The O.J. Simpson Trial: How One Case Changed True Crime Forever
When a former NFL star's murder trial became a cultural reckoning on race, justice, and reasonable doubt

Sagsdetaljer
Quick Facts
Quick Facts
On the night of June 12, 1994, Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman were found stabbed to death outside her condominium in Los Angeles. The crime scene, the victims, and the swiftness of suspicion pointed toward one name: O.J. Simpson, the legendary NFL running back turned actor and celebrity.
Simson did not go quietly. On June 17, 1994—just five days after the murders—he fled in a white Ford Bronco driven by his friend A.C. Cowlings in what became known as the low-speed chase broadcast live to millions of Americans. Rather than surrender to police, Simpson hid in the vehicle's back seat as helicopters tracked his movements across Los Angeles freeways. It was a moment that crystallized public attention on what would become the trial of the century.
When Simpson was formally arraigned on July 22, 1994, he pleaded not guilty. The trial began on January 24, 1995, before Judge Lance Ito, with prosecutors Marcia Clark and Christopher Darden building their case around Simpson's history of domestic violence toward Nicole and the timeline of the murders. The defense team—led by Robert Shapiro and the charismatic Johnnie Cochran, with forensic expert Barry Scheck—prepared a very different narrative.
The prosecution presented DNA evidence that seemed overwhelming at the time. Blood found at the crime scene matched Simpson's profile at odds of 1 in 170 million. Blood on socks recovered from his home matched at 1 in 6.8 billion. Witnesses like limousine driver Allan Park and houseguest Kato Kaelin provided testimony placing Simpson at key moments. Yet the defense systematically challenged every piece of physical evidence, questioning police handling, pointing to Detective Mark Fuhrman's documented racist past, and arguing that evidence had been planted. When defense witness Henry Lee, a renowned forensic scientist, examined the prosecution's DNA work, he simply stated: "Something's wrong."


