O.J. Simpson held without Bail in Las Vegas Robbery
Posted on Mon, 17 Sep 2007 01:38:17 CDT | by Luigi Lugmayr
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By Dan Whitcomb
LAS VEGAS (Reuters) - Former football star O.J. Simpson, who was acquitted in
1995 of murdering his ex-wife, was arrested and held without bail on Sunday in
connection with a suspected armed robbery in a Las Vegas hotel room last week.
Simpson, 60, was taken into custody at the Palms hotel just off the Las Vegas
strip on Sunday morning without incident and booked on suspicion of armed
robbery, assault with a deadly weapon, conspiracy and burglary, Las Vegas police
said. If convicted on all charges, Simpson could face some three decades in
behind bars.
Simpson will be held without bail pending a court hearing on Thursday, Sgt. John
Loretto said.
Las Vegas police on Saturday night arrested another man they believe was with
the former star athlete during the suspected theft of Simpson-related sports
souvenirs and other items and said they were searching for four others.
They also said they seized two handguns they believe are related to the Thursday
night incident, which was reported by a sports memorabilia dealer as an armed
robbery in his room at the Palace Station Hotel & Casino.
When asked if police believed Simpson was wielding a gun, Las Vegas Metro Police
Lt. Clint Nichols told reporters, "We don't have any info that would lead us to
believe he was armed."
Representatives for the Palms and Simpson's attorney did not immediately respond
to requests for comment.
'DONE NOTHING WRONG'
Orenthal James, or O.J., Simpson, who parlayed his fame as an athlete into a
career in movies and television before the murder trial -- one of the most
sensational in U.S. history, ended his career in Hollywood, previously told
police and the media he did nothing wrong in Las Vegas.
"I'm not walking around feeling sad or anything. I've done nothing wrong," he
said in an interview published in the Los Angeles Times on Sunday.
Simpson told the paper that "golfing buddies and some of their friends"
accompanied him to a meeting at the Palace Station Hotel & Casino to help him
retrieve sports memorabilia, personal photos and other items he said had been
stolen by a former sports agent.
Simpson who lives in Miami, Florida, said an auctioneer set up the meeting with
the sellers. He said the men in his party were unarmed.
"I'm O.J. Simpson. How am I going to think that I'm going to rob somebody and
get away with it?" he said. "You've got to understand, this ain't somebody going
to steal somebody's drugs or something like that. This is somebody going to get
his private (belongings) back. That's it. That's not robbery."
After he was acquitted in the murders of his former wife Nicole Brown Simpson
and her friend Ron Goldman, a civil court jury found Simpson responsible for the
deaths and ordered him to pay $33.5 million in damages to their families.
The former National Football League star, nicknamed "The Juice" during his
playing days, has had other minor brushes with police since 1995.
Simpson's latest legal flap comes as Simpson's book "If I Did It," which
includes a hypothetical account of his ex-wife's murder, was hitting store
shelves. The book is No. 2 on Amazon.com's best-seller list.
(Additional reporting by Adam Tanner in San Francisco and Lisa Baertlein in Los
Angeles)
© Copyright 2007 Reuters.
Posted on Mon, 17 Sep 2007 01:38:17 CDT | by Luigi Lugmayr
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