From Deseret News archives:

Both sides rest in O.J. trial

Published: Thursday, Oct. 2, 2008 12:26 a.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
LAS VEGAS — Both sides rested in the O.J. Simpson kidnapping and armed robbery case Wednesday after a last-minute dispute over testimony blurted out by a witness threatened to derail the trial.

The judge, rejecting mistrial motions, expressed concern that the trial was in jeopardy and said, "I'm trying to get this case back on track."

"I'm surprised you haven't seen my head spin and fire come out of my mouth at this point in this trial," said Clark County District Judge Jackie Glass.

Simpson and a co-defendant are accused of robbing and holding two sports memorabilia dealers at gunpoint a year ago in a hotel room to get back mementos that once belonged to the former NFL star, who once famously beat charges of murdering his ex-wife and her friend.

After both sides rested, Glass dismissed jurors for the day, convened privately with attorneys to discuss jury instructions and told everyone to return Thursday for final arguments.

But that was after she first admonished jurors to disregard testimony blurted out by police detective Andy Caldwell, then told them to forget about her admonition.

Defense lawyers, the judge and spectators thought Caldwell, the lead detective in the case, said star defense witness Thomas Scotto had been thrown out of a preliminary hearing for "tampering with a witness."

Story continues below
But after sending the jury from the courtroom and reviewing Caldwell's testimony on tape, Glass found that Caldwell had referred to "Mrs. Scotto," not Scotto himself.

Simpson's lawyer, Yale Galanter, said attacking the credibility of Scotto's wife was just as bad, but the judge said Sabrina Scotto was not a witness and retracted her admonishment to the jury. Glass also sternly lectured the detective outside the jury's presence for putting the case in jeopardy.

The legal flap all but upstaged the defense's final flourish — testimony from Scotto, a close friend of Simpson's who said two key prosecution witnesses tried to extort him for $50,000.

The defense introduced a voice mail recording of Walter Alexander offering to tailor his testimony to benefit Simpson if he was paid enough

"If I get some help, I'll do whatever I can," said Alexander, whose message was played in a hushed courtroom.

"I can do quite a bit," said Alexander, one of four former co-defendants who pleaded guilty to reduced charges in return for their testimony against Simpson.

Scotto was asked what he thought after hearing the message and replied: "Basically, he was selling his testimony."

Simpson was not called as a witness in his own defense.

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

Image
John Gurzinski, Getty Images

O.J. Simpson takes a break as co-defendant Clarence "C.J." Stewart confers with his attorneys in the background Wednesday in Las Vegas. Both sides rested after a last-minute dispute over testimony blurted out by a witness threatened to derail the trial. Simpson and Stewart are on trial for 12 criminal charges.

previousnext

Latest comments

That game was amazing! I think this will really help the sport grow in Utah....

Real Champions

Congrats on a great win. Utah as a whole should be proud not just of a major...

Congrats Real Salt Lake! but, they aren't the first major sports team to...

RSL regroups, dominates 2nd half

I told ALL of you how much i liked NED Pure irony his contributions vs x...

RSL wins MLS Cup on penalty kicks

this is to NevadaUTE @ 10:25!!! I love soccer, I love Real and it brought a...

Real Champions

wow!!! amazing. UTAH JAZZ DO SOMETHING!!!

Glenn Beck to enter politics?

So much fear and anger from Beck lovers. You all lost the last election, we...

RSL wins MLS Cup on penalty kicks

This is the most emotion I have had watching a sporting event since my...

Nicky Rimando is my hero! I love that guy. He has had his detractors, but...

Real Champions

Two stars means nothing! We played as a team and it showed! I'm still in...

Advertisements