Wednesday, June 19, 2019

MURDEROUS PIECE OF SHIT SHOWS HE BELONGS BEHIND BARS, NOT ON THE GOLF COURSE

'I will find your ass and cut you!' OJ Simpson is accused of sending threatening messages to parody account @KillerOJSimpson on Twitter after urging operator to delete it

Daily Nail
June 18, 2019

OJ Simpson is being accused of sending threatening messages from his new Twitter account - a move that could potentially violate the terms of his parole.

On Sunday, seven direct messages were reportedly sent from the 71-year-old's social media profile, @TheRealOJ32, to a parody account named @KillerOJSimpson, which pokes fun of the controversial Football Hall of Famer.

The parody account posted a video showing the exchanges that are purported to have occurred with the ex-NFL star - and they quickly turned violent in nature.

Simpson is alleged to have sent the first message to the parody account, writing: 'Delete this account or I will have my lawyer remove it for false misleading content I didn't post.'

When the man behind the parody account responds with a refusal, Simpson reportedly replies: 'Like I said, delete this 'Parody' account as you call it or face serious consequences by me. I'll find your ass one way or another so don't mess with me. I got nothing to lose. Grow up.'

The parody account then sends a thumbs-up emoji and a knife emoji.

Simpson allegedly replies with a single knife emoji, before a subsequent message which reads: 'You think I'm playing? Tired of all your bulls–t. I WILL FIND YOUR ASS AND CUT YOU — Don't believe me? Just watch and see bitch'.

The account allegedly belonging to the athlete then sends 16 knife emojis and the words 'You next'.

Simpson was famously acquitted of stabbing his ex-wife, Nicole Brown, and her friend, Ron Goldman, in 1995.

It's currently unclear whether Simpson himself is responsible for composing the messages, or whether his account was hacked. It's also possible the messages came from an alternative account, designed to dupe people into believing it is the athlete's verified profile.

DailyMail.com has contacted both OJ Simpson and the parody account for comment.

According to The New York Post, if Simpson is behind the messages, it could violate the terms of his parole.

The star was released from a Nevada prison in 2017 after serving nine years for robbery and kidnapping.

The controversy comes just days after her joined Twitter.

He has already amassed 700,000 followers since he launched the account on June 12 - the 25th anniversary of the murder of Brown and Goldman.

'Now, coming soon to Twitter, you'll get to read all my thoughts and opinions on just about everything,' he said in his debut post.

'Now, there's a lot of fake OJ accounts out there. So this one, @TheRealOJ32 is the only official one. So, this should be a lot of fun. I've got a little getting even to do. So God bless. Take care.'

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