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O.J. Is Guilty But Not of Murder Hardcover – November 14, 2000
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William C. Dear
(Author)
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Print length354 pages
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LanguageEnglish
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PublisherDear Overseas Productions Ltd
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Publication dateNovember 14, 2000
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Dimensions6.25 x 1.25 x 9.25 inches
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ISBN-100970205805
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ISBN-13978-0970205803
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"Mr. Dear's investigation and... theories 'extremely plausible and believable." -- James Cron, Former Commander of the Dallas County Sherriff's Crime Scene Unit
"Your report on the Bundy Drive murders is OUTSTANDING!! Your investigation provided ... new found hope. Keep the heat turned up." -- Charlie Sheen - Actor, Los Angeles, CA, April 2, 2001
Unlike preceding books, Mr. Dear's, to me, offers a "strong suspect,"... -- Hugh Aynesworth - Washington Times, February 26, 2001
From the Inside Flap
Opinions were skewed, arguments over the jurys decision were heated. O.J. Simpson became the butt of hundreds of jokes, while the families of the victims were left to mourn their own and seek civil remedies for tragic losses.
As the frenzy died down, the media armies moved on to other stories, and people moved on with their lives each with their own opinion of what really happened. Although the case is over, and O.J. walked away a free man, the question still remains Who killed Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman?
Stunned by the brutality of the murders, and at the same time fascinated by how the case was being investigated, veteran detective Bill Dear launched his own investigation into the facts. Dear, within weeks of the murders, climbing over the fence at Bundy, sitting at the front door of Nicoles condo and recreating in his mind that dark night of Sunday, June 12, 1994, was convinced that O.J. Simpson could not have committed the murders but may have been at the crime scene soon after they occurred. If this is true, O.J. has known all along the identity of the killer.
Once Dear established in his own mind that O.J. was innocent, he focused his attention on six possible suspects. After carefully investigating the facts and not assuming what he had been told, read or shown concerning the alibis of each of the six, Bill Dear was more determined than ever to find the truth. His grueling, six-year search finally narrowed to one major suspect. The facts speak for themselves.
Learn for whom and why O.J. may have been willing to stand trial in the murders of Nicole Simpson and Ron Goldman as you walk step by step beside Bill Dear on this compelling journey.
Bill Dear has uncovered startling new evidence that is certain to change everyones perception of O.J.s guilt. This evidence has never been made public.
About the Author
Nicknamed The real James Bond: by the London Times, Toronto Star and the Dallas Times Herald, Bill has been involved in some truly unique and harrowing cases. He solved the mystery surrounding the disappearance and death of a young genius at Michigan State University, as chronicled in his book, The Dungeon Master. He was also head of a team appointed to the exhumation of Lee Harvey Oswald. Dear solved the Dean Milo murder in Akron Ohio, which resulted in eleven arrests and convictions the most ever in U.S. history for a single murder case. The Black Widow murder case and the Wax Museum murder case in Arlington, Texas. This larger than life character, who aptly calls Texas his home, may indeed have finally solved the murders of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman bringing closure, not only to the victims families, but to the question in the minds of the countless people who were riveted to their televisions while it was played out by national media.
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Product details
- Publisher : Dear Overseas Productions Ltd; F First Edition Used (November 14, 2000)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 354 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0970205805
- ISBN-13 : 978-0970205803
- Item Weight : 1.74 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.25 x 1.25 x 9.25 inches
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Best Sellers Rank:
#1,759,713 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #7,140 in Criminal Law (Books)
- #7,215 in Murder & Mayhem True Accounts
- Customer Reviews:
Customer reviews
Top reviews from the United States
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If you have concluded that O.J. Simpson is guilty of murdering his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ron Goldman, then you should not read this book unless you are to ready to learn something or use your mind to determine your own conclusions.
The author here does a briliant job in developing a case against Jason Simpson, O.J.'s son. Of course, maybe Jason would have emerged as the prime suspect if the police or district attorney's offices talked to him. That's right, the LAPD and the district attorneys like Marcia Clark and Christopher Darden already concluded that O.J. Simpson committed the crimes.
This book states he was protecting his son, Jason, who you would learn is emotionally disturbed and suffers from mental illness and has a history of blindess. Oh let's not forget that Jason is an excellent chef who carries around his own knives in his chef's kit.
Remember, O.J. hates the site of blood which is documented. This book has also painted a portrait of Nicole Brown Simpson not as a victim but a strong woman who survived a violent domestic relationship to O.J. Simpson but their relationship was far more complicated than the media allowed to believe.
She was a woman who was enjoying the good life and the freedom to pursue men but she always talked about O.J. to others. When they were together, they were inseparable. Apart, they talked little about anybody else to their friends and relatives.
O.J. wasn't or isn't stupid. He may have covered up for his son's deeds and it cost him more than anything he could have imagined such as the loss of his true love, the public's demonization, and financially. He lives in Florida and plays golf but is still dismissed as the killer.
I think he would rather bear that than lay it on Jason who would have probably been sentenced to death row at San Quentin in California. Of course, let's remember that nobody else was ever charged or even investigated.
The whole crime was displayed as murder but Dear doesn't mention that O.J.'s physically damaged by his years of football and drugs to commit such a heinous crime and manage to get away with it by running for his life.
At least, this author does investigate the possibility of Ron Goldman as the ultimate target. He investigates the entire Simpson family including the death of the infant daughter, Aaren.
He also digs into Jason's medical history rather illegally but at least he is doing the work that the L.A.P.D. has not done at all. They never questioned Jason, never verified his alibi which wasn't airtight, never bothered to verify his story, never bothered to investigate Jason as a potential suspect.
At least, Dear appears to be on the side of the truth. It is not that O.J.'s inner circle isn't aware of his existence. Maybe O.J. wrote his recent book to dissuade the notion that Jason is a suspect because this book does reveal a lot of interesting facts. Regardless of how you feel about O.J. Simpson, the former celebrity, sports hero, and now social pariah, this book sheds light never shown before on a man who might be guilty but not of murder but of protecting his son, Jason.
Dear writes sympathetically about Jason as a complicated and troubled man who needs help. At least, he has been quiet but who knows what really happened that night on Bundy Drive.
Who is to say that the criminal jury got it wrong and maybe the civil jury got it right because O.J. felt responsible?
When I read that Jason couldn't view Nicole's body at the wake, it should have been a wake-up call. O.J. and the mourners sat there for hours while Jason was too distraught. At the trial, he was kept away until the verdict.
He suggests, “Despite the evidence against him, [Simpson] repeatedly claimed he was innocent of the murders. Here was a man who had volunteered to be interviewed by the police, gave the crime lab samples of his blood and… willingly agreed to take a polygraph test. There were not the actions of a guilty man.” (Pg. 6-7)
He says, “To my mind, the most obvious glitch in the LAPD scenario was the ease with which O.J. allegedly left Rockingham without Kaelin having heard him drive away in the Bronco, and the limousine driver’s failure to hear his return. As anyone who has even driven a Bronco can attest, this is not a quiet vehicle.” (Pg. 14)
He points out, “I could only read between the lines, but the evidence seemed clear. Jason [Simpson’s son from his first marriage; before his marriage to Nicole] had attacked his boss with a kitchen knife, the kind a prep chef might use to carve meat or cut vegetables. Even though the charges had been dropped, the fact remained at the time that the Bundy Drive murders took place, twenty-four-year old Jason Lamar Simpson was on probation for assault with a deadly weapon.” (Pg. 97)
He says of a 1996 deposition given by Jason, “This single interview, recorded nearly two years after the murders… represented the first and ONLY time that Jason had been officially questioned about the deaths of Nicole Simpson and Ron Goldman. The police hadn’t even talked to Jason! Nor had anyone from the DA’s office!” (Pg. 145)
He asserts, “Just as Ron Shipp had said… Jason was an embarrassment to his Dad, which was something O.J. did not tolerate.” (Pg. 242) He later adds, “To my mind, it didn’t take the same leap of imagination to put Jason on Bundy Drive that night, engaged in a to-the-death struggle with Goldman, and cutting Nicole’s throat. Jason had once gotten into a mad rage and used his chef’s knife to slash and cut of the hair of his girlfriend, Jackie. He had assaulted Paul Goldberg with what was believed to be a kitchen knife. And he had tried to squeeze the life out of Jennifer Green by choking her with his bare hands. He hadn’t just punched and slapped her. He had gone for the throat.” (Pg. 264) He concludes, “O.J. was at the crime scene, but not until after the murders.” (Pg. 291)
A very speculative theory. Those interested in such will probably enjoy (it definitely is in a class above many such alternative theories).



