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highfivesucka
Posts: 20855 Alba Posts: 0 Joined: 1/8/2007 Member: #1246 USA |
![]() If the glove don't fit you must acquit!
^precocious neophyte.
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playa2
Posts: 34922 Alba Posts: 15 Joined: 5/15/2003 Member: #407 |
![]() http://www.bookmasters.com/marktplc/00554.htm#Summary
"NEW, SHOCKING, NEVER BEFORE SEEN, DOCUMENTED EVIDENCE" A stunning turnabout in the highly publicized Nicole Simpson and Ron Goldman murders… By William C. Dear “Never assume. Always verify.” Every detective, public defender, and investigative reporter should have those four words tattooed in black ink on their forehead. Then every time they would look at themselves in the mirror they would be reminded of the great responsibility they have to themselves and to the public to check their facts before jumping to conclusions. Lives are on the line – and not only those of the falsely accused. Click on the link and read the 1st chapter of his book here's an excerpt FROM Detective BILL DEAR: Foremost on my list of unanswered questions was why police had let O.J. become a fugitive from justice in the first place? If indeed the LAPD had solid and incontrovertible blood evidence linking O.J. to the murders, and if reports were true that his bloody glove had been found at the crime scene, and that his shoe prints led from the victims to the alley behind Bundy Drive, it seemed inconceivable to me that LAPD hadn’t already arrested him, or at the least known where he was at all times. Furthermore, I had to ask myself why the highway patrol didn’t stop the Bronco in Orange County, where it was first reported seen? Even if A.C. Cowlings hadn’t willingly pulled the Bronco over, the highway patrol could easily have set up a blockade or laid down a strip of metal tire tacks in the roadway that would puncture the Bronco’s tires and disable the vehicle. As a former Miami policeman and highway patrolman, I knew that this was the accepted procedure. Instead, the LAPD gave the entire freeway to the fugitives as they would for a visit from the President of the United States. Nor did the LAPD appear to be in any rush to get O.J. handcuffed when he did reach his Rockingham estate. He was permitted to leave his car, enter his house, use the bathroom, telephone his mother and shake hands with family and friends before being taken into custody. Rather than arrest him back in Orange County ten minutes after the Bronco was spotted on the freeway, police and prosecutors permitted the drama to last all day and into the evening. These were not the actions of a guilty man ! In retrospect, I regret not having been more candid. I was already disturbed by the eagerness of the journalists covering this story to focus their attention only on O.J. By not speaking up, or at least voicing serious concern, I now believe I was contributing to the problem facing anyone investigating or writing about the crime. From the moment O.J. made headline news there was a distinct lack of critical thinking taking place. The right questions were not being asked because everyone assumed that he was guilty. It was merely a question of tunnel vision— finding proof for what they believed to be true and ignoring the rest. I would no longer remain silent about this case. However, before I risked challenging the status quo, I had to study the case from every conceivable angle and then check the facts. I had solved the majority of crimes in my career by doing just that. In one of my more recent high-profile investigations, that of sporting-goods mogul Glen Courson, I conclusively proved that Courson had been murdered, and had not committed suicide as police believed. In that case, the Irving, Texas police department had failed in the most fundamental way: No one had taken the time to closely examine the murder weapon to see that the breech-block firing mechanism was in a closed and locked position, and not partially open as it would have been after being fired. Dead men don’t eject spent shell casings. I suspected that the LAPD had overlooked such details in their own rush to judgment. The only way for me to find out for sure was to visit the crime scene and check the facts out for myself. [Edited by - playa2 on 11-05-2007 10:18]
JAMES DOLAN on Isiah : He's a good friend of mine and of the organization and I will continue to solicit his views. He will always have strong ties to me and the team.
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