You're Wrong About - The O.J. Simpson Trial: Marcia Clark Part 1
Episode Date: November 14, 2019Sarah tells Mike how Marcia Clark got the slam-dunk case that ended her career as a trial lawyer. Digressions include string cheese, "Inception" and what calling women "difficult" ...means in 2019. We go on the record in favor of a wide range of frivolous hobbies. Continue reading →Support us:Subscribe on PatreonDonate on PaypalBuy cute merchWhere to find us: Sarah's other show, Why Are Dads Mike's other show, Maintenance PhaseSupport the show
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I cannot count the number of times I have left my house because it's spattered with my own blood
because I was in a hurry to get in an Uber and I didn't want my rating to get too low.
Welcome to You're Wrong About, the podcast where the perm of misconception meets the flat iron of
hindsight. Oh my god. Right? Wow. I had a month to make that. The perm of misconception. That sounds
like something in the never-ending story. I am Michael Hobbs. I'm a reporter for The Huffington
Post. I am Sarah Marshall and I'm a woman sitting in a closet talking about OJ Simpson asking a boy
to love her. If you want to support the show, we are on Patreon at patreon.com slash You're Wrong
About. And it appears by the time we have this out that we will be selling merch. If you want more
details, just go to our Twitter page and we'll put something on there. It's Twitter slash
You're Wrong About, I'm pretty sure. And yeah, thank you for coming on this ride with us. This is
episode four in our series on the OJ Simpson trial. We're four hours into our telethon and we're
about to go all the way. Mike, how do you feel? Very good. I am extremely excited to talk about
Marsha Clark and about this period of investigating OJ, I guess, during and after the Bronco chase.
Yeah, I want to start by talking about who Marsha Clark is kind of right now versus who she was
maybe four years ago in the American mind because she's someone who's gone through a really interesting
rehabilitation of image very recently. What's your experience of that? I mean, she was one of these
women that was sort of in the wave of recapturing 90s women who really got treated terribly, right?
Like Tanya and Lorena Bobbet. And Marsha Clark was one of the main people that we've now returned
to and been like, we were really mean to this lady who seemed to have been doing her best.
Yeah. Did you like have a sense of who Marsha Clark was before her image kind of got rehabilitated
in 2016 with the Ryan Murphy show about the OJ Simpson trial?
I really didn't. I mean, I don't actually think that I had such a negative view of her at the time.
I think I just thought that she was incompetent. Because you were an 11-year-old boy and you
were kind of not communicating in the language of misogyny that was being spoken so fluently around
you, maybe? I mean, I think I was, but I just think that it didn't attach itself to her for
whatever reason. Maybe for millennials like Marsha Clark in the same way that so many other
women who had jobs in public inspired this kind of vitriol among their contemporaries
that maybe kids at the time didn't get because many of us were used to have working mothers.
So we were like, oh, look, it's mom. I mean, so what do you think are the big contrast between
her four years ago and her now? Well, first of all, I'll tell you my first impression of Marsha
Clark, which is that I started researching the OJ Simpson trial for the first time five years ago
and got to the part where Marsha Clark, a prosecutor is introduced. And I was like, oh,
there's a, the prosecutor is a woman. That's neat. Like I had no, I had no memory of her.
Oh, like I had no sense of her being someone who was attached to the case. Like I had no sense of
her as like a legendary figure. I remember when I read Jeffrey Tubin's The Run of His Life, which
is the first book I've ever read about the OJ Simpson trial and which really like opened my
eyes to so much of the complexity that we had forgotten since. The sense that I got about
Marsha Clark and the thing that probably immediately made me really like her and had like started my
like attachment to her as a figure in the story that has has grown and blossomed to this day
in which I must be open about upfront. I guess really like Marsha Clark. And I think the first
thing I liked about her was that like she was the one person who was taking all this seriously.
And also that she was trying, I mean, she had, let me actually read you a quote. So Marsha Clark
has a memoir called Without a Doubt co-written with Teresa Carpenter. In it, she says that one
of the things she likes about court is that there are clearly delineated rules of combat,
rules that follow reason, which to me kind of says a lot, right? This idea that she's drawn to work
as a trial lawyer and she's like later on in her career promoted out of prosecuting and given
an office job and hates it and asked to be put back in litigation. Interesting. But what she's
saying is that one of the things that she loves about it is that, you know, there are rules.
There are clear rules and there are rules that are oriented toward logic and toward
finding the truth. We're going to hear the phrase search for truth a lot in the next several hours
of this show. So get ready. But that's what she believes trials are for and what trials are capable
of and that she believes that the law is able to actually bring about justice. Like you get the
sense that she is operating from sincerity and from also a belief. And, you know, we are all coming
here to honor reason, basically. And that's not what this trial did. I know. I was just going to
say it sounds so naive now, especially knowing what we know about the O.J. Simpson trial and
then knowing what we know about the legal system generally, that the idea that it's this pure thing
and everybody follows the rules and all anybody wants is to find the truth. It's just like hopeless
somehow. It's so it's very like trust the system thinking. Well, and it's not as if she went into
this trial as as like a newly as what she calls a baby VA like she's she's 40 years old at the time
that her involvement in this case begins, you know, she's she's been a prosecutor for over a decade
at this point. She's also been in high profile media cases before like she tried a case that was
featured prominently on court TV. So she already even knows what it's like to be working with kind
of celebrity concerns and to have cameras on her all the time. So this is not really new for her,
which I find interesting, too. Like it's not as if she's like young or green, you know, I mean,
she's she's a woman in her sexual prime, but she's not young as a lawyer.
Right. I knew you were going to bring that in somehow. Well, I just I don't want to like
leave there any door open to the fact to the idea that I'm, you know, that's less than complimentary
about Marcia Clark's age, because I guess feeling 1995 was a really, you know, was enough. Yeah.
Right. Because of course, he's like facing off against F. Lee Bailey, who's 62 years old and
looks like he's 80 because of yeah, the kind of life that he's been drinking his way through. But
like, she's the one who has to have thousands of words written about her under eye bags.
Totally, totally. And the fucking haircut thing, which I'm still mad about.
Let's talk about that, too. What do you know about like Marcia Clark's
appearance? I bet you could tell me in great detail about like what she looked like at various
times. Can I admit something? Yeah. I know I'm supposed to avoid spoilers. But the other day,
I was looking for a photo to include in this post and it was from an interview with Marcia
Clark like a year ago or something. And it was her talking about the infamous makeover where she
began. I know I always mix them up, but she began the case with a perm, right? And then she straightened
it out later or was it the other way around? She began with a perm. Okay. She began with a perm and
then she had like a makeover, quote, unquote, and then she had the straight hair. And so of
course this was built up at the time as like, oh, the cameras are on her and like she's trying to
gussy it up and she's trying to look more professional. So in this interview that I cheated
and read and I promise I won't do it again. Where is this interview that you cheated and read?
It's in Vulture. Okay. They're asking her about the haircut and she says,
that was a media creation. In the very beginning of the case, before opening statements,
our press person said, you did a haircut. It looks kind of messy. And I did. It was kind of
scraggly. So I got my haircut. That was it. And after that point, the media goes crazy with this
shit. It's just so weird. There came that point in the trial when my perm grew out. I didn't have
the time to go out and get permed again. That particular morning I looked at myself and said,
just blow it out and stop trying. You can't keep it up. You're never going to have time to go back
to the hairdresser now and I have straight hair. So I blew it out. Thus began the media parade
about the makeover. How could I have had a makeover and still looked like that? I just don't
understand. Oh, Marsha. But it's just so relatable to me about the way that people make those decisions.
Yeah. We all assume that people who are in the public eye do everything very deliberately.
And there's always some level of calculation behind everything they're doing. But oftentimes,
like, she's a person. She doesn't have time in the morning. She doesn't want to do it with her
hair. So she's like, fuck it. Do you think the public's combined demeanor is a little bit like
OJ the toddler, right? Where it's like, why would you do this to me? Why this thing affects me?
And it's like a woman in Glendale straightens her hair and that affects your life somehow. And
you have to talk about it for days. Like, what is that? Yeah. Yeah. Maybe also, in addition to that,
she's trying what no one will stop calling the trial of the century. Imagine that you're
prosecuting someone for murder and you're on television all day, all day. And there's this
weird thing where it's like the dyrness of the consequences of your work are what make it so
that you don't have the time or wherewithal to be like thinking about eyeliner. Yeah. Yeah. But
also, like, that's what has brought them to the kind of prominence that makes people want to tell
you what to wear. Right. Yeah. It's also, it's like, I think it also allowed people to blame her
because they're like, well, if she didn't want people to comment on her makeover, she wouldn't
have had one, right? She's putting it into the public eye. If she'd wanted the jury to listen
to her, she would have had a different hairstyle that would have made all of the sanctuaries of
systemic racism just melt away. Yeah. Show me that hairdo. What have you been coming across in your
readings about the social construction of Marsha Clark in 1994? I feel like the person who I have
spent the most time reading on the subject of Marsha Clark's appearance is Marsha herself
at this point because I've really been enjoying kind of going straight to the source
because it's like, wouldn't it be nice, and maybe this is it for me, wouldn't it be nice if we lived
in a world where like Marsha Clark didn't have to be this like this very Liz Lemonish person
actually who's like trying to be the rational center of this mess that is spinning out of control
and is just every day showing up and is like, here's the evidence. We have so much evidence
because like just doing this like be our guest of evidence, right? Just like any kind of evidence
practically that you could ask for like people who are doing legal commentary on this at the time
like often the remark that you hear is like, it's very weird to have a murder trial with this much
evidence like Marsha Clark has won a case previously on a single drop of blood. She's worked with that
that degree of matter before so she's like just showing up with this like reasonable case that
like I imagine any lawyer would feel like they would have no trouble arguing in good faith
and that there shouldn't be, it shouldn't be complicated and every step that she tries to
take like falls out from under her and I don't disagree with the reasons that many of those
steps fell out from under her but they still did and she still believed in what she was doing
and she also you know from the very beginning was furious about what happened to Nicole.
So there's always good stories of almost like radicalization when you realize the institution
that you're a part of does not have the same mission as you or is not of the nature that
you've been assuming it was to put all that trust in the law and then realize how easily it can be
gamed and how money is so central to warping it in this way that if any of your defendants right
like some random kids stealing a car if he could afford five high-priced lawyers he would probably
manage to get off too. Right here's the thing too here's what I also want to like keep in the mix
here as we go forward that like say this kid has all this money he gets all these he gets F. Lee
Bailey and he gets off like to me that would be very justified like to me that's not like a reason
why the system is invalid but like what we also can state I think with some security at this time
is that the legal system we have is not known for handing out proportional sentences especially for
property crimes and so if that kid was going to get maybe like 25 years in prison for a nonviolent
offense then it's like if the choice is between a disproportionate sentence and an acquittal then
I don't see how a disproportionate sentence is just simply because it is a sentence and because
it validates that a crime happened like that's not that's not justice. The phrase is beyond a
reasonable doubt it's not a preponderance of evidence that's civil trials you use a preponderance
of evidence when you're going to be separating someone from their money not their freedom like
we shouldn't live in a society where we think it's terrible when someone doesn't go to prison you
know I know that this is a complicated area and in this case like I believe that Marcia was on a
righteous quest to put him in prison but also my righteous quest isn't putting people in prison so
I feel many ways about this all at once. One of the other things I really believe about the
OJ Simpson trial is that people tend to regard it as unfair because it was so unfamiliar to us
as a trial that was unusually fair where like the defendant had a chance and where there was
significant evidence against the defendant and where a lot of the public was poison against him
through a lot of high-profile media coverage and where there was still the possibility of a reasonable
doubt as that jury was sequestered I mean that's actually what you're supposed to have right right
but so how how does Marcia get involved in this case we'll take take us back to the the Bronco
Chase I don't know what happens we're going back pre-Bronco Chase we might not even get to the
Bronco Chase at the end of this episode I feel like the Bronco Chase might be a looming horizon
for us and this whole thing could be not really but like wouldn't it be great if this is like a
Tristram Shandy type podcast series and I finally got to use my my English degree
I keep thinking about inception where like the third level down an hour is like one minute
in time on the first level and that's what it's like in Sarah time yeah we go in we do another
two hour podcast and we're like and we've covered one day of the OJ Simpson trial yeah that's my
dream so this is awesome so so rewind us where are we rewinding to okay well speaking of inception
time and Sarah time and you're wrong about time let's talk about Marcia standard time okay it's
June 13th 1994 okay the day after the murder the day after the murders but Marcia doesn't know that
yet okay all Marcia knows is that she is a 40 year old prosecutor in as we have already mentioned her
sexual prime with two young boys who she's taken care of wait wait two young sons that she's taken
care of you said sexual prime and then you said two young boys oh god with two young sons who she's
taken care of and three days prior she has filed for divorce from her husband Gordon
okay Marcia and her husband have been separated for about six months Gordon moved out of what she
calls their dilapidated tract home in January and it's only at the urging of her friend Lynn
that Marcia has finally bitten the bullet and filed for divorce who does that sound like yeah
so December 1993 is when she asks her husband Gordon to leave and it's also at this time that she
asks for her old job as a prosecutor after she's been given a promotion and a desk job
that this is like a turning point for her she's like I can't go on with this marriage anymore
I can't go on with this job anymore and I'm just gonna plunge into the abyss basically because
one of the things she also writes about in her memoirs is that she had a first husband who she
met when she was quite young and then went straight from her first husband to Gordon
and so she writes I spent most of my life with a man under the same roof I was constantly terrified
and I remember reading this for the first time and being surprised and then surprised that I
was surprised which is an always an interesting thing because I was like oh like I didn't think
Marcia Clark was scared of stuff I thought she was like very tough and brave and a grown up and
wasn't having the experience of being like a vulnerable new single mom new single person
who was really going through a lot of what Nicole was going through at the same time just in
different neighborhoods of the same city of like fuck like I have to call a repair person I don't
know what to do about the plumbing I don't know how to get the mold out of my bedroom wall like I
don't know how to take care of my house I'm afraid to be living on my own like I've never that I
didn't plan to do this is she hinting that there was abuse in the marriage why was she scared no
she doesn't she doesn't say that she I mean in this passing she's saying she was terrified I think
because she's used to having a man around just generally and also because this is like just a
brand new life I mean I think you could see this as as physical and or existential terror right
and what she says about her marriage to Gordon is quote I will not go into particulars because
they are no one's business but our own so it's not our business okay that's fair but it's June 13th
Marcia drives into work she's running on what her friends call Marcia's standard time which
means she's always a little bit late but this is like a quiet day and she writes I had no court
appearances no witness interviews a short skirt day no need for a believe me suit that's great
wording yeah so she goes into her office and she notices that her desk is like almost clean
which is just like imagine I just like to think about this detail imagine that you're like you're
looking at your inbox you know and you're like wow I've only got like 13 emails in here and it just
feels like things are in order and I filed for divorce against Gordon and I just feel like I'm
getting like things have been crazy but I'm getting my life under control things are calming down
just like savor this moment with Marcia because it will not ever come again so Marcia's desk is
almost clean and the phone rings and it's a detective named Philip Van Adder okay and he
says according to Marcia she gives herself kind of private eye dialogue which I don't always
totally buy happened word for word but like I like it so Van Adder calls he says Marcia do you
have a minute she says I got two man what's up this is like Marcia's first line of dialogue in her own
book isn't that great I love her hard boil she's hard boiled she's hard boiled right she is like
and she like sits around reading mystery novels in her spare time and then post trial like she
writes mystery novels and she you know smokes like a character in a 90s movie who's being
established as a rebel so she smokes so Phil Van Adder is on the phone and she and Phil
have a connection he is in the LAPD's robbery homicide division and they had worked together
on a murder case two years before this is the one where the evidence was a single drop of blood
and they convicted the defendant based on the DNA from this single drop of blood foreshadowing
she says they're buds basically and then he's he's getting close to retirement so they probably
will work on another case together again Phil says to Marcia on this morning I got this double
I need to run it by you and Marcia explains that this is a common practice for a detective to call
a DA to see if they have the material for a search warrant and so he says OJ Simpson do you know who
this guy is what do you think Marcia's reaction is based on the reaction of every other woman we've
seen on this show so far does she know him from the Hertz commercials she says wasn't he a naked
gun or something uh okay I really love the fact that in this case where celebrity is so important
and where people have this idea of where they of like such a pre-existing image of OJ Simpson
in their head that they cannot wrap their mind around him committing a murder that the person
who is prosecuting this trial is like who what right who's OJ Simpson is he Nordberg so Vanatter
gives her the rundown basically he says that OJ Simpson's ex-wife who Marcia Clark always
identifies as Nicole Brown she always identifies OJ Simpson as Simpson she never calls him OJ
she doesn't like that other people do that all the time and her book is dedicated to Ron Goldman
and to Nicole Brown so she she takes this all very seriously but anyway Vanatter at the time says
there are two bodies Simpson's ex-wife Nicole Brown and an unidentified male companion and
Vanatter gives Marcia the basics which are in her words that there is a lot of blood in fact a
trail of blood leading away from the bodies because of death not immediately apparent
he tells her there's a blue knit ski cap found at the murder scene there was a brown leather glove
found at the scene and then after investigating this scene Phil and his partner have gone to
OJ Simpson's house to notify him of his wife's death when no one answers and they can't get
in and they notice what looks like blood on a white Bronco outside they decide to send the
youngest and fittest detective among them over a wall and into the property and that detective's
name is Mark Furman okay but I mean I want to know what you think of that I mean it just seems
so fucking obvious that he did it why are we even talking about this genuinely I mean I feel like in
all of the coverage especially at the time there was so much sort of hemming and hawing and back
and forth and like the sheer tsunami of evidence that OJ did this crime I feel like completely
got lost I mean literally a tsunami I mean it's unbelievable because of the violence
of the murders like the amount of blood right is extraordinary and later on Marcia goes to
to Nicole's house to look at the crime scene and is not let in because there's already a lot of
tourists and who's to say she's not one of them unbelievable so says the cop on duty a normal
tourist activity visiting a crime scene super chill and she's staring in through this fence
trying to get a look and what she sees is basically this river of blood oh god the thing that stands
out to her too is that there are these these paw prints that have walked through oh fuck through
the blood and then and then down the walkway is that Kato is that the dog that's Kato oh my god
do you know the story of Kato what's what's the story of the dog there's the story of the dog I
didn't even know there was a story of the dog yeah oh yeah the dog actually let me show you because
I bought there's an Annie Leibovitz portfolio and an issue of the New Yorker from 1995 of
some of the principles in the OJ Simpson trial okay and the first portrait is of Kato the dog
really yeah let me send it to you okay okay oh wow doesn't he look like a good boy yeah he's like a
German shepherd in the front and like a zebra in the back he has like weird stripes going on
he's an Akita wait what he's an Akita that's that's what he is oh I've never heard of that brand of
dog it's an extremely attractive dog well I mean so after the murders there is a fair amount of
commentary on the fact that Kato displayed subpar oh like he should have protected her and he didn't
they people are blaming the dog yeah what yeah that seems like a weird take but like whatever you
gotta fill the newspaper every day you gotta do you got like 36 inches to fill do you have to fill
it with blaming dogs on things what's with the dog oh my god and I guess Akitas are known for being
pretty protective they can be pretty aggressive and one of the people that Dominic Dunne interviews
says I was just at an Akita event and all of us agreed that OJ had to be the killer because there's
no way that a stranger could have been like lurking around the house or invading the house
and Kato wouldn't have barked at him like it had to be OJ or they would have heard Kato barking
sooner I mean sure I don't know that's that's another one of those internet sleuth details
where it's like we really don't know very much and we're trying to read significance into the
details we can know but like I don't know you don't know their dog maybe the dog barks a lot
maybe he almost barks never and there's much better evidence that OJ did it so again it's like
on the list of good evidence it's like 1032nd on the list when it's like the trail of blood is
like pretty good evidence and like the long history of domestic abuse is also very good evidence
like we don't we don't need to go to dog breeds that's true at the same time the first time I read
that I was like huh that is persuasive like there are details that like make a scenario make
sense to you suddenly or like make something easier to visualize and I was like yeah right right
but Kato the dog ends up being the one who leads people to the crime scene he's the reason the
crime scene is first discovered and the way this happens is that the night of June 12th a guy named
Steve Schwab is walking his dog around Brentwood and he later proves a very reliable witness
because he can place the time that he discovers Kato the dog at right after he had been watching
the Dick Van Dyke show between 10 and 1030 because he always walked his dog right after that so that
he could get back home I think at 11 so he can watch the next show that he wants to see he has
kind of like his little evening routine scheduled around reruns okay interesting and he happens
to pass a white Akita barking at a house which he kind of pauses and looks at and he he goes
up to the dog and looks at it and as he's looking at the collar and getting a closer look at the
dog he notices that there's blood on all of his paws oh my god so he can't figure out where he
lives and he ends up walking home and the Akita follows him back to his house where he gets home
at 11 as he planned and the Mary Tyler Moore show is on which just like it's funny to me that the
first details of this like the first the public encountered this case were just like so mundane
right it's just like this yeah this guy who's structured his evening around his his tv shows
and he's like this feels so familiar right you're just like I'm gonna watch my one show and then
I'm gonna walk my dog and then I'm gonna watch the Mary Tyler Moore show yeah because you know I
guess I feel like things like this remind you that like this is real life like this is this is not
entertainment I mean it is entertainment it became entertainment we can't say that it wasn't that
this is all part of the real world that we all live in that we watch our shows in can I ask a
logistical question yeah I'm just thinking like I I am sick to my stomach thinking about like the
last minutes of Nicole and Ron's lives yeah is there is there a reason people didn't hear screaming
or something are these like just big houses far away from each other I don't think that they're
super far away from each other it's in more of a cramped area of Brentwood than the one OJ lives in
the crime scene is at the end of a long walkway and there's a lot of kind of trees and foliage so
it makes it hard to see from the sidewalk one of the reasons that Nicole was able to afford
the Bundy condo was because it had been on the market for a long time before she bought it because
people really didn't like how much traffic noise especially you got because it was on a pretty
busy road so I think that that was a big part of it people heard other stuff there's a a witness
who later testifies that he was out when he heard coming from from Nicole's house a man's voice
saying hey hey hey which Ron Goldman's family talked about knowing that that was exactly what Ron
would say coming across a situation like you know whatever whatever he found it's just terrible to
think about there might not have been time for screaming yeah or there might not have been very
much I don't know right I'm glad that you feel really horrible too now yeah I know this is how
you felt for months now it was such a bummer to think about yeah I used to just drive around
listening to jump for my love really sadly oh my god people do that too I think you have to
start by thinking of this as like not this fascinating murder this like puzzle for us to solve
which is how we like to regard our murders but it's like a woman's life that almost happened
and a young man's life that kind of ended before it was beginning and just like this thing that
didn't need to take place it didn't have to happen you know there were just so many moments when
things could have changed and just the resources were never available to the right people at the
right time right who called 911 finally or like who discovered the body so this is kind of a funny
story it's slightly funny it's going to feel funnier because this has been so sad so Stephen Schwab
the unsuspecting dog walker comes home and tells his wife Linda that a dog followed him home
and points to this majestic white dog that's standing outside with blood on his paws and so
their neighbor sucrubo's tepe comes home at that time and sucru and his wife Bettina decide to
take the dog out for a walk to see if they can maybe wind him down or find his house they take
him for a walk out in the direction of where Stephen found him and the dog keeps getting more nervous
and pulling them more and more and around midnight the dog stops in front of 875 Bundy Drive the
house is dark enough that they wouldn't have noticed anything if the dog hadn't been pulling them
toward it but they lean in and and look and see what looks at the time like Nicole lying down
and blood all around her so she's like visible almost visible from the street if you like come up
to the house if you concentrate if you I mean because there's a long walkway and Nicole is
at the bottom of her front steps so sucru and Bettina after seeing this go to a neighbor of
Nicole's and knock on her door and the person who lives there an old lady named Elsie
calls the police because she fears you know someone's knocking on her door that's weird oh
right okay she calls 911 and reports an attempted burglary and so officer Robert Risk picks up the
call he comes to Elsie's house and figures out what's going on and then he's the one who sucru
and Bettina take to Nicole's house and then he calls the cavalry I assume and he and Officer
Risk calls the cavalry okay so after all of that because at the time that this happens Marsha Clark
is sleeping soundly or maybe she has insomnia is reading a detective novel but in any case she
doesn't know what's happening but in any case it's the following day that Marsha gets the call from
Van Adder telling her here's what we found at OJ's house so far can we get a warrant okay so then
in the call they had gone over to the house they saw the trail of blood they couldn't get in so Mark
Furman jumps the fence well and what they say later on is that they come to the house of the ex
husband of the victim they see a trail of blood and so they say that they send Furman over the wall
based on the understanding that they might be protecting whoever lives there from a possible
assailant okay which you know my my sense of that is like yeah and also you reason to suspect
that OJ Simpson is a possible victim or a possible assailant right yeah those are the options I guess
and it's after Mark Furman jumps over the wall that he finds the glove that is a partner to the
glove that was found at the crime scene at Nicole's house wait so they find one bloody glove at her
house and one bloody glove at OJ's house yeah that's like how good the evidence of the bloody glove
is that's like how open and shut it is yeah oh my god I feel like I wouldn't call anything open and
shut at this point but like it's like a little puzzle you would give third graders about like this
is what detective Simmons does at a crime scene the assailant cut themselves and bled all over
the place yeah and the fact that there's one glove at the crime scene and one glove at OJ's house
it's like I honestly wonder if you could leave more evidence if you tried right right he's cut
up his driver's license and left little shards of it lying in like a Hansel and Gretel trail from one
murder location to his house yeah it's like the kind of evidence you would have in a game of clue
yeah but Mark Furman found the glove and Mark Furman is a complicated guy right and this will
come up yeah and so getting back to March's call um yeah so Van Adder tells her about the
evidence he's like do you think this is enough for a warrant which I'm pretty sure he knows the
answer to yeah seems seems good seems strong and March is like yeah yeah we've both done this before
yeah so March is like I can go out to Rockingham and supervise the cops that are serving the warrant
if you like and he's like yeah that's that sounds good and I'll call you after I type it up and then
he writes and it's like the warrant signed and we're all done and everything's great and March is
like oh you weren't you weren't gonna read it to me before you submitted it or keep me in the loop
or anything and she's like okay that's uh that feels weird but I'm not gonna bring it up because I
have a history of friction with the cops and like let's not make this difficult from the start like
let's be on the same team let's just play along and then everything will will work itself out
okay and she's like oh Phil by the way like do you have a really good criminalist on this right
and he's like um yeah we have a we uh the guy we have is okay is he talking about Mark Furman
or somebody else no the criminalist is the person who gathers evidence at the crime scene oh okay so
that's obviously like one of the most exacting jobs yeah if you don't collect the evidence
in the correct manner and store it in the correct manner and right you know collect and test
all of the relevant evidence from a crime scene yeah and not miss anything and not inadvertently
destroy anything right like that's what you need in a criminalist yeah you need somebody with like a
lot of color coded post-it notes and very good binders to keep all this stuff in yeah you need
you need a fiend for binders you need a binder fiend yeah this is not what marcia clark is going to
get oh and marcia talks about the fact that during a previous case she had actually been so dissatisfied
by some of the forensic work that the la pd did that she went to the sheriff's department instead
oh interesting and they had to basically redo the la pd's work on her case
police departments don't seem to like it when that kind of thing happens it's also so interesting
of that there's all these people in criminal investigations that nobody makes tv shows about
like you don't have the climax of a csi episode being that somebody put a piece of evidence in
the wrong binder and like a bullet casing went missing and they can't try the case now not yet
it's because i'm not in charge of tv yet but you just it'll be over for all you pictures once
that happens yeah i also think of like i don't know people who clean up crime scenes crime scene
photographers are really important that's some good foreshadowing mike oh wait is it oh yeah we're
going to be looking at lots and lots of crime scene photographs don't worry like we're going to be
talking about like could this be green and yellow leaves could it could it you know we are yeah you
know i love logistics and i just love all the logistics involved in this case you're going to
love the very shack episode like that's going to be the sweet spot of all this for you i just want
all the project management just give me all the project management this is why you're going to
fall in love with marsha clark because she is at the end of the day a constantly disappointed project
manager i've never i've never felt for someone on the show so deeply and it's not even that her
standards are that high you know she's like she's talking to van aderen she's like why don't we get
dory music she's a criminalist we had on this other case we did together where we had to win it
based on a single drop of blood like she did great on that why don't we use her on this and he's
like no we've already put someone on it and i heard he was okay oh man and marsha writes
okay was not terribly reassuring yeah what's his name i asked and van adder says it's guy
named denis fung which wings of a very faint bell for me that's because very shack said his name
probably 500 times okay in the kind of cadence of where is it mr fung does she know that he's bad
or she just like doesn't know who he is at all well marsha knows that phil van adder says he's
quote okay which is like do you really want to hear that about anyone who's working on a case
that you might also be working on like if i were like mike i found someone to make tote bags for us
you were like oh are they good and i'd be like um they're okay right doesn't feel great
does she make a thing out of it at the time or is she just like oh man let's let's hope this isn't
as bad as it sounds no because of course marsha again like you can see how this is all everything
that we are going to see is going to grow out of a very old structure right we're like the da's office
doesn't totally trust the cops that they're working with marsha is kind of known as being difficult
okay essentially because she i guess wants like people who are better than okay to do forensics
yeah and so her attitude i mean the same way that like when you go to thanksgiving with like
your family who in order to avoid outright conflict with you're just kind of like grit your teeth and
yeah sometimes it's easier to just eat the dry turkey right marsha is like sitting there eating
the dry turkey yeah and she's like if i like play along and don't make this difficult for you now
then you'll come through for me later right which again like that's not a healthy dynamic like if
this was a relationship between two people you'd be like i don't know marsha a constant theme for
our show i don't know this isn't great yeah so marsha marsha after she gets off the phone with
phil and learns about denis fine the okay criminalist goes to or j simpson's house in brentwood
and i'll read you the scene she writes there is a cruiser parked up ahead where a uniformed officer
directed traffic a few civilians milled around outside an iron security gate some of them had
the nervous unfed look of reporters oh my god i slipped unnoticed past the press and through
the gate where i got my first look at the larger tutor style house overhung with old eucalyptus
trees the manicured ground seemed to glow an unnatural shade of green in the midday light
in one corner of the lawn stood a child's playhouse okay simpson might be a has been i
thought but he must still be bringing in serious bucks to manage the upkeep on this place i love
that that's where her mind goes like to me that really shows that she is a relentlessly
practical person like she shows up at oj simpson's house everyone else is like this is an american
tragedy okay simpson the great football star and she's like this is an expensive lawn right she's
like what is the lawn maintenance schedule for this home yeah because it's like she's a practical
thinker like she thinks about things in terms of like functional logistics is this also when she
does the description of nicole that you read to us a couple episodes back yeah yes this is so this
is where she sort of quote unquote meets nicole yeah this is also where marcia finds out that oj
has a framed photo of him and nicole underneath his box spring what that's weird what's the photo of
well it's of nicole and oj dressed up for some kind of formal event okay he's in late middle
age and he's keeping a photo of his ex-wife and himself underneath his bed because that's what
time does to us so she's like basically wandering around oj's house just sort of looking at stuff
wandering is kind of an app description because she gets there and she's like where is everybody
so another robbery homicide guy burt looper is there and she's like where where tom and phil
tom lang and phil van adder he's like oh oj showed up at the house and so tom and phil took him to
parker center to question him oh okay so that's where oj is that's where oj is okay marcia's like
okay that's a good use of their time well anyway not for me to micromanage i'm sure that the
detectives are doing their job yeah she's wondering when someone's going to show up and show her around
and that's when she notices some guys approaching who quote had the unmistakable swagger of detectives
okay once again mark farman is entering the story okay and of him she writes he was a real straight
arrow hair closely trimmed she pressed a little more neatly than the others okay the main thing
she mentions about mark farman is that he is not one for small talk she calls him politely condescending
sick burn marcia so mark farman is the one who gives her a grand tour of rocking him first
farman takes her to the spot where he found the glove which is on the path that runs behind the
guest house where kato kalin has been staying and when the cops first got to oj's house they woke
up kato and interviewed him and first thought that he was on something because he was super
woozy and disoriented which like they woke him up at six in the morning i feel like i would probably
yeah seem pretty disoriented then but maybe he's like super disoriented but he tells them that he
was on the phone with a friend the night before and he heard thumps coming from the wall like
hard enough that like a picture that was on the wall was like shaken okay and thought for a second
that they were having another earthquake okay and what ferman tells marches that he thinks that's the
sound of the killer basically hitting that wall or that air conditioner and dropping the glove as a
result hitting it with the car with his hand no with his body like he's running and it's dark and
he like runs into the air conditioner or he jumps over faults over a wall to get back onto the property
and the thumps happen that way like this is there's a couple of different scenarios for this
but basically that like whatever impact happens however it was made causes the second glove to
basically like fall out of the killer's hand or something so the the the theory is that oj went
over there committed the murders and then sort of rushed back yeah so the car is parked at a weird
angle so it looks like it was just like parked in a hurry so mark ferman tells marcia that he
thinks the killer basically ran into the air conditioner and then dropped the glove without
realizing and marcia asks did you pick it up and he's like no i didn't pick up a piece of evidence
i'm a real detective that's his politely condescending i think one of the one of the sad parts of
this case too is that like mark ferman actually like from the standpoint of like noticing things
and gathering evidence and giving a shit about details and like assessing a situation like he does
like in the kind of purely deductive realm seem to have been a pretty good detective like he
actually seems to have been better at his job than a lot of the other people here interesting
because ferman was the first detective assigned to the case very briefly they gave it to him and
then they were like actually we're giving it to robry homicide okay so you're cool just you know
go back to to the bench so he was on it very briefly the other thing that marcia points out
though is that ferman also seems to be totally starstruck by oj simpson this is what she says
as we walked the lawn that sloped north toward ashford we came to a bronze statue of a man in
football uniform he was holding a helmet ferman stopped in front of it he got that when he won
the heisman trophy he said as if it was something i should know i sneaked a look at ferman out of
the corner of my eye he was staring at that statue with unguarded awe oh my god it is so weird
it's the dumbest shit how so the guy has a statue of himself in his own house yeah and also one that
his his son from his first marriage attacked with a bat at one point i know mark ferman is not every
man but i'm just thinking of all the men that accuse women of like being frivolous for being
into fashion or like the royal family or whatever it's like oh so why do you revere oj simpson oh
because he can pick up a ball and run it across a line faster than the other boys can run it across
a line and also avoid other boys who are trying to tackle him and stuff yeah it's like yeah women's
women's hobbies are really really silly there buddy right literally everyone's interests are stupid
like we should all just we should all just admit it my interests are stupid yours are that's why
they're fun we can't all be interested in serious things all the time i know makeup is frivolous
sports is frivolous it's fine yeah and that mark ferman based on his taped statements like
is quite racist yes even he is like wow yeah it's the fastest boy i know it's so
so this is marcia this is ha the marcia clark story like this is it this is this is the world
she's in yeah and everyone's like why is marcia doing her makeup that way and it's like yes if
only marcia could master whatever you want her to do with foundation right this trial would swing
her way like the the detectives would be competent and celebrity wouldn't be the one force more
powerful than racism and she wouldn't be locked in a weird bureaucracy where she has to not really
mention to their faces the terrible behavior of the detectives that she's working with because she
has to maintain a good relationship with them it's like if only if only she wore lighter colors all
that would go away okay so marcia goes back to the office she wants to hear how the case is going
she wants to know if they've arrested him how has the interview gone like what are they figuring out
at the crime scene she's like waiting for the detectives to call her and her boss david khan
is like why don't you give them a call and she says he was right why sit here like some
deb waiting for a prom date i rang parker center which i love like this is her prom date she's
waiting for these detectives get to get back to her and they're like oh yeah we interviewed him
and we taped it don't worry about that and she's like so where are you holding him
oh no wait so this is where we we now intersect with paula that like they let him go right
eventually they let him go and they interview him for slightly over half an hour oh what
wait there's blood on the there's there's a trail of blood why what i mean yeah i mean try and do
you want to hear some of the interview oh yes please okay extremely the other amazing thing okay did
by the way is that he already has a lawyer at this point like he's not lawyerless he's he's he's
already has a lawyer on hand but he decides that he wants to talk to the police by himself
without counsel what just why not and this is just my guess but my guess here is that he's like
i'm okay simpson i can get out of this right i can talk my way through it and they kind of let
him oh god and so when marcia gets the tape of this the way she describes it is that she like
sits down in her oversized leatherette chair and she like gets ready to parse the evidence and
you know kind of settles in to listen to this long interrogation where they're gonna
catch him in his inconsistencies yeah she's lit candles she's got madonna's erotica on
she's in the tub she's got exactly she's in her her happy place and they kind of pleasantly chat
with him for half an hour and are like well go call your girlfriend i guess i want to hear these
excerpts from the interview i'm like already mad i'm like pre mad thinking about this interview
how do you think marcia feels oh my god i know let me just read let me read a little bit of this to
you so van adder we're investigating obviously the death of your ex-wife and another man
lang says someone told us that van adder says yeah and we're gonna need to talk to you about that
god it's like an internet day it's like when you you catch your child
flagrantly masturbating and you're like i'm embarrassed to i don't want you to feel bad but
like i know what you're doing so van adder says yeah and we're gonna need to talk to you about
that are you divorced from her now ok says yes and van adder says what was your relationship with her
what was the and oj says well we tried to get back together and it just didn't work and i think we
both knew it wasn't working and probably three weeks ago we said it just wasn't working and we
want our separate ways what would you respond to that with i mean i guess you would ask if if
if he had any reason to be angry with her like trying to feel out if he had a motive this is
with all of my background knowledge but i noticed he says probably three weeks ago or so we said
it just wasn't working and we want our separate ways my first impulse is to be like oh so like
was it totally mutual like you both totally because like how often do totally mutual breakups
happen yeah it's kind of a conspicuously friction-free thing to describe yeah so like you said she
came back about a year and four months ago about us trying to get back together and we gave it a
shot and probably three weeks ago or so we said it just wasn't working and we want our separate
ways and van adder says okay the two children are yours he's like all right great that's like me on
this podcast just like okay okay yeah i'm acting him saying okay i don't want to talk about michael
bolden okay the two children are yours and oj says yes van adder says how is your separation
and oj says for me it was big problems i loved her i didn't want us to separate and van adder
says uh-huh i understand she made a couple of crime reports or something i don't think that vagueness
is because he doesn't know what he's talking about i think again it's like um so this is embarrassing
this also implies that he knows that there are reports of domestic abuse yeah it certainly
seems that he does well let me read you the next exchange so oj says uh we have a big fight about
six years ago on new years you know she made a report i didn't make a report and then we had
an altercation about a year ago maybe this is the 1993 911 call where he's kicking her door in
it wasn't a physical argument i kicked her door or something oh my god van adder says and she
made a police report on those two occasions and oj says mm-hmm and i stayed right there until the
police came lang says were you arrested at one time for something and oj says no i mean five years
ago we had a big fight six years ago i don't know i know i ended up doing community service like the
way he talks about this it's like if you like spoke french as a child but you haven't since then
you're like oh it's through the misty haze of time i vaguely remember i see myself doing community
service but like it just feels like he hasn't integrated it as part of what he sees as his
actual past yeah like he hasn't thought much about it or see he doesn't see it as significant
i wonder if they are domestic abuse illiterate to the degree that they don't see a connection
between the previous charges and the possibility of him having committed the murder yeah that's
what i'm wondering too yeah like seeing it as the equivalent of like a burglary charge or something
that like he's got priors but like maybe that's just not super relevant i don't know credible so he
says after the recital was the last time he saw nicole and her family and he claims that nicole's
mom invited him to dinner but he said no i have never heard anyone else say that that happened
so that's interesting right um i would find it interesting if like even in a police interrogation
he's like lying about something irrelevant that just seems to be about his pride that's like oh
no nicole's mom totally wanted me to come to dinner it's like he can't not lie it's fascinating
van adder says where did you go from there okay okay says ah home home for a while got my car
for a while tried to find my girlfriend for a while came back to the house it's like a little poem
yeah so what time do you think you got back home actually physically got home seven something
van adder says seven something and then he left and and again it's like so you're leaving it was
seven something you're like oh seven something yeah that's mm-hmm yes right it is mystifying
right because like this is not their first time being cops like they know what they're doing
and then he left and nicole says yeah i'm trying to think did i leave you know i'm always i had to
run and get my daughter some flowers i was actually doing the recital so i rushed to get her some
flowers so now he's suddenly talking about before the recital he's like switched to a different
period of time right and i came home and then i called paula as i was going to her house and paula
wasn't home okay van adder paula is your girlfriend simpson girlfriend yeah although she had actually
broken up with him by voicemail that morning so even that's a little exaggeration too he's like
yeah my girlfriend that's the ticket my girlfriend who broke up with me and fled to las vegas to be
with michael bolton like all girlfriends do van adder so you didn't see your last night about paula
okay says no we'd been to a big affair the night before and then i came back home i was basically
at home and then they asked him if he was scheduled to play golf today he says yes in chicago he was
playing with like hurts clients this is essentially a lot of his work at this point in his life
involves like playing golf in some way interesting just like glad-handing various corporate people
and then van adder says what time did you leave last night leave the house
okay about the lemma was supposed to be there at 10 45 normally they get there a little earlier
i was rushing around somewhere between there and 11 van adder so approximately 10 45 to 11
simpson 11 o'clock yeah somewhere in that area right ish i find it so interesting that they put
no effort into establishing time frame during this conversation i know and also the fact that
essentially his alibi for this whole thing is like i was at home by myself yeah watching turner
classic movies like is that the whole alibi even if they have like very incomplete information like
even if we're as charitable as possible about like what they do and do not know like they know
that the time between like 9 and 11 p.m. is extremely important right and they're just like
okay next question right that's like a pretty long period of time that he hasn't accounted
or where he's basically given himself these like areas of strategic wiggle room like all
of these are basically holes that he and his lawyers are going to be able to squirm through
later right and they're not challenging him on any of them and they're not sealing them up
they're letting them stay there on the record unbelievable imagine marcia sitting there in
her chair i know i'm imagining her with a glass of red wine just like angrily smoking a cigarette
and the camera zooming in slowly as she's listening to this that would be riveting
so okay says of calling paula he says i called her a couple of times and she wasn't there and i
left a message and then i checked my messages and there were no new messages she wasn't there
and she may have to leave town then i came back and ended up sitting with kato wait so he hung
out with kato at the time is that his alibi he did he came home and he hung back with he hung
around with kato okay so okay says he went out and got a burger with kato and but he came home
kind of leisurely and got ready to go this is like a rare moment of the cops like seizing on
something because lang says he weren't in a hurry when he came back with the bronco and okay says
no and lang says the reason i asked you the cars were parked kind of at a funny angle stuck out
in the street and okay says well it's parked because when i was hustling at the end of the day
to get all my stuff and i was getting my phone and everything off it when i just pulled it out of
the gate there it's like it's a tight turn lang so you had it inside the compound then simpson yeah
lang oh okay the word okay is said 27 times in this transcript and only three of those times are oj
pan adder says how did you get the inquiry on your hand now this is important because when they
bring him in for questioning they do notice that he has a cut on one of his fingers oh my god again
the evidence to move forward in time a little bit and quote from marcia she's will later say in court
the bloody glove that was found at the crime scene is left-handed that's a very important fact
and then she says there were bloody shoe prints leaving the crime scene and to the left of those
prints were blood drops so marcia says that shows us that the killer was injured somewhere on his
left side the blood on the driver's door handle of the ford bronco would logically be open with the
left hand and it's no coincidence that we just happened to find the blood spot on the driver's
door handle now on the day the defendant returned from chicago detective van adder makes the observation
that he saw the left-handed bloody glove left at the crime scene that clearly came off during the
struggle which is what allowed him to get the cut that left the blood drops to the left of the
footprints van adder sees the blood drops on the driver's hand door he sees the defendant with a
bandage around his middle left finger and then he takes him down to parker center where he sees
again that he has a swollen finger on the left hand with a cut that was dressed and treated
at parker center no coincidence so he literally he comes into this questioning without his lawyer
with a cut on his left hand which the police already can observe corresponds with evidence
that they found at the crime scene and the police are the ones who dress his wound for him i mean
van adder says how did you get the injury on your hand and oh he says i don't know
the first time when i was in chicago and all but at the house i was just running around
not convincing okay well it's also it's like so there's a second time what like you injured
your hand twice now i guess yeah you don't remember getting a deep cut on your hand or like you do
remember but it was two different times somehow yeah what van adder says how did you do it in
chicago okay says i broke a glass one of you guys had just called me and i was in the bathroom
and i just kind of went bonkers for a little bit what is that how you cut it
it was cut before but i think i just opened it again i'm not sure so it's like okay so what he's
saying is that he cut it the first time at the house getting ready to leave and then he recut it
when he broke a glass in chicago unbelievable lang so do you recall bleeding at all simpson
yeah i mean i knew i was bleeding but it was no big deal i bleed all the time i play golf and stuff
so there's always something mixing stuff here and there and it's like yes okay you play golf so
you're always getting deep cuts on your hands the rough and tumble life of a golfer they say when
was the last time you were at nicole's house okay says i don't go in i won't go in her house
it's like oh that's an interesting reaction from someone who had a mutual break up had a mutual break
i haven't been her house in a week maybe five days i go to her house a lot i mean i'm always
dropping the kids off picking the kids up fooling around with the dog you know van adder how does
that usually work do you drop them at the pork or do you go in with them simpson no i don't go in
the house van adder says you haven't had any problems with her lately have you oj oj says
i always have problems with her you know our relationship has been a problem relationship
van adder did you talk to her last night simpson to ask to speak to my daughter to congratulate
my daughter and everything van adder but you didn't have a conversation with her simpson no
van adder what were you wearing last night oj okay what kind of shoes were you wearing
tennis shoes tennis shoes do you know what kind probably rebock that's all i wear
and the fact that he's saying all he wears is rebock and that they're not pressing him on that
either is interesting because they're like oh you only wear one kind of shoe and it's definitely
not the kind of brand of shoe that was worn by the killer you go to a lot of black tie functions
and so on you guess wear rebocks every single day so he's kind of making small talk with them about
you know his whole life is on and off airplanes he's always flying off somewhere to play golf
the hectic life of oj simpson and then kind of as the interview is winding down they start
kind of getting to the point and van adder says oj we've got sort of a problem we've got some
blood on and in your car we've got some blood at your house sorry to break this to you pal
we got sort of a problem tell us about the old little diddly dang old blood we found in your
little truck we know oj says well take my blood test and lang says well we'd like to do that we've
got of course the cut on your finger that you aren't real clear on do you recall having that cut on
your finger the last time you were at nicole's house oj no it was last night and they come back
to the fact that they have been trying to reconcile until about three weeks ago van adder did you
ever hit her oj oj says uh one night we had a fight and she hit me and they never took my statement
they never wanted to hear my side and they never wanted to hear the housekeeper side i'm the real
victim perfect nicole was drunk she did her thing she started tearing up my house you know i didn't
punch her or anything but i and van adder says slapped her a couple times and oj says no no i
wrestled her is what i did i didn't slap her at all i mean nicole's a strong girl she's uh one of
the most conditioned women since that period of time she's hit me a few times but i've never
touched her after that and i'm telling you it's five six years ago oj is like not good at saying
when something happened you're like okay like when is the movie gonna start and he's like between
six and eight thirty that's not helpful and then lang asks oj about taking a polygraph test for
them oj says should i talk about my thoughts on that i'm sure eventually i'll do it but
he's like should i talk about my yeah okay yes i'm doing it okay nicole's mom is quoted in
shila weller's book saying that if you were having a phone call with oj you could like put the phone
down for five minutes and come back and he would still be in mid soliloquy i've been on dates like
that where you accidentally bring up barefoot running and then you get like a 35 minute long
monologue one of the sad things about this interview is that like it would suck if they had
any suspect in a case where there was this much evidence and they put this little pressure on
him but you also get the sense that like it's harder for him not to talk than to talk he's like
should i talk about my thoughts on the polygraph well i am so yeah let's it's happening yeah
it feels it almost it feels like watching someone just take a bite straight out of a string cheese
it's like why would you do that so lang says understand the reason we're talking to you is
because you're the ex-husband and oj says i know i'm the number one target and now you tell me i've
got blood all over the place like it's their fault god ah okay this is almost over we're getting
there lang once again confirms he gets okay to say again like he gives him a chance to go back on this
like let me get this straight you've never physically been inside the house and simpson says not in the
last week and lang says ever and oj says oh christ i slept at the house many many many times you know
i've done everything at the house you know i'm just saying you're talking in the last week or so
okay and it's like i have never been inside the house and they're like so you've never been in
the house and he's like not in the last week it's not like a criminal mastermind we're interrogating
here this is not like a little verbal chess game this is the last little bit of tape he says oh i'll
tell you i did see her one day i don't know if this is the early part of last week i went because my
son had to go and get something and he ran in and she came to the gate and the dog ran out
and her friend fey and i went looking for the dog that may have been a week ago i don't know
lang to van adder got a photographer coming van adder no we're going to take him up there
lang we're ready to terminate this at 1407 crack work guys so they have started this interview
at 135 p.m. and ended it at 207 awesome good stuff you got him alone we got a lawyer why take up
longer time than an episode of er good stuff so i mean what like what was the purpose of this
what did they learn what what do you even say at this point it's like so obvious you sound you
seem speechless i'm stymied tell me just like what comes to your head because i've been immersed in
this for so long that like these details are pretty familiar to me like i think i've lost some
of my surprise it just seems like at this point they should like arrest the guy like he doesn't
have a strong alibi he just broke up with his ex-wife who he has a history of domestic abuse
with and who made a 911 call about him less than a year ago exactly there's one glove at the murder
scene and the other fucking glove at his house i just don't understand how they're not just like
we got him boys i mean the defense will later argue that like the sheer quantity of evidence
actually supports their claim that oj was framed and it's like you know what kind of like people
don't often leave this much evidence behind right when they commit a murder so i mean they can't
have been confused about what any of this meant yeah but i feel like they knew what they had to do
but they just like didn't do it what do you think explains this are are they just dazzled by his
celebrity like what what is this marcia says they tell her that he's too famous to flee
and she's like bullfucking shit who cares it doesn't matter there's more stuff you can do
beside fleeing he could be intimidating witnesses he could be tampering with evidence he could be
destroying evidence like what are you talking about oh marcia and they talked to him for 30
minutes during which they don't really pin him down on much of anything and then he gets to go
and then there's four days between the police interview and him surrendering and being arrested
where he has that time to basically be ironing things out yeah with his lawyers to be potentially
doing all the stuff marcia talked about he does seem to have spent a lot of time just like drugged
watching turner classic movies but i mean still still but so yeah so is contemporaneously like
is marcia as mad about this then as we are now like is it obvious to her how bad this was michael
you know marcia and her ways i mean you know i mean think about the fact that you and i
are like very soft on crime people who also don't know how to be cops or lawyers and we're like oh
this is bad yeah marcia is fucking livid so what does she do nothing she has to maintain
a good relationship with the cops oh so she can't like go in their bust heads no she has to be like
that was great oh no so okay here's what marcia says you ready i didn't get it
simpson had spent three full hours at the station what could they have been doing all that time
oh he was there for three hours he was okay i was even more disturbed by what was on the tape
phil and tom both sounded exhausted that was understandable they've been up since three in
the morning of june 13th but that was no reason to allow a potential suspect in a double murder to
set the program for the interview yeah any monday morning quarterback that's us can now see that
simpson lied to tom and phil all through that interview of course some of the lies weren't as
apparent to them at the time for instance simpson claimed that he'd been invited to dinner with the
brown family after their recital which nicole's mother would later deny tom and phil couldn't
have known that yet but on other more elemental points like where and when he'd parked the
bronco there was plenty they could have done yeah laying what time did you last park the
bronco eight something replied the suspect maybe seven eight o'clock eight nine o'clock i don't know
right in that right in that area marcia says the follow-up should have come hard and fast
well what the hell was it seven seven thirty eight or nine you knew you had a flight to catch so
shouldn't you have been aware of the time what time did you park what did you do then right on some
fundamental level i think tom and phil wanted to hear a plausible explanation that would eliminate
simpson from suspicion just when they got a big opening they'd move on to something else and then
marcia is sitting there listening to this very short interview and gets to the part where
they're questioning him about the 1989 beating and asked so you slapped her a couple times and he
says no i wrestled her is all i did and i say oh okay and marcia thanks to herself nicole is dead
his children have no mother he's talking about the time he was arrested for beating her and once
again he's whining about how he feels mistreated right as i sat listening to this crap i thought
this guy is going to deny everything all the way he's never going to confess there wasn't one shred
of remorse there not enough real soul for him to need to unburden it by telling the truth right
that interview was one of the worst bits of police work i'd ever seen but i kept my thoughts to myself
i couldn't afford to alienate my chief investigators besides it was spilt milk complaining about
their ineptitude would not help me get through this case so she just swallows it she has to
yeah you just have to you know you have you have to say well it's done you know we can't go back
and we're gonna move forward and i'm gonna maintain relations with my detectives and she
has no power to affect things either so it's like she she's watching this like us watching a horror
movie right that she's like don't go in the basement she's like don't put these ding dongs on this
case we're gonna fuck it up well and think about the fact that shirley has a reputation for like
being difficult because of her like past insistence on having like good forensic evidence right
shirley has a reputation for having standards yeah i mean speaking of the difference between
marcia four years ago and marcia now is that i think we're all much more poised to hear the word
difficult in like a gendered way now yeah but it's like typically when we have women in professional
positions who are considered difficult it usually means like yes they are insisting on standards
or like you know actresses that are difficult because like they complained about rampant sexual
harassment on the set like it just hearing that a woman is considered difficult i just hear it so
differently now than i used to they didn't want to be sexually assaulted at work so she's aware
of this dynamic from day this is literally day one so she's like she's seeing this celebrity
blindness take over the entire police force already yeah she knows what she has to work with
she's being given kind of in many form what this entire trial is going to be for her which is that
she doesn't have trustworthy allies in the la pd everything is political like she's looking at
essentially like an app sampler of the next 15 months of her life yeah and god bless marcia
because you know she has had a day right she goes home to be with her two little kids and
the wall behind her bed basically gets damp and moldy in spring and fall so she spends like
spring and fall with respiratory infections well this is like so erin brokovich to me right she goes
home to her like public servant tract home in glendale with her two little kids with her like
swamp wall and finds like a spider the size of a pinball she says hanging out in her room
and she's just like well i got a new case i'm pretty excited right and she writes i found to
my surprise that i was in an indestructibly good mood true the cops had cut loose the suspect in
a double homicide when they had a mountain of evidence to hold him true they were holding me at
arm's length but you work with what you've got the fact of the matter was i loved having a new
case a new case is like a secret lover you think about it plan for it it infuses unrelated events
with a sense of purpose that's how it's supposed to feel mind and heart engaged neither tripping
over the other i hadn't been that happy in a long time oh it's like the letters from nicole
talking about being happy with oj it's like looking at the footage from their wedding it's like
everyone's so happy but you know it's gonna end in this nightmare it's like no marsha with marsha
it's interesting because i feel like she's observing the arc of this for like the rest of her life
so like this case destroyed her she didn't even clean out her desk after it ended like someone
else had to do it for her she like could not go back to her office she never got her desk clean
you know i mean this was it for her yeah she was done this was the end of her life as a trial lawyer
really maybe this is just me like over identifying with her and wanting her to be like me but i feel
like i see in her kind of the thing that we saw in nancy carrigan when she skated at 1993 worlds
and just like fell a bunch and just like the footage of her in that competition the camera like zooms
really close on her face as her scores are coming back and you can see her feeling like she let
everybody down yeah and i feel like marsha feels like she either has to nail this or let everybody
down right i guess i almost wonder if like if having an experience where the entire world
watched her fail and blamed her for it was like the only thing that could like make marsha not
blame herself all the time like what if you know looking at the world blaming you and being like
well that's not totally true i didn't screw everything up maybe everything isn't my fault
what do you think i feel like we struggle to separate the outcome from the process
yeah like they lost this case it should have been a slam dunk and they lost it like that's an
undeniable thing but it's also it's possible to be good at your job and still fail and it's possible
to be really bad at your job and still win mic i do it every day and so i think it's like we we
look at the result and then we backfill whatever like well if she lost she must have been incompetent
she must not have cared enough she must have bungled evidence she must and she must be in
charge of all of the failures right all of the failures must be hers because she oversaw this
big failure right like marsha is the dictator of like the entire legal system in this scenario
where it was all under her control i'm sure that marsha made mistakes and i'm sure that oj's team
made mistakes too right once the victory is locked in then it's like no she must have sucked
and they must have been geniuses because we don't want to believe that we could be marsha
we could all be marsha at any time yeah we are all one terrible project management away from
just tearing our hair out in the way that she was forced to right we promised you the bronco
chase in this episode it's not happening we've been recording for five hours and it's getting
dark and i was supposed to go outside today so i'm very sorry sometimes the flat iron of hindsight
is slow yes what are you excited to talk about next the bronco chase i'm gonna keep saying
never like the next three episodes until we get to it what if we never talk about it we never get
to it we just keep doing this podcast for the rest of our lives every episode we move more slowly
toward the goal yeah it's kind of it's like that math problem about if you like cut your the distance
you travel in half each time will you ever reach the bronco chase no