Friday, September 14, 2007

Author Says He Was Told O.J. Book Was Confession



O.J. Author Was Told 'If I Did It' Was a Confession

Pablo Fenjves, author of O.J. Simpson’s controversial book, “If I Did It,” says the book’s original publisher told him it was a confession.

Fenjves writes in a prologue to the book, obtained by this column exclusively, that Judith Regan, then of ReganBooks/HarperCollins, told him:

“He wants to confess, and I’m being assured it’s a confession. But this is the only way he’ll do it.”

The book, which was canceled by HarperCollins and is today being published by Beaufort Books after a court battle, now belongs to the family of Ronald Goldman. A civil jury found Simpson responsible for the 1994 slayings of Goldman and Simpson’s ex-wife Nicole Brown. A criminal jury acquitted him of murder charges.

[click here] for full post from Fox News

* * * *
* * * *

Most defendants don't get a dream team. They get an overpaid possibly lazy lawyer. In most cases if a lawyer goes against the wishes of police, the prosecutor, or a judge, the lawyer can be disbarred, arrested, and ruined. Just ask former Attorney Jim Brewer in Connecticut that defended good cops against the bad ones.

[click here] for:

The Less than Honorable Chief Justice William J. Sullivan?

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home