapped about how he “would have killed Nicole Simpson and Ron Goldman” “if” he did “it”.
On June 12, 1994, Simpson attends his daughter Sydney’s dance recital. He writes that he is in a foul mood after the performance, stewing over the behavior of his ex-wife. He is due to fly to Chicago late that night. But first he races to Nicole’s Bundy Drive condominium in Brentwood. He parks in the dark alley behind her condo and dons the knit wool cap and gloves he keeps handy to ward off the chill on the golf course.
He also has a knife in the Bronco, protection against L.A. “crazies.” He intends to scare her. He enters through a broken back gate?he’s told her a “million times” to get the buzzer and latch fixed?and encounters Goldman, who is returning the glasses of Nicole’s mother, Juditha. She had left them at Mezzaluna, where the Brown family dined after Sydney’s recital and where Goldman is a waiter. Simpson accuses Goldman of planning a sexual encounter with Nicole, which Goldman denies. Nicole tells Simpson to leave him alone. Goldman’s fate is sealed when Kato, Nicole’s Akita, emerges and gives him a friendly tail wag. “You’ve been here before,” Simpson screams at Goldman.








