O.J. Simpson bags 15-yr jail
term
O.J. Simpson, who famously
stunned America more than a decade ago by walking away from his murder
trial a free man, was sentenced on yesterday to at least 15 years in
prison for his Las Vegas kidnapping conviction.
The sentence was levied by a
judge two months after jurors found the 61-year-old retired football
star guilty of all 12 charges against him for last year’s gunpoint
holdup of a pair of sports memorabilia collectors in a casino hotel
room.
The former National Football
League hero turned actor, dressed in blue prison garb, appeared somber
and drawn as the sentence was pronounced. Minutes earlier, he had
pleaded for leniency, saying he had only meant to retrieve possessions
that he believed were wrongly taken from him.
"I didn’t mean to hurt anybody,
and I didn’t mean to steal anything," he said, his voice shaking with
emotion.
Simpson has remained in custody
since he was convicted on October 3, exactly 13 years after his
controversial 1995 acquittal in Los Angeles in the slayings of his
ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend, Ron Goldman.
It was not immediately clear how
many years the onetime star athlete known as "The Juice" would
actually serve before he might be eligible for parole, or how the
prison terms imposed by the judge for other offenses would add to the
15-year sentence he received for kidnapping.
Simpson’s lawyers had asked that
he receive a term of no more than six years for storming into a room
at the Palace Station hotel and casino with five cohorts in September
2007 to hold two sports merchandise dealers at gunpoint, then making
off with thousands of dollars in collectibles.
The four other men originally
charged in the case all agreed to plead guilty and took the witness
stand for the prosecution during nearly three weeks of trial
testimony.
Neither Simpson nor co-defendant
Clarence Stewart testified in their own defense.
Simpson’s lead attorney, Yale
Galanter, has said his client’s past as a notorious murder defendant,
widely seen as having eluded justice in Los Angeles, was a factor in
his being found guilty by the Las Vegas jurors.