You're Wrong About - The O.J. Simpson Trial: The DeLorean Detour
Episode Date: February 22, 2021To tell the story of the "dream team" we must begin by going back to the future. This week we learn why O.J. Simpson fired the man who defended John DeLorean and why a briefcase of cocaine i...sn’t always a smoking gun. Digressions include Bob’s Big Boy, Margaret Thatcher and the Fonz. Support us:Subscribe on PatreonDonate on PaypalBuy cute merchWhere else to find us: Sarah's other show, Why Are Dads Mike's other show, Maintenance PhaseLinks!1970 GTO Humbler commercial 1981 DeLorean commercialHoward Weitzman on John DeLorean in 2013 The "better than gold" tape John DeLorean Reinvented The Dream Car. Then He Totaled It.Delorean is Freed Key Witness Against DeLorean Begins Testimony Government Paid Informer Support the show
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Discussion (0)
Yeah, instead of MLMs in the early 80s, people just had cocaine.
Ooh, ooh, I have one, I have one, I have one.
Okay.
Apologies in advance.
Welcome to You're Wrong About the podcast where if the narrative doesn't fit, it ain't legit.
Oh, that's nice.
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That's a rhyme that you did there.
The syllables are wrong.
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Here's to my sweet Satan.
He tries his best.
I am Michael Hough.
I'm a reporter for The Huffington Post and a poet laureate.
Oh, yeah, that's true.
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Charles and Tati and Shane Dawson and cancellations more generally.
Yeah.
And today, we are talking about, I guess, the Dream Team.
We are, yeah.
So we're talking about the Barcelona Olympics, just kidding.
This is a funny thing, right?
Because in the early 90s, the Dream Team referred to the basketball team at the Barcelona Olympics.
Yes.
And it referred to OJ Simpson's defense team, which I think had enough people on it to play basketball.
I was going to try to make a basketball joke for the tagline,
but I couldn't find it.
I don't think either of us know how to do that.
We can't do that.
No.
So today, we are talking about the origins of OJ's Dream Team.
And Mike, you've already spent significant time with some of these people.
Yes.
Who are these people?
Okay.
All I know of any of these people is the actors who are playing them.
So I know we have John Travolta with his eyebrow wigs.
Yes.
And that is Bob Shapiro, who's like a celebrity lawyer guy, right?
Yeah.
That's that's how Marcia Clark describes him.
That's how he's seen.
This is a really, this is an interesting episode because we're going to talk about kind of layers
of celebrity lawyer dumb and like what kind of celebrity lawyer does OJ need?
Because I feel like the narrative that emerged was that OJ's lawyer at the time of the murders
Howard Weitzman was kind of a lightweight and that his move to Shapiro was based on,
you know, Shapiro, like he handles the big cases.
He can save the celebrities.
But in reality, Howard Weitzman, it doesn't seem that obvious that he would be less substantial
than Bob Shapiro, I don't think.
I mean, I wasn't shopping for lawyers in LA in 1994, but we're going to talk about Howard
Weitzman a little bit in this one because he's the guy who is representing OJ prior to him becoming
basically the prime suspect in what is suddenly the most high profile crime in the United States.
And it's not really a foregone conclusion that he would be sort of quietly forced out as quickly
as he was, which I find interesting.
Who should I imagine in my brain?
What is what does Weitzman look like?
Oh, well, I have the perfect thing for you.
I have some footage of Weitzman himself.
Ooh, ooh.
So this is Howard Weitzman talking about what was at the time of the Simpson Trial
his most famous case.
Do you know what this is?
Is it going to be Menendez's?
That's a good guess.
It's farther back in time.
And to give you a hint where we're going, we don't need roads.
What?
It's something related to back to the future and a clock tower?
It's like an IP lawyer?
Now my brain is going in a million directions.
I'm going to send you a clip.
This is him reminiscing about this case, I think in 2013.
OK.
It's funny all these people are still alive.
Rich people live a long time.
I know.
Oh my god, John DeLorean?
What?
OK, so I just opened this link and the headline of the clip is why John DeLorean was not found
guilty of coke dealing.
Are you intrigued?
I did about any of this.
Shall we watch it?
OK, let's do it.
Three, two, one, go.
There was a videotape of John DeLorean standing in a room with a suitcase full of cocaine
and saying, looking at it and saying it's better than gold and picking it off.
He picked up the brick kilo of cocaine and he said something about the weight and he said
gold, this is better than gold.
It weighs less than gold and put it down.
So what I'm hearing is we are now embarking on a 15-part series on the John DeLorean cocaine
trial.
Obviously.
So tell us about this man.
How would you describe Howard Weitzman?
So OK, and I don't mean this in a mean way, but the only comparison that I could think of was
Robert Blake.
He looks kind of like Robert Blake in Lost Highway.
It's funny because my comparison and I want to emphasize I don't mean this in a mean way
is that he reminds me of Ian Holm as Bilbo Baggins.
Yes, super duper Baggins energy.
Yes, he has like a very round face and kind of ears that stick out.
And I don't know what his stature is, but he has like short king vibes.
Yeah, he is a short king.
I am well trained in spotting fellow short kings.
Yeah.
For the youths, can you just give a little snapshot of like who is this John DeLorean guy?
So yes, I do have a couple of aids for you, Mike, and I'm really happy you asked.
So first, we're going to watch a commercial, which is going to illustrate Act One of John
DeLorean's career.
Amazing.
So he ran Pontiac.
He worked for General Motors.
And so basically the Pontiac GTO is unusual and it's a weird idea that people originally
do not want to get behind because it is a smaller car with a large car's engine in it.
I feel like this is a great example of how just like corporations are just completely
allergic to the concept of good ideas until someone somehow forces them through.
He was like, people don't necessarily just want to be in really big cars or cars that
are as big as possible.
Like sometimes people want to drive a smaller car that has a lot of power and they might
want to drive not in a stately way, but fast.
And also there's a youth market, if you will.
And GM was like, I don't know, John.
And so here's how they got it through.
So basically they find a loophole where instead of selling this as a brand new standalone car,
they say, we're going to sell you the regular old Pontiac Tempest.
But you can, for an extra $295, add this bigger engine.
So it's like, it's not a new product.
It's just a new tweak to an existing product.
So they introduced this in 1964 and they sell 32,000 GTOs in the first year.
Nice.
So let's watch this ad so we can understand like what a GTO really is.
Oh my God.
Three, two, one, go.
What?
There's a lot going on.
There's, wow.
This is like the model of masculinity that most Casey Affleck characters seem to be following.
This ad has a lot of cuts.
This is like a little film we're getting.
Yes.
This is the toxic fucking masculinity I've ever seen in ad.
Remember, Mike, it's the humbler.
The humbler is here.
This is the way it's going to be.
So there's like a unique disappointment when you're watching something,
when you think it's going to be hella gay and then it turns out to be hella straight.
Yeah.
It's basically a guy pulls into a, I guess, a drive-in.
Yeah, it's a Bob's big boy, I think.
But one of those like 50s drive-ins where people were sort of outside of their cars
and kind of milling about, like they're not all sitting in their cars.
And this extremely attractive dude drives up in a GTO humbler, I guess.
And it's kind of like this loud thing.
And the first reaction shot that we get is like another like hot as breakfast dude
noticing the first hot dude and like looking him up and down.
There's like elevator eyes, but it's elevator eyes on his car.
It's like, what is that?
Yeah, you're right.
So it really, it looks like this is like about to pop off.
And then it just becomes like a normal car ad where then there's like a hot lady who notices
and like a hot couple who notices.
And basically, the rest of the ad is just this first dude in this dumb car driving around in
circles around this like sad strip mall hamburger joint, just like run, and like making a lot of
noise, but instead of being bothered like normal people would be, they're all like impressed
by his like loud smelly car going two miles an hour past them.
And then he just leaves, actually.
Because at the end of the ad, he just leaves the parking lot.
And it's like, is your ex-girlfriend hanging out there or what?
Like what's the story, morning Lori?
I know.
It's also implying that this guy's life is really sad, right?
It's so sad.
Like this is the car for if you're like a guy who's still hanging out, trying to like hang
out with high school girls, even though he graduated six years ago and you drive around
the Bob's big boy parking lot for no reason on a Saturday night.
You're not even hungry.
He doesn't even get a burger.
Also, I think there's this like fascinating thing.
Has anyone in the history of the world been impressed by somebody else with a loud vehicle?
No, they're like annoyed.
No.
We're like, especially if you're making a podcast, you're just like, oh my God.
But despite the fact that that ad is unpersuasive to both of us, because we're blibs, this is
a staggeringly successful car.
And because of it, John DeLorean is credited for inventing the muscle car and kind of anticipating
the next wave of American automobiles.
And so he does extremely well at GM because of this.
It is weird how we have a social construction of like the oil and gas companies
as these evil, you know, they all knew about climate change like 50 years ago.
Like they are very much built up as evil in the American mind.
And I feel like American car companies, it's not like we like them necessarily, but like
they definitely skate by with a less bad reputation than the oil companies, which I find totally baffling.
It is.
Cars are the number one killer of children in America.
Like cars.
No, I think it's, I think it's witches, Mike.
I think it's witches.
Like transportation is the number one contributor to climate change.
And yet like somehow the car companies have escaped blame and like oil companies are also
bad.
But like what are we putting all the oil in guys?
Straws, it's straws.
But so is that the sort of social construction of John DeLorean that he's like this
maverick car executive or something?
It becomes that.
Yeah.
Because basically after he invents the GTO, he kind of, you know, he becomes as glamorous
as a GM executive I think can possibly be.
Like he starts spending time in California.
He dates Ursula Andres and Joey Heatherton.
He resigns from GM in April 1973 because he writes a speech that he wants to deliver about
how the company is stagnating and they need basically to be thinking more like John Z DeLorean.
And the company is like, you can't give the speech.
And he's like, fine, I guess someone will leak it to the Detroit news.
Nice.
And then his idea, which he starts working on after leaving GM is like an all American
glamorous flashy car for the people that is like as exciting as a Ferrari but is by an American
car manufacturer.
And also interestingly, his pitch is that it's a car that you won't need to replace,
which is a very weird thing for a car manufacturer to even pretend to promise.
Yes, fascinating.
Because he's essentially like if he's successful, he's offering to maybe put himself out of business
by doing what he intends to do.
So he's kind of like H&M.
Before H&M, there were like attractive clothes and there were cheap clothes and they were
completely different stores.
And then H&M was like, what if we made cheap clothes that were also attractive and then
the entire industry was like, holy shit.
Yeah.
So I think that's really the John DeLorean dream in a nutshell that like normal Americans
because the GTO is a thing of beauty partly because it is accessible to people who can't
get European sports cars necessarily, that Americans will have the best, safest, most
reliable and most exciting looking car that there is and that America will make the best car.
Finally.
So this is the original DeLorean ad from 1981.
This is from the DeLorean Museum where I would love to go when it is safe to once again.
Delightful.
Three, two, one, go.
It looks pretty good.
It's not, it's not an unattractive car.
That's exactly what I would say.
You know, not an unattractive car.
Sarah Marshall cars weekly and only 6,000 of these cars were ever sold.
What?
It's that low?
Yeah.
God, that's like the virtual boy and not because of unpopularity so much as the fact
that it became almost impossible to go on manufacturing them.
Many people and things came between John DeLorean and his dream, the difficulty of starting a new
car company, the fact that ultimately they located their factory in Belfast because they
got a very sweet incentive from the government to create jobs there because the unemployment rate
was so high, the fact that they needed to train a workforce to make cars, the fact that this car
is designed in a way that makes it hard to imagine how you're supposed to park at the mall.
Right.
But the final nail in the Delorean coffin was hammered in there by Margaret Thatcher.
Oh.
So this is from a Forbes article by Chuck Tanner.
I'm going to read you a summary of the downfall.
The biggest problem we had was that the first business plan that was developed once the project
had come to Northern Ireland made it quite clear we're going to run out of money the day we
produced the first car, says Barry Wills, author of John Z, the Delorean, and me.
We always knew that, and that's why we were constantly under pressure to try and persuade
the British government to give us just a bit more money, but that wasn't forthcoming.
Seven months after breaking ground in Belfast, Margaret Thatcher's conservative party came
to power in Britain. She did not approve of the deal the Labour Party had struck with the American.
Then in January 1981, the first wave of cars had quality control issues, which led to bad
press in the US. Critics were thrilled with how the car looked, but the car was underpowered,
offered so-so handling, and was neither as groundbreakingly safe nor as fuel-efficient
as Delorean had promised it would be.
Is that all?
But it looks great. I mean, if you like that kind of thing, they don't explode.
The money crisis grew. A plan emerged to restructure the company and take it public as
the Delorean Motors Holding Company. The proposed stock offering would have personally
enriched Delorean, the company's majority stockholder, by around $120 million, but would
have left anyone holding only options, like the car dealers who had joined the dealer investor
program, with next to nothing. Of course.
It would be a particularly bad deal for Margaret Thatcher and the British government.
Thatcher cut off any further investment in the American company, placing the Belfast plant
and receivership. In the end, only 9,000 DMC-12s were built, approximately 6,000 of which were
sold to customers. Wow. I hate that you put me in a position where I'm agreeing with something
Margaret Thatcher did. Yeah, that is weird. How are you feeling?
Very uncomfortable. Because basically, she's forced to outmaneuver,
to outflank this guy before he screws her first.
Yes. There's something so cynical about all of this rhetoric around private sector innovation
is so much better than the government. Then you look into any of these people, you zoom in on
any of these companies, and they're on the government teat for billions of dollars,
which I think is fine, but let's all be honest about it and subsidize the stuff that we want.
Yeah. This is also the American model of innovation, which we are very familiar with,
which is promise everything, have a big idea, just decide that it's someone else's job to
figure out how that all comes together. That's totally what Elon Musk's thing is,
announce your amazing big maverick idea, and then just assume that the force of your own
will and belief, I think it's a basic belief that the materials of the world are of less
significance than your own dreams. Right. Also, make sure that no matter how much
you fuck up, you get enriched by the bailout plan. Then pass along the loss to everyone else
when you inevitably fail. How do we get to the cocaine trafficking
chapter of John DeLorean's life after this? Yeah. This is very interesting, right? How
does one get casually involved in cocaine? Yes. We know that at this point, John DeLorean is
willing to do anything to suddenly get tens of millions of dollars. He has an acquaintance,
apparently their sons or friends. In the past, before DeLorean's woes really began,
this acquaintance was like, hey, you could get in on some cocaine trafficking with me or
something, because casually, have you ever considered the exciting new world of cocaine?
Yeah, make a palette with me. John DeLorean was like, no, that's fine. Then I can really easily
imagine if my car company is going under, Maggie's just pulled the plug on my first
technically legal but wildly unethical scheme. I got to start getting creative and I'm like,
what about that guy with the cocaine? It's funny because it sounds like the kind of plan that
you would come up with while on cocaine late at night with your random neighbor who happens to
have a hookup. You're like, oh man, this cocaine is great. People would love this. People would love
this. Yeah. What John DeLorean doesn't know is that this acquaintance of his has already
been tapped as an informant by the FBI. I am not wild about this thing where law enforcement
authorities make up crimes and then prosecute them. Neither am I, Mike. There's been a bunch of
infamous terrorism cases where FBI informants will spend years cultivating sources and basically
talking them into planning a terrorist attack and then be like, how dare you plan a terrorist attack?
Spoiler alert, that's what happens with DeLorean. We have this very damning videotape
of John DeLorean looking at this briefcase full of cocaine and saying it's better than gold. It
weighs less than gold. Whose briefcase was that? It wasn't John DeLorean's briefcase. It was brought
in to be on video on that meeting and to impress the jury with the fact that here's a man who's
got a briefcase of cocaine in front of him, but it was actually cocaine that they had seized
from a smuggler and were essentially using as a prop. The whole thing is so counterfeit because we
know from consistent findings in criminology that crime is very situational. It's not like
people are either criminals or non-criminals regardless of the situation. It's exactly the
opposite. For law enforcement to create situations that encourage people to commit crimes, it's
totally illiterate about the nature of crime. There's been these things to take a total
tangent that I've been mad about for months. There's been these quote-unquote stings in Seattle
where they will leave a bicycle in a parking lot unlocked and when a homeless person comes by
and starts riding it around, oftentimes they're looking for the owner. They'll sort of ride on
the bike and be like, hey, does anybody know whose bike this belongs to? The cops will come up and
arrest them for stealing a bike. I have a Vittorio de Sica film that the Seattle police should
try. I know John DeLorean is not a marginalized population, like homeless people are. And people
don't leave briefcases of cocaine on the sidewalk when they don't want them anymore and yet. Yeah,
you can't entice people that need money into money-making schemes and then be like,
how dare you participate in this money-making scheme. I feel as if maybe it speaks to the
difficulty of prosecuting white-collar crime because I can imagine looking at John DeLorean
and being like, this guy is shady as hell. And then you're like, well, we can't take him down for
any of his shady business stuff because it's impossible, but you know what? We can take people
down for drugs. There's a lot of parallels between this trial and what eventually becomes OJ's trial
and one of them is that like, this is huge. And this also takes a long time to actually
reach the trial stage. Like I think they're in pretrial hearings and stuff for 17 months.
Holy shit. So this has the time to loom very large in people's minds. Yeah. So this is from
Judith Cummings's coverage of the trial for the New York Times. And we're going to talk about James
Timothy Hoffman, who's the DeLorean acquaintance who got him started down this path. While James
Timothy Hoffman, an informer, was helping the government put its cocaine trafficking case
together against John Z DeLorean, the government spent more than $32,000 to protect and support
him, a federal agent testified today. Mr. Hoffman also knew that he could be prosecuted for a past
heroin violation anytime his work failed to please investigators. Yeah, fuck. Mr. Hoffman,
Mr. Waters testified, was paid a total of $111,643.43 by the government from January 1982.
When he began working as an informer to date. That some included expenses for five narcotics
investigations. The money also covered living costs for Mr. Hoffman, his wife, and the three of
their four children who were living at home. Howard L. Weitzman and Donald Ray, Mr. DeLorean's
attorneys, said today that they construed what the government called expenses for Mr. Hoffman to
be equivalent to a salary. Yes. Out of those expenses, they said Mr. Hoffman's rent, utilities,
clothing, and other bills were paid, just as anyone else would cover them from their paycheck.
Mr. Ray said, Hoffman thought he had a good job, that it was worth keeping.
So he's earning a literal salary to keep entrapping DeLorean.
Yeah, that's the Weitzman argument. Interestingly, or ironically, or something,
my understanding is that the way you get people involved in a criminal enterprise is you don't
just make it appealing for them to help you, you also make it dangerous for them to not help you.
And this guy, Hoffman, is in that situation where he has strong financial incentive to keep
putting together these entrapment or borderline entrapment deals. He's got a heroin charge over
his head. If he stops going along with the government, he's screwed and they're paying
him pretty well. That's basically the case that the DeLorean defense team is making.
This is a terrible way to detect crimes. We're going to pay dirtbags like a monthly sum so that
they can go out and entice people into drug trafficking, people who would not necessarily
be trafficking drugs otherwise. And it's also this weird thing, we're like in sort of one of these
government informant cases, and you see this on law and order. It's really weird. There are these
episodes where the original person who you as a viewer are like, get him, get that guy. They're
like, we can't prosecute the Larry Miller character. We have to find out some sort of weird
backdoor way because now we have all this audience momentum and you guys want to watch
someone go to trial, right? And they're like, yeah. And they're like, we're going to charge
some random drug manufacturer with wrongful endangerment. And I feel like this is the kind
of momentum that you get these kinds of, you know, the public accepting these kinds of versions of
police work. Do we not want to go after this Hoffman guy? Like he seems like he got into drug
trafficking all by himself. And it's just because of the fact that he was chosen as the informant
that his crimes become less relevant. Right. I mean, one of the things that we've seen as a
thread through a lot of the moral panics that we've seen around street gangs and street crime and
stranger danger on this show, there's this weird warping of the idea of detective work. Because
this isn't detective work in any meaningful sense. They're not finding like, okay, this guy's selling
drugs. Here's his supplier. Here's his supplier, supplier. Right. Investigations like this come
at the cost of investigating crimes that are actually happening. Do you think somebody on
this team like John DeLorean stole his girlfriend back when he was, you know, on the town because
like this feels personal. And I get that it might be advantageous legally to take this guy down,
but like once again, you know, you can't just invent crimes in place of the real ones.
Oh, but I think this is totally the Wesley Snipes effect where agencies of the government,
because they're doing so little enforcement and they're getting so few positive headlines,
they deliberately look for celebrity defendants because they know that's going to be in the
papers for months and it's going to make them look like these heroic cops that are doing
busts like this routinely. If you're an informant and you can dangle a celebrity defendant in front
of law enforcement, that's going to be really enticing to them because it feeds a narrative
that they're super duper competent even when the case itself is evidence of how incompetent they are.
Which is another one of the reasons why when you skip ahead to, you know, the beginning of
OJ's trial or the beginning of people hearing the news of him being a suspect, you can use pattern
recognition and be like, what if this is the LAPD trying to look good by taking down someone
prominently? In the scheme of American police stuff, it's a believable story. It's just in the
details that it breaks down. Yeah, exactly, because this is not the story of a high-level
celebrity drug trafficker. This is a story of a desperate rich dude who turns to like some really
dumb ideas ultimately, but it's not like this guy's not a criminal mastermind for the drugs.
He's probably a criminal mastermind for like wage theft and like union busting.
Yeah, exactly. Let me show you footage of these clips. It's really great.
Oh, this is the clips of him talking about the cocaine?
Yes, this is the clip. We're going to see him with the cocaine.
And by the way, as someone who's watched a lot of Oxygen over the years, I get really annoyed
when people act like it's proof that you're a ruthless criminal. If you get excited about
seeing a lot of cocaine, or if you want to like lie in a pile of money, like a lady on a
snap I watched one time did, they're like, it was proof that she would do anything for money.
And I was like, excuse me, if I were more comfortable about how clean money is,
I would get up the gumption to do that any old time. It sounds fun. Just get small bills.
That's like the entire American ethos is that we should all be doing things for money at all
times. Lying in a pile of money. Yeah. Three, two, one, go.
Who offers to let DeLorean out of the deal. September 9th at a bank in San Carlos, California,
an undercover agent introduces DeLorean to a phony banker who says he can provide cash for
the deal. September 20th, the Bel Air Sands Hotel in Los Angeles. The phony banker seated on the
left and DeLorean meet a suspected big time drug smuggler, the real target of the undercover
investigation, who says he won't get involved unless DeLorean was involved.
During the first three weeks of October, DeLorean assigned half of the stock of his company to
the undercover agents allegedly as payment for the drugs and Hedrick imported 220 pounds of
cocaine from South America. Hedrick was arrested and pleaded guilty. The cocaine was seized and
on October 19th in a hotel room in Los Angeles, the trap was sprung on John DeLorean. A suitcase
full of cocaine was put before him and he called it better than gold. A few minutes later, the FBI
arrived and John DeLorean was put under arrest. What do you think of that? So I mean, it's clear
that they wanted to get enough interactions and enough logistics between him and the undercover
guy and the banker and the foreign drug dealer, whatever, to sort of establish that like this
was not just something that he was dabbling in, right? It's not just like they spoke once and
he's like, yeah, cocaine sounds fun and the cops rush in. They're on some level doing that to cover
up the fact that they're inventing this crime out of nothing. Right. I often think of Clarence
Darrow's closing argument in the Leopold and Loeb trial and specifically his point. What he does
that I love in that is basically like force the judge to look at the implications of just sort of
the popular rhetoric around this trial and one of the things that people were saying at the time
and what they still say now is like these boys have committed the most brutal, terrible,
thoughtless, senseless, terrible murder that has ever happened in the history of Cook County or
maybe Illinois or maybe America. And for that reason, the state has to be as merciless to them
as they were to their victim, Bobby Franks. And Clarence Darrow gets up and it's like,
so you're telling me that the government is supposed to emulate my crazy teenage murder
appliance? Are you sure you want to be doing that? And in this, I'm like, how would we be treating
you know, the FBI if they were rather than a government entity, a person, like this would
be someone who would be, you know, they would be the originator of this entire scheme. They're the
one who set this up. They're the one who's like John DeLorean seems like the kind of guy who
traffics on cocaine. Let's get him in on this. Like they are the party that has the most responsibility
if this is a crime that individual actors are conspiring to commit to together rather than
one of the actors is secretly a government entity that doesn't really want to commit a crime at
the end of the day. There's also a weird thing that they're treating this sort of it's worth
more than gold a statement as some sort of smoking gun when like that's just a statement of fact.
Yes, it is. Like if you showed me a bag of diamonds, I would probably be like, wow, it's
worth more than gold. Like, yes, it is. I'd be like, they're so sparkly. And that doesn't mean
that I came up with this idea to sell hot diamonds. I'm just appreciating the aesthetics.
It doesn't like mean anything. Yeah, I don't know why this is supposed to be this like moment
on the video that sort of makes him look so guilty. It's like, he's just saying stuff.
It's because they're like seeing if he goes for the cocaine, like, you know, which owner
will Ribsy choose? It's Mamma Mia all three. Yeah, and that he's appreciating the cocaine
as an aesthetic object. And it's like, you guys are the ones who have all this cocaine that you
can use as props all the time. I don't know. Yes. So, okay, let's let's get to some whitesmen.
So this is from the Forbes article again. During the trial that followed DeLorean's attorney,
Howard Weitzman argued that the FBI had been able to entrap the desperate automaker because
they knew he would do anything to save his business. And the evidence suggested Weitzman
had a point. According to multiple reports at the time, the deal was presented to DeLorean by a
paid FBI informant. When DeLorean said he didn't have the cash to pay for the drugs up front,
the informant promised to arrange the financing as long as he would put up his company as collateral.
And although he showed intent, he never took possession of the drugs. It seems he never
planned to pay for them either. The cocaine deal was yet another business venture into which DeLorean
was not putting a dime of his own money. The government believed his agreement to hand over
control of his company constituted proof of his willingness to participate. But DeLorean did
not give them control of DeLorean Motor Cars Limited or the DeLorean Motor Company. Instead,
he agreed to provide them with control of DMC Inc, a dormant shell company that had no assets.
DeLorean was conning the con men. This is why you don't prosecute cases like this because you get
wrapped up in these weird hypotheticals. Yes. And I also love that Howard Weitzman's team is able
to be like, excuse me, he is innocent of this cocaine charge because he was being crooked in
this other way that makes it a moot point. Thank you. Well, this is the whole thing. If you prosecute
people that actually traffic drugs, you don't need to do this. Like what were his intentions?
What was he going to do after we arrested him type shit? So after 30 hours of deliberation,
DeLorean is acquitted of all charges. Oh, I mean, he still seems like kind of a dirtbag,
but it's good that it just didn't work. But this is the point of American law.
Yeah. Dirtbags deserve justice too. You know? However, after that, he went to trial for embezzlement
and fraud and he was investigated by the Brits and he was tried by federal prosecutors.
And he still kept coming through. He was never convicted of anything,
but he basically lost his empire. Oh, so that's what took it all down? I mean,
he was already financially fucked going into this cocaine thing. That's why he was doing it. So I
think he took himself down and then the government just sort of helped. Like when you have a fraying
sweater. Right. And this is also from the Forbes article. He was never convicted, but accountants
did recover almost a hundred million dollars for the creditors of DeLorean Motor Company in
civil court over the course of nearly two decades. Yeah. Driven and this is to me, this is the saddest
part. Okay. Driven into bankruptcy, DeLorean had to sell his home in New Jersey, where his nearly
500 acre estate was eventually purchased by Donald Trump. No. And converted into a Trump
National Golf Club, which he frequently visits as president. Oh, that's like the darkest epilogue.
It is. Oh, that's because that's like the part in Wolf of Wall Street, where he gets taken down
by the Benihana guy. And a final thought on John DeLorean. This just caused me to empathize with
him. At one point in his adult life, he got chin implants for himself. And as someone who like is
very self conscious about having a weak chin, I just appreciate that concession to male vanity.
How tall is he though? Oh, he was like 6'5", actually. Oh, see, I only get solidarity under
5'7". Yeah. Sorry, Joan. We'll find a short and trapped guy for you next. Thank you. So,
is your contention that Howard Weitzman was like a good lawyer who probably would have
been good for OJ ultimately? Weitzman did a great job. And here's some more coverage of
that. DeLorean interviewed other well known defense attorneys here, but Weitzman and Ray
had handled some early motions and were willing to give DeLorean 100% of their time. In return,
DeLorean signed over to Weitzman whatever interest he has left in a San Diego ranch
and in the New York apartment worth 6.5 million. Weitzman said he and Ray have paid more than
$300,000 of their own expenses while the properties are tied up in legal challenges.
Asked why he is extending himself so far for DeLorean, Weitzman discards his usual jokes
and rehearses a speech she will someday make to the jury. If the government can do what it did
to Joan, then God help us all because we're all next. Wow. I feel, based on this, that it's very
interesting that Howard Weitzman, regardless of what he was handling in the intervening 10 years
between this and OJ going to trial, had been successful in exactly the kind of trial that
OJ is facing. This is someone who is extremely well known, kind of a beloved American figure,
a symbol almost of 60s masculinity and who falls from grace in a spectacular and highly shocking
fashion and they need someone who will drop every other task, every other client and dedicate all
of their time and their own money to protecting and defending them. This is exactly what he needs
and I just find it, I don't know, before I kind of started looking at Weitzman's performance in
this case and how he describes it and how he talks about it years later, I was like, okay, yeah,
whatever. I don't know anything about this guy. It makes sense if you want Bob Shapiro,
he's the shiny new guy or something. But then I was like, this is, this is folly, like to have the
ideal lawyer for this based on previous victories and get rid of him. So the question is why?
Do we know? We have some thoughts. So we are now turning to Lawrence Schiller's American Tragedy,
which is the book basically from the perspective of the defense team. And this is where we have the
infamous and very short gentle questioning of O.J. Simpson. Yes, 32 minutes. What is one of
the notable things about that session? What isn't there? A lawyer. Apparently what happens is that
Van Adder is like, hang back Weitzman, we don't need you in here. And we're only going to talk to
O.J. if he doesn't have you present. Schiller writes, Weitzman knew Van Adder was bluffing,
but O.J. insisted he could handle this himself. No problem, nothing to hide.
That was the trouble with superstars, ego, image. So they have their conversation. O.J. and Kardashian
go back to Rockingham. O.J. is convinced that they've stolen some money he had in his closet that he
won playing golf. Okay. You know, so he's just like, he's kind of focused on, on random stuff that
doesn't really involve the case being built against him. In the midst of all this, O.J.'s
assistant, Kathy Randa, gets a call from a guy named Roger King, who's just a random guy who,
among other things, owns Inside Edition. Okay. And knows O.J. kind of, but he's calling and he's like,
we got to hire Bob Shapiro. He's the best. And O.J. is like, okay, I don't know you. And Roger King
tracks down Bob Shapiro, where he's hanging out at the House of Blues that night. And Bob Shapiro
is like, okay, I don't know you. But like, sure, maybe. O.J. So this whole thing comes down to like,
a random person calling and just giving a name? Kathy Randa Our friend from Inside Edition,
you know, Roger. O.J. That's so weird. Kathy Randa It is so weird, right? It's so weird. He's got the guy
who freed DeLorean. O.J. Yeah. Kathy Randa I find this really interesting that like, some
person he barely knows from Adam is like, I'm going to hire a lawyer for you. And he basically
just goes with it. Yeah, it's like a really monumental decision too. If you're like, maybe
kind of sort of being accused of murder, who your lawyer is, it's like a really big deal.
By the way, don't feel too sad for Weitzman because he's representing Justin Bieber now. He's
doing fine. That kid is always getting in trouble with exotic animals. Yeah, that's true. So
Bob Kardashian sleeps fitfully that night. And on the morning of June 14th, he drives
back to O.J.'s house from his home in Encino and shows up just as Howard Weitzman is leaving.
And Kardashian goes up to O.J.'s bedroom where he's having some oatmeal. And O.J.'s still in the
same place he was last night of just sort of continual verbal disbelief and denial. Shiller writes
that his voice rose as the words cascaded out. You know, they're treating me like I'm a suspect.
They're treating me as if I did it. Now O.J. moved to something more specific,
Howard Weitzman at the police station yesterday. The lawyer had been wearing a suit after all.
His role was obvious. The cops had asked some tough questions. They were looking hard at him.
You go downtown to the lawyer and people think something happened. Howard kept saying things
would work out. It's normal that they want to question you. But they searched the house all
day long. Is this what you do when you are used to handling people with huge egos like you develop
a habit of just kind of going with their grain to make things easier? I guess. But yeah, I feel as if
Weitzman in that basically was like chose to let his client do the thing that would be worse for
him. But I also feel like he's then like he's blaming Weitzman for things for his house getting
searched. Like he feels that sense of violation of like the cops have been through my house,
which like I don't even like it when TSA goes through my bag. So basically Howard becomes
a vessel for all of OJ's irritation about how this case is going. I think so. There's the fact
that like Howard Weitzman was like around and he was the only lawyer who OJ had when this happened.
And so like it has to be his fault. Like who's else's fault can it be? It can't be OJ's fault.
Right. It's also an extension of all of the abuse dynamics we've seen with both Nicole and with
Paula that this is the mindset of an abuser, right? That however I'm feeling is the reality.
And I am going to take that out on whoever's around me and whoever made me feel that way.
Yeah. And also the way that like we push away the people that are capable of loving us,
you know, as especially as narcissists. It's like OJ above almost anyone else. Like this is this man
like professed to love and stood by and spent a lot of money on John DeLorean. Like do you think
you are going to find someone better suited to your needs? Yeah. So on June 14th OJ and Kardashian
arranged OJ's escape from Rockingham. They go once again to OJ's offices. And this is where
they have their first meeting with Bob Shapiro. And so this is the Kardashian as told to Shiller
description. He had a cool, polite, precise manner like a therapist Kardashian thought.
He's here to help. Simpson seemed to emerge from his lethargy. You have to hire the best
investigators criminalist forensic people. Right now Shapiro said he must bring them in immediately
to get an independent review of the evidence. Kardashian asked if Howard should be brought
into this conversation. Shapiro said no. Next he asked Kardashian to leave. So I love how Bob
Shapiro according to this telling is like just let it happen. Just let me be your lawyer. He moved
on him like the driver of a Pontiac GTO at a hamburger drive-in. Nice. He's like I rumble
loudest. Yeah. I get why this would appeal to OJ and probably would appeal to like any client,
right? Because he comes in and he's like we have to get the best people, the best forensics,
the best crime scene, the best experts, the best of everything for you. Because this case and your
innocence are so important. We need the best of everything for it. It's kind of appealing.
It's very like masculine. It's like this whole thing where the performance of confidence and
competence is more important than demonstrating actual competence. Yes. And I feel like this is
like of course OJ wants an acquaintance of an acquaintance. This is also why you would relentlessly
have affairs if you're married because like a new person doesn't know what you're like.
It's funny to me how easy it is to scam people like OJ. Like people with this kind of worldview
that sort of go fast and act on their emotions without realizing that they're acting on their
emotions. It's like it's so easy to do some razzle-dazzle with these people and convince them of
basically anything. Like I have seen this working in international development. I have seen this
with billionaire philanthropists too that they'll meet somebody like at the coffee break table at
fucking Davos and after five minutes they're giving them millions of dollars for their
asinine development idea. And it's like, do you not realize how easy it is to convince you of this
bullshit? Like it's incredible to me that they don't see their own patterns. Rich people can
afford to be impulsive too. Yes. This is not mastermind behavior. This is someone who has like
failed to progress past the most elementary emotional stages and is maybe trapped there.
Okay, so they have this meeting. OJ likes him and basically it like starts to happen. They're
all just like, let's just kind of let this happen. You know, it's like he's moving in. Howard Weitzman
is lighting up all of the possible phone lines that could get him to OJ and no one is taking
his calls. He's calling Bob Kardashian as well. And Lawrence Schiller writes, it made Kardashian
squirm. He'd known Howard nearly 40 years and he hated seeing a friend treated this way. But he
said nothing. Something was happening here that took precedence over a valued friendship. Kardashian
realized he had crossed some threshold whether he had planned to or not. So the next day, June 15,
Bob Kardashian gets another call from Howard Weitzman because finally skipped Taft OJ's business
advisor whose name I love has called Howard Weitzman and let him go. Schiller summarizes the call
as OJ wanted to make a change. She was hiring Robert Shapiro. Why hadn't his old friend protected
him from embarrassment or at least warned him so he could protect himself? It was very unpleasant.
Personally, as someone who constructs my entire life to avoid getting yelled at,
I really feel like I'm getting Bob Kardashian in this moment. What do you mean?
He's like, sorry, it just kind of happened around me. And I could have said something,
but I didn't. It's just hedging everything basically and doing everything within your
power to avoid being the bearer of bad news, which I feel like if you have weathered the decades as
one of OJ Simpson's best friends, this is another thing he has. Well, this might be the only thing
that Bob Kardashian has in common with Kato Kalen, but they both seem to be people pleasers.
Yeah. And that very afternoon, Howard Weitzman goes on YouTube and wonders,
is there a Canadian singing sensation who may later on need legal representation?
And that man was Michael Buble. So next time we're going to continue to talk about the dream
team, I realize that this is like the really fun part of the most fun kind of movie, which is
the highest movie, which is where you assemble your crew. Yeah, you get the team together.
And so now that Bob Shapiro has hatched first and consumed all the other larva,
he's going to assemble the crew. And we're going to talk about who these people are,
where they came from, what their deal is, what kind of shady shit they've been up to,
and what they're bringing to the team. I am going to need some montages.
Oh, yeah. Also, do you want to hear a celebrity cameo that I didn't get to?
Oh, sure. So this is from a profile of Weitzman around the DeLorean trial.
Weitzman lives in Pacific Palisades with his wife, Margaret, 29, who sits with DeLorean's
wife, Christina, every day in court. Weitzman's 12-year-old son, Jed, lives with his first
wife, who is now married to actor Henry Winkler. Hey. Hey. Yeah. So just, you know, in conclusion,
okay, why did why did you make this all so hard for yourself when you were only one, you know,
when your original lawyer had you one person away from the guy who could come in and slam
the jury with his elbow and make it all go away and could keep this entire defense from jumping
the shark. Somebody's got to do it.