EXCLUSIVE: Ron Goldman's father blasts 'low-life sociopathic murderer' O.J. Simpson: 'He has no concern he took two lives. I don't think he has an ounce of soul or remorse' on eve of 25th anniversary of the death of Ron and Nicole Brown Simpson
By Alan Butterfield
Daily Mail
June 11, 2019
Ron Goldman's father says he has no doubt 'low-life sociopathic murderer' O.J. Simpson killed his son and O.J.'s ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson 25 years ago tomorrow.
In an exclusive interview with DailyMailTV, Fred Goldman blasted O.J., who was acquitted for double homicide but lost a civil action brought by the Goldman and Brown families for their children's deaths.
Fred, 78, responded to an interview O.J. gave on Monday where Simpson said he spends his days playing golf in Las Vegas and tries to stay in a ‘no negative zone' rather than think about the murders.
Realtor Fred, from Peoria, Arizona, told DailyMail.com said: ‘He is the negative zone. He has no concern he took two lives. He is a low-life sociopathic murderer.
'He gets to breathe every day. That’s more than Ron and Nicole ever have had for 25 years.
'I don’t think he cares. I don’t think he has an ounce of soul or remorse.'
Fred also does not see why O.J. is viewed as a celebrity. He said: 'I’ll never understand it. How people can associate with anyone of that low-level.'
Fred warns women to stay away from him. He said: 'If I was any of those gals I would make a wide berth away from him. I'd have to be crazy, given his history.'
He added: ‘Every day since Ron’s brutal murder has been horrible but on June 12th of each year the day is a little bit worse.
‘It signifies another year of not being able to be near him.’
Fred refuses to use 71-year-old O.J.'s name, instead calling him 'the killer' when referring to the former NFL star turned actor.
Fred said: 'Ron would have been 50. He had plans to open up a restaurant/bar, restaurant/cocktail lounge. He had literal plans for it. Menus, everything. Everything worked out about it.
'And the killer took that away totally. He took away everything.'
'Ron was a wonderful, caring, unselfish, warm, kind, decent human being. All of the opposite of the killer. The exact opposite.'
When asked what would he do if he ran into O.J., Fred replied ‘with a car? Too bad!’ Then added, ‘I have no interest in him. I would never stoop to the level he is at.’
Ron was just 25 when police found him stabbed to death outside 35-year-old Nicole Brown Simpson’s condominium in Brentwood, CA.
Nicole and her family had dined at Mezzaluna Trattoria, a local restaurant where Ron was a waiter, on the night of June 12, 1994.
Nicole’s mother, Juditha Brown, had accidentally left her sunglasses at the restaurant and Ron, who was a friend of Nicole's, agreed to drop them off at her house when his shift ended.
At midnight both bodies were discovered on the walkway outside of her home.
O.J. Simpson, who had a history of domestic violence against Nicole, was arrested on June 17, 1994 and charged with the double murders.
His 11-month long trial at Los Angeles Superior Court ended when he was found not guilty on October 3, 1995.
But in a civil trial in 1997 the Goldman and Brown families were awarded a $33.5 million wrongful death judgement against O.J.
Fred Goldman says the families have so far received little money from the judgement.
He said: 'Minimal, to say the least. Tiny. A per cent of one per cent. Probably under several thousand.'
Meanwhile O.J., a former Buffalo Bills and San Francisco 49ers running back, receives a $300,000-a-year pension from the NFL which cannot be touched by creditors.
When asked what would he do if he ran into O.J., Fred replied, ‘With a car? Too bad!’ Then added, ‘I have no interest in him. I would never stoop to the level he is at.’
In 2006, O.J. Simpson tried to make money by writing a book, titled 'If I Did It' where he put forth a 'hypothetical' description of how Nicole and Ron could have been killed.
Simpson said he could have gone to the house to criticize Nicole after he heard she was lowing their two young children to be present when she was partying too hard with friends.
He claimed to go to the house with a man called Charlie and when they arrived, the book claims, O.J. got into a heated argument with Nicole, culminating in Ron Goldman coming out of the house to defend her.
Simpson, still speaking hypothetically, then says he blacked out and only came to when he saw Ron and Nicole's bloody bodies. The book suggests Charlie killed the pair with a knife O.J. kept under the seat of his Ford Bronco car.
But Fred told DailyMail.com he is certain there is no such person called Charlie and the book was a confession by Simpson to the murders.
In August 2007 in a Florida bankruptcy court awarded the Goldman family the rights to the book to partially satisfy the wrongful death judgement they had against Simpson.
They re-titled the book 'I Did It: Confessions of the Killer' and added comments by their family.
Fred said: 'It’s as good as you can get. Absolutely. He puts himself there and pretty much makes clear that nobody other than him was involved, other than his make believe person that pops up out of a clear blue sky and then disappears instantly.'
'There was never one single minute shred of evidence pointing to anyone else. Not one infinitesimal piece of evidence pointing to anyone else.'
And he understands, because of double jeopardy laws, Simpson can never be tried again for the crime, no matter what new evidence is uncovered.
Fred said: 'There isn't. Even if they had a movie of him committing it, it would be double jeopardy. There was plenty the first time.'
There is one thing that will put a smile on Fred’s face - the day he hears that O.J. Simpson is dead.
Fred said: ‘I’ll have a large smile on my face when I hear the news!’
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