He was Simpson's houseguest in 1994 and told jurors the football star had no obvious cuts or injuries shortly after the murders. Kato Kaelin, 55, was the breakout star of the criminal trial with his long, surfer-style blond locks and colorful, often conflicting, testimony. ![]() The aspiring actor went on to appear on reality TV shows and is now working on a clothing line called Kato Potato. It wasn't worth it."īrian 'Kato' Kaelin testifies during the O.J. If I could go back, I wouldn't answer that call. "I wasn't even on call that night, but my boss wanted me to handle it. ![]() "I know I sound bitter and angry, but I've wasted 20 years of my life on something that took 20 minutes (of detective work)," said the retired cop who many blame for turning the tide of the criminal trial. He said Simpson is "getting what he deserved" as a Nevada inmate. All they cared about was the sensationalism of a guy who could play a child's game and become a celebrity."įuhrman, who lives in Idaho and has written several books, works as a pundit for Fox News. "This was the simplest case in the history of murder in Los Angeles, but it turned into a giant car wreck," Fuhrman told The News. Simpson's team accused Fuhrman of planting the glove in a racially motivated plot to frame the former gridiron great. The recordings contradicted the LAPD detective's claim he hadn't used the hateful slur in a decade and led to a felony perjury conviction that ended his police career. Mark Fuhrman, 62, found the bloody glove at Simpson's house but later became the trial's unexpected villain when recordings revealed he repeatedly used the N-word while consulting on dialogue for a screenplay.
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