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Simpson
and
Nicole
Brown
Simpson
at the
Los
Angeles
premiere
of Naked
Gun 33
1/3: The
Final
Insult
in 1994
Photograph:
Vinnie
Zuffante/Getty
Images |
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O.J.
Simpson,
football
great
whose
trial
for
murder
became a
phenomenon,
dies at
76
By Rick
Maese,
Glenn
Frankel,
and Matt
Schudel
washingtonpost.com
correction
A
previous
version
of this
story
incorrectly
recounted
that
defense
attorney
Johnnie
L.
Cochran
Jr.
asked
Mr.
Simpson
to try
on
gloves
during
the 1995
trial.
The
request
came
from
prosecutor
Christopher
Darden.
The
story
has been
updated.
O.J.
Simpson,
the
football
superstar
who
became a
symbol
of
domestic
violence
and
racial
division
after he
was
found
not
guilty
of
murdering
his
ex-wife
and her
friend
in a
trial
that
riveted
the
nation
and had
legal
and
cultural
repercussions
for
years
afterward,
died
April
10. He
was 76.
The
cause
was
cancer,
according
to a
post
from his
family
on the
social
media
platform
X.
Additional
details
were not
immediately
available.
Mr.
Simpson
had
served
nine
years of
a
33-year
sentence
for
kidnapping
and
armed
robbery
unconnected
to the
death of
his
ex-wife
before
he was
released
in
October
2017
from the
Lovelock
Correctional
Center
outside
Reno.
It was a
stunning
downfall
for a
man who
had
risen
from a
poor
neighborhood
in San
Francisco
to
become
one of
the
greatest
running
backs in
football
history,
an actor
in more
than 20
Hollywood
movies,
a
corporate
pitchman
—
sprinting
through
airports
for
Hertz
Rent-a-Car
in his
most
memorable
television
commercials
— and a
TV
sports
commentator.
He had
good
looks, a
warm
smile
and a
poised
manner
that
made him
a
popular
sports
media
personality
long
after
his
playing
days had
ended.
The
double-murder
charges
shattered
his
high-achieving
and
amiable
reputation.
Appearing
at a
parole
hearing
in July
2017 for
his 2007
armed-robbery
conviction,
O.J.
Simpson
pleaded
his case
for
early
release.
(Video:
Reuters)
He was
accused
of
killing
Nicole
Brown
Simpson
and
Ronald
Goldman
in a
brutal
knife
attack
on the
walkway
outside
her
townhouse
in the
fashionable
Brentwood
section
of Los
Angeles
in June
1994.
Because
of the
toxic
combination
of race,
sex and
celebrity,
the
murders
and
their
aftermath
quickly
became
what
Time
magazine
called
“the
Godzilla
of
tabloid
stories.”
Bloodstains
and
other
physical
evidence
linked
him to
the
crime,
but in
1995 a
mostly
Black
jury
accepted
the
defense
team’s
claim
that Mr.
Simpson
had been
framed
by
racist
Los
Angeles
police.
Members
of the
jury
took
less
than
three
hours to
acquit
him
following
a
marathon
eight-month
trial
that was
nationally
televised
and
infected
by a
circus
atmosphere.
The
verdict
triggered
widespread
public
emotions
and
reflected
the deep
gap in
perceptions
and
experience
between
many
Blacks
and
Whites
when it
came to
racism
and
police
conduct.
Those
gaps
were
still
passionately
evident
20 years
later
during
protests
and
riots
over the
police
killings
of
unarmed
Black
males in
Missouri,
New
York,
Minnesota
and
elsewhere,
which
led to
the
Black
Lives
Matter
movement.
The
Simpson
case
“showed
that
when it
came to
law
enforcement
and
belief
in the
police
and the
judicial
system,
Black
people
and
White
people
in 1995
lived in
different
countries,
and that
was
something
that the
country
really
didn’t
want to
be
reminded
of,”
author
and
legal
analyst
Jeffrey
Toobin
told
“Frontline,”
the PBS
documentary
program.
“This
case
sure
brought
it
home.”
Toobin,
who
commented
on
television
about
the
trial
and
later
became a
high-profile
author
and
journalist,
was one
of many
figures
in law
and the
media
who came
to
public
attention
during
the
Simpson
trial.
Others
included
legal
analysts
Harvey
Levin,
who
later
launched
the
celebrity
news
website
TMZ.com,
and
Greta
Van
Susteren,
who
became a
cable-news
host.
Hollywood
hanger-on
Brian
“Kato”
Kaelin,
who
lived in
a
bungalow
on Mr.
Simpson’s
property,
became a
short-lived
sensation
and
offered
four
days of
rambling,
colorful
testimony
before
prosecutor
Marcia
Clark
declared
him a
hostile
witness.
When
Clark
suggested
he had
moved
into Mr.
Simpson’s
guesthouse
to
further
his
acting
career,
Kaelin
replied,
“I don’t
think we
were
going
for the
same
parts.”
Mr.
Simpson’s
legal
defense
team
included
his
primary
attorney,
the
colorful
and
persuasive
Johnnie
L.
Cochran
Jr., and
Robert
Kardashian,
whose
family
went on
to
become
media
gossip
fodder
for
decades.
Although
Mr.
Simpson
was
found
not
guilty
in the
criminal
trial,
the
Goldman
and
Brown
families
in 1997
won a
$33.5
million
civil
judgment
against
him from
a jury
that
ruled he
was
liable
for the
murders.
Shunned
by
corporate
sponsors
and
pursued
by
creditors,
Mr.
Simpson
sought
to
maintain
his
affluent
lifestyle
with a
series
of
increasingly
desperate
moneymaking
schemes.
The last
was an
organized
raid at
gunpoint
in 2007
to rob
two
memorabilia
dealers
in a Las
Vegas
hotel
room;
Mr.
Simpson
claimed
the two
were
seeking
to sell
stolen
personal
items
from his
sports
and
movie
careers.
It led
to his
arrest,
trial,
conviction
and a
sentence
of 33
years
for
kidnapping
and
armed
robbery.
A
gridiron
great
Orenthal
James
Simpson
was born
in San
Francisco
on July
9, 1947,
and
raised
in the
tough
Potrero
Hill
section.
He
suffered
from
rickets
when he
was 2
and wore
leg
braces
made by
his
mother
until he
was 5,
but he
grew
into a
strapping
and
unruly
teenager
with a
penchant
for
violence.
He
joined
the
Persian
Warriors
gang and
was
suspended
from
school
several
times.
“I was
in a lot
of
street
fights,”
he
recalled
later.
“Maybe
because
I
usually
won.”
Thanks
in large
part to
the
determination
of his
mother,
who
worked
the
graveyard
shift as
a
hospital
orderly
while
raising
four
children,
Mr.
Simpson
graduated
from
high
school
in 1965.
His raw
athletic
ability
made him
a
football
standout,
but his
teams
were too
mediocre
and his
grades
too poor
to
attract
the
interest
of
big-time
college
sports
programs.
Instead,
he
entered
City
College
of San
Francisco,
where he
broke
records
for
junior
college
football.
He was
accepted
to the
University
of
Southern
California
in 1967.
He grew
to
6-feet-1
and more
than 200
pounds,
and his
combination
of speed
and
power
impressed
coach
John
McKay.
Mr.
Simpson
reportedly
ran the
100-yard
dash in
9.3
seconds
— the
world
record
was 9.1
— and as
a member
of USC’s
track
team, he
was part
of a
440-yard
relay
team
that set
a world
record
of 38.6
seconds
in 1967.
On the
gridiron,
Mr.
Simpson
immediately
drew
attention
as one
of the
finest
running
backs in
the
country.
In 1967,
his
64-yard
run in
the
fourth
quarter
gave his
team a
21-20
victory
over
UCLA in
one of
the most
dramatic
college
games of
all
time.
USC went
on to a
14-3
Rose
Bowl
victory
over
Indiana
and
finished
the
season
with the
country’s
No. 1
ranking.
The
following
year,
Mr.
Simpson
won the
Maxwell
Award
and
Heisman
Trophy
as the
nation’s
best
college
player.
He led
the
country
in
rushing
both
seasons,
with
1,543
yards in
1967 and
1,880
yards in
1968. He
averaged
5.1
yards
per
carry
during
the two
years
and
scored
36
touchdowns
in 22
games.
“Most
experts,”
Sport
magazine
declared,
“are
rating
O.J.
Simpson
as the
greatest
running
back in
the
history
of
college
football.”
Along
the way,
he
married
Marguerite
Whitney,
his high
school
girlfriend,
and had
three
children.
He
bought
his
mother
her
first
house
when he
was in
his
early
20s.
Mr.
Simpson,
nicknamed
“The
Juice,”
was the
first
selection
in the
1969
draft
and
signed
with the
lowly
Buffalo
Bills.
He spent
three
losing
seasons
in
Buffalo
until
coach
Lou
Saban
arrived
and
built
the
offense
around
his
speedy
running
back.
Under
Saban,
Mr.
Simpson
ran for
more
than
1,000
yards
for five
straight
years
and won
four NFL
rushing
titles.
“O.J.
has
great
speed,
darting
quickness,”
Saban
told
Time
magazine
in 1973.
“He is
not a
slashing
runner;
he has
an
elusiveness
that is
all his
own. He
is
simply
O.J. and
lives in
his own
world
when he
has the
ball.”
In 1973,
Mr.
Simpson
set a
single-game
NFL
record
by
gaining
250
yards
against
the New
England
Patriots
in the
season’s
opening
game. In
the
next-to-last
game of
the
season,
also
against
the
Patriots,
Mr.
Simpson
rushed
for 219
yards on
a
snow-covered
field.
In the
season
finale,
against
the New
York
Jets, he
gained
200
yards to
finish
with a
total of
2,003,
breaking
Jim
Brown’s
record
of 1,863
yards,
set in
1963. He
was the
first
player
in pro
football
history
to run
for more
than
2,000
yards in
a
season.
(Today,
an NFL
regular
season
consists
of 17
games;
in Mr.
Simpson’s
time, it
was 14.)
He
finished
his NFL
career
in 1979
after
two
seasons
with his
hometown
San
Francisco
49ers,
retiring
with
11,236
rushing
yards,
second-most
in
history
at the
time. He
was
inducted
into the
Pro
Football
Hall of
Fame six
years
later.
Troubled
relationships
Mr.
Simpson
was more
than
just an
outstanding
football
player.
His
genial
public
manner
made him
one of
the
country’s
best-known
and
best-liked
media
personalities.
His 20
films
included
comic
roles in
“The
Naked
Gun” and
two
sequels,
plus
supporting
roles in
“The
Towering
Inferno,”
“The
Cassandra
Crossing”
and
“Capricorn
One.” He
had a
cameo
appearance
as an
African
man in
the 1977
TV
miniseries
“Roots.”
In 1983,
Mr.
Simpson
joined
ABC’s
“Monday
Night
Football”
crew,
working
alongside
broadcaster
Howard
Cosell
and two
former
football
stars,
Frank
Gifford
and Don
Meredith.
But the
affable
public
persona
concealed
a
turbulent
and at
times
brutal
private
life.
Mr.
Simpson
met a
blond
18-year-old
waitress
named
Nicole
Brown in
1977
when she
was just
out of
high
school,
and they
started
living
together
the
following
year
while he
was
still
married.
Mr.
Simpson
and
Marguerite
divorced
in 1979,
and he
and
Nicole
were
married
in 1985.
It was a
tempestuous
relationship.
Mr.
Simpson
was
reputedly
a serial
womanizer
who
couldn’t
resist
boasting
of his
many
sexual
conquests,
but
there
was
evidence
that he
descended
into
jealous
rages
regarding
his
wife.
Nicole
Simpson
made at
least
eight
911
calls to
police
for
protection.
In 1985,
she
called
for
help,
saying
Mr.
Simpson
had
smashed
her car
windshield
with a
baseball
bat.
A more
severe
incident
came on
New
Year’s
Day
1989.
Nicole
Simpson
called
911 at
about 3
a.m.,
and when
a police
car
arrived
she
jumped
from the
bushes
outside
their
house
wearing
only a
bra and
sweatpants.
Police
reported
that she
had a
black
eye, cut
lip and
purple
bruises
on her
face and
neck.
“He’s
going to
kill me,
he’s
going to
kill
me!” she
cried.
A
furious
O.J.
Simpson
emerged
from the
house
dressed
in a
bathrobe.
The
police
officers
told him
he was
under
arrest
but
allowed
him to
go
inside
to
change
his
clothes.
He
stormed
out
again a
few
minutes
later,
hopped
in his
Bentley
and sped
off.
Police
did not
pursue
him, nor
did they
charge
him with
resisting
arrest.
Mr.
Simpson
was
fined
and
placed
on
probation
after
pleading
guilty
to
spousal
battery.
Three
months
later,
NBC
Sports
signed
him to a
new
broadcast
contract.
Nicole
Simpson
left her
husband
in
January
1992 and
obtained
a
divorce
in
October.
But
within
months,
they
were
dating
again.
In
October
1993,
she
called
911 once
more,
this
time
pleading
for
police
help
because
she said
Mr.
Simpson
had
broken
down her
back
door.
Early in
1994,
she told
friends
she had
left him
for
good. On
June 12,
Mr.
Simpson
attended
a school
music
recital
but did
not
speak to
Nicole
or join
her and
her
family
for a
celebratory
dinner
afterward
at
Mezzaluna,
a local
restaurant.
Nicole
left her
glasses
there,
and
after
work
Ronald
Goldman,
a waiter
who knew
her
casually,
offered
to bring
them to
her home
about
9:45
p.m.
Their
slashed
and
bloody
bodies
were
found
three
hours
later.
She lay
in a
pool of
blood,
with
deep
wounds
to her
head and
neck,
while
Goldman’s
body was
found
nearby
with 22
stab
wounds.
Investigators
concluded
that she
was
attacked
first,
and he
was
killed
when he
interrupted
the
assailant.
From the
beginning,
Mr.
Simpson
was the
only
serious
suspect,
although
he
insisted
he was
innocent.
His
lawyers
arranged
for him
to
present
himself
for
arrest
on June
17, but
he fled
in a
white
Ford
Bronco,
with
lifelong
friend
Al
Cowlings
at the
wheel
and
police
cruisers
in
pursuit.
A
tearful
Mr.
Simpson
sat in
the back
seat
holding
a gun to
his head
with one
hand and
pictures
of his
children
in the
other.
After a
low-speed
car
chase
broadcast
live by
news
helicopters
and
witnessed
by
millions
nationwide,
the
Bronco
finally
pulled
up to
Mr.
Simpson’s
Brentwood
home,
where he
surrendered.
The
media
circus
had
begun.
Trial
and
acquittal
Investigators
found
blood
samples
from the
victims
in Mr.
Simpson’s
home and
car.
They
also
found
blood
from Mr.
Simpson
at the
murder
scene;
human
hairs on
a dark
knit cap
and
Goldman’s
clothing
that
matched
those of
Mr.
Simpson;
and a
pair of
bloody
leather
gloves —
one at
the
crime
scene
and the
other
behind
Mr.
Simpson’s
guesthouse.
Mr.
Simpson
had no
verifiable
alibi
for the
time of
the
killings.
But the
prosecution
had no
eyewitnesses,
no
murder
weapon
and the
burden
of
relying
on a
police
department
with a
long
history
of
racism.
Mr.
Simpson’s
high-priced
legal
team,
led by
Cochran,
a
skilled
defense
attorney
known
for his
showmanship,
sought
to turn
the
proceedings
into a
trial of
the Los
Angeles
police.
The
defense
accused
two
White
police
detectives
of
manipulating
and
manufacturing
evidence
and
mocked
the
testing
methods
and
competence
of the
lab
technicians.
In one
of the
pivotal
moments
in the
trial,
prosecutor
Christopher
Darden
asked
Mr.
Simpson
try on
the
bloody
gloves
in front
of the
jury.
The
former
football
star
struggled
to pull
on the
gloves,
which
appeared
to be
too
small.
“If it
doesn’t
fit,”
Cochran
told
jurors
in his
closing
arguments,
summarizing
the case
in
general,
“you
must
acquit.”
The
legal
drama
inside
the
courthouse
was
often
drowned
out by
the
media
noise
outside.
The
supermarket
tabloid
Star and
the
syndicated
television
show
“Hard
Copy”
reported
the
contents
of Mr.
Simpson’s
lengthy
statement
to
police
within
days of
the
murders.
The
National
Enquirer
reported
on the
New
Year’s
Day 1989
fight in
which
Nicole
Simpson
was
found
bruised
and
battered.
Louis
Brown,
Nicole’s
father,
eventually
sold his
daughter’s
diary to
the
National
Enquirer,
and her
sister
Dominique
sold
topless
photos
of
Nicole.
“When a
tabloid
tornado
begins
to spin
… even
the best
among us
tend to
get
caught
up in
it,” CBS
anchor
Dan
Rather
told the
Los
Angeles
Times.
“Before
you know
it …
your
standards
have
just
broken
open and
you’re
not
applying
the same
rules
that you
do to
other
stories.”
Every
moment
of the
trial
was
broadcast
live
after an
early
ruling
by the
presiding
judge,
Lance
Ito. As
a
result,
Ito
became a
household
name, as
did many
lawyers,
investigators
and
witnesses
connected
to the
case.
Ito was
widely
criticized
for
failing
to keep
a
tighter
rein on
the
courtroom
antics
of
Cochran
and
other
defense
attorneys
— among
them
celebrity
lawyers
Robert
Shapiro,
Alan
Dershowitz,
F. Lee
Bailey,
Peter
Neufeld,
Barry
Scheck
and
Kardashian
— known
collectively
as the
“Dream
Team.”
The
defense
frequently
outmaneuvered
prosecutors
Clark
and
Darden,
who
failed
to
anticipate
the
damage
that the
defense
team’s
aggressive
and at
times
outlandish
methods
wreaked
on the
credibility
of
prosecution
witnesses.
Mr.
Simpson’s
attorneys
attacked
the
handling
of DNA
evidence
by the
police,
which
led to
far-reaching
changes
in
police
practices,
including
more
rigorous
ways of
collecting
evidence
and the
establishment
of crime
labs to
study
DNA
samples.
“We did
not
challenge
the
underlying
reliability
of DNA
testing
methods,”
Scheck
told the
Los
Angeles
Times in
2014.
“We
attacked
the way
that
evidence
was
gathered
and
processed.
We had a
21st-century
technology
and
19th-century
evidence
collection
methods.”
During
the
trial,
defense
lawyers
undermined
the
testimony
of
veteran
police
detective
Mark
Fuhrman,
who said
he had
found
two
bloody
gloves,
one at
the
murder
scene
and the
other at
Mr.
Simpson’s
home,
and had
observed
bloodstains
at the
house
and
inside
Mr.
Simpson’s
Bronco.
Under a
withering
cross-examination
by
Bailey,
Fuhrman
denied
ever
using
racial
slurs,
but the
defense
then
called a
screenwriter
who had
tape-recorded
the
detective
using
such
language
during
an
interview.
In his
closing
argument,
Cochran
compared
Fuhrman
to Adolf
Hitler
and
accused
him and
other
investigators
of
seeking
to frame
Mr.
Simpson.
After
the
trial,
Fuhrman
resigned
from the
police
force
and
pleaded
no
contest
to
perjury
charges.
Because
of the
media
frenzy,
the jury
was
sequestered
for 266
days.
Eight of
the
original
jurors
were
eventually
dismissed
for
various
forms of
misconduct.
The
final
jury
consisted
of nine
Blacks,
two
Whites
and one
Hispanic.
After
the
verdict
acquitting
Mr.
Simpson
on Oct.
3, 1995,
several
jurors
emerged
to say
they had
never
believed
the
prosecution’s
case.
There
was
cheering
among
sections
of the
Black
community.
‘If I
Did It’
Still
seeking
justice,
Goldman’s
family
and the
Browns
filed a
wrongful-death
civil
suit.
The
trial
that
ensued
in 1997
was less
fettered
by rules
of
evidence,
and Mr.
Simpson’s
new
attorney
was far
less
savvy
than
Cochran
and his
team.
The
plaintiffs
introduced
a
photograph
of Mr.
Simpson
wearing
distinctive
Bruno
Magli
loafers
— the
same
kind
that
left
bloody
size-12
footprints
at the
murder
scene.
Mr.
Simpson
had
denied
ever
owning
such
shoes,
but now
had to
concede
that he
did.
Mr.
Simpson’s
defense
team
characterized
Nicole
Simpson
as a
woman
who
drank
too
much,
opted
for an
abortion
after
becoming
pregnant
by one
of her
many
boyfriends
and
allowed
prostitutes
and drug
dealers
into her
home.
The
portrait
was
designed
to offer
alternative
possibilities
for
murder
suspects,
but
instead
it was
seen by
legal
critics
and
trial
observers
as
desperate
and
demeaning.
Mr.
Simpson’s
defense
team had
not
allowed
him to
take the
stand at
the
murder
trial.
This
time he
spoke.
Testifying
in front
of an
enormous
photo of
Nicole’s
face
with
cuts and
purple
bruises
after
the 1989
incident,
Mr.
Simpson
at first
denied
ever
having
struck
her but
eventually
conceded,
“I
physically
tried to
impose
my will
on
Nicole,
and I
shouldn’t
have
done
it.”
In
February
1997,
the jury
awarded
$12.5
million
to the
heirs of
each
victim
and
another
$8.5
million
to
Goldman’s
parents.
“We came
to the
conclusion
that Mr.
Simpson
should
not
profit
from
these
murders,”
one
juror
declared
afterward.
The
authorities
seized
Mr.
Simpson’s
Brentwood
house
and many
of his
possessions,
including
his
Heisman
Trophy,
but only
a small
portion
of the
judgment
was
paid. He
was
living
off an
NFL
pension
reported
to be
$25,000
per
month,
and he
eventually
moved
with his
two
younger
children
to
Pinecrest,
Fla.,
outside
Miami,
amid
charges
that he
was
concealing
his
assets.
He
engaged
in a
series
of
abortive
get-rich
schemes,
including
a
ghostwritten
book,
“If I
Did It,”
that was
pulled
from
bookstores
after a
public
outcry.
The
Goldmans
later
won the
right to
release
the book
to
collect
some of
the
settlement
they
were
owed.
In
September
2007,
Mr.
Simpson
was
arrested
for
leading
a group
of men
into a
room at
a Las
Vegas
hotel,
where
they
held at
gunpoint
and
robbed
two men
of
memorabilia
that Mr.
Simpson
claimed
belonged
to him.
On Oct
3, 2008
— 13
years to
the day
after
Mr.
Simpson’s
acquittal
in the
double-murder
case — a
jury
convicted
him of
10
counts
of armed
robbery,
kidnapping
and
conspiracy.
He was
sentenced
to 33
years in
prison.
Appeals
of the
verdict
failed.
Before
his
prison
sentence,
Mr.
Simpson
shared
custody
of his
and
Nicole
Brown
Simpson’s
two
children,
Sydney
Simpson
and
Justin
Simpson,
with
members
of his
slain
wife’s
family.
The
children
attended
college
but
remained
out of
the
public
eye
during
their
father’s
legal
troubles.
Survivors
include
two
children
from his
first
marriage,
Arnelle
Simpson
and
Jason
Simpson;
and the
two
children
from his
second
marriage.
A
23-month-old
daughter
from his
first
marriage,
Aaren
Simpson,
drowned
in the
family’s
swimming
pool in
1979.
Mr.
Simpson’s
trial
and the
lurid
events
surrounding
it
remained
in the
public
imagination
for
decades.
The
verdict
was
continually
debated,
and in
2016 two
television
series
about
Mr.
Simpson
captivated
the
imagination
of a
generation
too
young to
have
seen him
as a
football
star or
even
during
the 1995
trial.
ESPN’s
multipart
series,
“O.J.:
Made in
America,”
won the
2017
Academy
Award
for best
documentary;
the FX
network’s
dramatic
series
about
the
celebrated
trial,
“The
People
v. O.J.
Simpson,”
won
several
Emmy
Awards.
After
his
acquittal,
the once
unstoppable
football
star and
celebrity
struggled
to find
his way
in the
world.
In 2001,
Mr.
Simpson
was
charged
with
assault
during a
road-rage
incident
but was
acquitted.
Other
violent
episodes
followed
before
Mr.
Simpson
went to
prison
in 2008.
Days
after
his 70th
birthday
in 2017,
in his
first
year of
eligibility,
he was
granted
parole.
In his
pleas
before
the
Nevada
parole
board
that
ultimately
set him
free,
Mr.
Simpson
said, “I
basically
have
spent a
conflict-free
life.”
He
settled
in Las
Vegas,
where he
told the
Associated
Press in
2019
that he
played
golf
every
day,
obligingly
took
selfies
with the
curious
who saw
him at
restaurants
or
athletic
events,
and was
not
inclined
to
reflect
on the
past.
“We
don’t
need to
go back
and
relive
the
worst
day of
our
lives,”
he said.
“My
family
and I
have
moved on
to what
we call
the ‘no
negative
zone.’
We focus
on the
positives.”
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