He parks in the dark alley behind her condo and dons the knit wool cap and gloves he keeps handy to ward off the chill on the golf course. He also has a knife in the Bronco, protection against L.A. "crazies." He intends to scare her. He enters through a broken back gate--he's told her a "million times" to get the buzzer and latch fixed--and encounters Goldman, who is returning the glasses of Nicole's mother, Juditha. She had left them at Mezzaluna, where the Brown family dined after Sydney's recital and where Goldman is a waiter. [...]
Simpson writes that his ex-wife came at him like a "banshee." She loses her balance and falls hard, her head cracking against the ground. Goldman assumes a karate stance, further angering Simpson. He dares the younger man to fight. Then, in the book, Simpson pulls back. He writes, "Then something went horribly wrong, and I know what happened, but I can't tell you exactly how."
Perhaps, then, the book might have been more accurately titled, Look--I Did It, But I Can't Tell Exactly How My Harmlessly Showing Up To My Ex-Wife's House To Scare The Out Of Her With A Knife Led To A Double Murder. The article, containing the rest of the chapter summary, is here. Read it, comforted by the knowledge that neither O.J., nor any demon-eyed Fox reality execs, will earn their platinum pitchforks by profiting directly from your morbid curiosity.
UPDATE: In an interview with the AP, Simpson claims the chapter leaked is a "fictional creation" written by a ghostwriter.
- Evidence of Guilt? [Newsweek]
- O.J.: Chapter is not a murder confession [AP]
Defamer
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Do you think shows like CSI: Miami instill fear in some people about what could actually happen?
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