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 SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA FOR THE COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES 
HON. HIROSHI FUJISAKI, JUDGE 
REPORTER'S DAILY TRANSCRIPT 
JANUARY 17, 1997 
VOLUME 45 
(At 11:30 A.M. a recess was taken until 2:10 P.M. of the same day.) 
(The following proceedings were held in open court outside the 
presence of the jury.) 
THE COURT: There appears to be a blue-back filed by defendant with 
regards to augmenting the record on motion for mistrial. 
MR. BAKER: Yes. 
THE COURT: That's been filed. 
MR. BAKER: Thank you. 
THE COURT: There's a request from, I guess, that's Court TV, to 
televise the verdict. The Court, having heretofore made an order 
with regards to television, is not changing the order, and I'm not 
granting any order to televise anything. That matter's been heard 
and taken up on appeal and the Court is not going to change the 
position. The Court has before it requested jury instructions. The 
instructions, as I am advised, have been divided into agreed and 
disagreed. These instructions appear to be in the agreed group, and 
I will be giving these, as requested, with modifications thereon. 
And plaintiff is ordered to prepare a clean copy of all instructions 
that the Court is going to give, leaving on each instruction form 
whether it's page 1 or subsequent pages, space of that much 
(indicating), for perforation and detachment, and to eliminate any 
footnotes from the face of the instruction. And finally, not to 
include on the face of the instruction, the stationary heading of 
the attorney's office on any of the requested instructions. Also, on 
the headings, please include the party requesting it. Okay. The 
following instructions are agreed to, and I will be giving them 
unless counsel advises me that it's not in the correct pile. BAJI -- 
these will be by BAJI numbers. 1.00, 1.01, 1.02. 1.20 -- this is a 
special instruction -- and as way of illustration, counsel, you see 
page 2. Page 2, starts at the very top, and it also has footnoting. 
We'd like it to start at this level 
(indicating), so that when the clerk prepares the instructions to 
be sent into the jury, and the Court intends to send the 
instructions into the jury, that the clerk will be able to detach it 
without having to reconfigure the entire instruction. 
MR. GELBLUM: I understand. 
THE COURT: Okay. This is this instruction which has been agreed to 
read as follows: This is a civil case, not a criminal case. The 
parties who have brought this suit are called plaintiffs. The party 
sued is called the defendant. We are here trying three actions which 
have been consolidated for trial. In the first case, plaintiff 
Frederic Goldman, individually, and as the personal representative 
of Ronald Lyle Goldman, deceased, is suing defendant Orenthal James 
Simpson. In the second case, plaintiff Sharon Rufo is suing 
defendant Orenthal James Simpson. In the third case, plaintiff Lewis 
H. Brown, as the executor of Nicole Brown Simpson, is suing 
defendant Orenthal James Simpson. For the purposes of these 
instructions I will sometimes identify the various parties as 
follows: 1, plaintiff Goldman means plaintiff Fred Goldman. 2, 
plaintiff Rufo means plaintiff Sharon Rufo. 3, plaintiff Brown means 
plaintiff Lewis H. Brown. 4, plaintiffs means Goldman, Rufo and 
Brown, collectively. 5, defendant Simpson means defendant Orenthal 
James Simpson. Okay. In the fourth paragraph, the clerk informs me 
it should read -- that's the fifth paragraph; it should read, in the 
third case plaintiff Lewis H. Brown, as executor of -- that should 
be the estate of? 
MR. BAKER: Yes. 
MR. GELBLUM: Yes. 
MS. BLUESTEIN: Your Honor, I'm sorry. That same addition should 
probably be put at the bottom when you refer to plaintiff Lewis 
Brown. 
MR. PETROCELLI: I don't think so. 
MR. GELBLUM: I don't think so. It was called Lewis H. Brown. 
MS. BLUESTEIN: He's not the plaintiff. The plaintiff is the estate 
of -- he's the executor. 
THE COURT: He's the plaintiff. He's suing as the executor's -- the 
named party, isn't he? 
MS. BLUESTEIN: Okay. 
THE COURT: So we'll leave it on. 2.00, 2.01, 2.02, 2.03, 2.04, 2.05, 
Okay. With respect to 2.05, I informed the jury as to the fact that 
Exhibit No. 732 was being received for a limited purpose, and I 
indicated that I would give a formal instruction to the jury, and I 
instructed the plaintiff to prepare that instruction. If defendant 
is not satisfied with the limiting admonition I gave to the jury at 
the time, I'll ask the plaintiff to prepare a formal instruction on 
that and give it as part of the instructions. 
MR. BAKER: I think you also gave a limiting instruction on the Nancy 
NeySojourn House. 
THE COURT: I also ask that, and also as to the polygraph. 
MR. PETROCELLI: Object to the polygraph, to the Court's admonition. 
I want to submit my own instruction on that. Is that okay? 
THE COURT: You can submit it. I don't know if I'll give it. 
MR. PETROCELLI: Okay. We'll submit all of then. 
THE COURT: Okay. 
MR. BAKER: Are you -- 
THE COURT: 2.06 -- 
MR. PETROCELLI: By the way, is the Court's order -- this Court made 
an order that no one was to bring up that subject again. Does that 
apply to closing argument? 
THE COURT: I believe so. 
MR. BAKER: I don't think we ought to have an instruction. 
MR. PETROCELLI: Then I don't think we ought to have an instruction. 
THE COURT: I won't give an instruction on that. But on the last 
one, the only reason I bring that up is because I gave a limiting 
admonition to the jury, and Mr. Baker would like to be heard on the 
instructions. 
MR. PETROCELLI: Yeah. On the -- 
THE COURT: If you want to be heard on the formal instruction I'll 
give them formal instructions, other than a limiting instruction. 
MR. PETROCELLI: You're talking about 732, right? 
THE COURT: Yeah. So you want it or you don't want it? 
MR. BAKER: On 732? 
THE COURT: Yeah. 
MR. BAKER: Yeah. 
THE COURT: Prepare a formal instruction then, please. 2.06, 2.08, 
2.09. 2.20; and there is a handwritten modification that's been 
added that says a character of the witness for honesty, or 
truthfulness or their opposites. 
MR. GELBLUM: That's one of the bracketed parts of the instruction 
that was left off and then the parties agreed to add it back in. 
MR. BAKER: And we object to that, Your Honor. We don't think there's 
been any testimony to that. 
MR. GELBLUM: We agreed. 
THE COURT: I thought you said you agreed. 
MR. BAKER: I disagree. That's my contrary nature. 
MR. GELBLUM: He agreed while we were sitting there before. 
THE COURT: Okay. I'll give it. I believe both sides have witnesses 
who said they were honest. 2.21, 2.22, 2.25. 
MR. BAKER: Could we -- 
THE COURT: I'd like you also -- the print date to be removed. 
MR. GELBLUM: The what? 
THE COURT: You have a print date on it. 
MR. GELBLUM: That was the defendant's one. We'll submit all new 
ones, Your Honor. I just don't want to get blamed for something we 
didn't do. 
THE COURT: I'm just asking you not to put it in. 
MR. BAKER: Don't be so sensitive. 
THE COURT: Do you want to say something on 2.25? 
MR. BAKER: No. That's fine. 
THE COURT: 2.40, 2.41, 2.42, 14.51, 14.60, 14.62. 14.69; is there 
some reason why there's only one of these? 
MR. GELBLUM: I'm sorry, Your Honor. 
THE COURT: 14.69. 
MR. GELBLUM: Yes. What about it? 
THE COURT: There's only one. 
MR. GELBLUM: Yes. 
MR. BAKER: I don't think anybody from the Browns provided one. That 
was provided by the -- 
MR. PETROCELLI: They don't have a wrongful death . . . 
MR. KELLY: We don't have that claim. We just have a survival action. 
That would be inapplicable. 
THE COURT: Oh. Okay. 25 years is 49 additional, and 56 years is 
21.4. Then after plaintiff, I think you have the names inverted, 
don't you? 
MR. GELBLUM: I don't have a copy, Your Honor, because we did that 
right in court here. 
THE COURT: Do you have -- after plaintiff you have Goldman and 
Ronald Goldman, and I think the age entries you have -- 
MR. GELBLUM: Ronald first. 
THE COURT: Ronald first. 
MR. GELBLUM: We'll reverse it. 
THE COURT: Okay. 14.70, present cash value. As to punitive damages 
instructions, two instructions have been submitted. One with the 
name of Ronald Goldman, and one with Nicole Brown Simpson, which 
reads: If you find that Ronald Goldman, on one, and Nicole Brown 
Simpson, on the other, suffered actual injury, harm, or damage 
caused by battery, you must decide in addition whether by clear and 
convincing evidence you find that there was oppression or malice in 
the conduct on which you base your finding of liability. Next 
paragraph is oppression. Next paragraph is malice. Next paragraph is 
despicable conduct. You have an instruction for clear and 
convincing? 
MR. GELBLUM: I thought there was one. 
MR. BAKER: 2.62, Your Honor. 
MR. GELBLUM: You know what happened, I think, Your Honor, I think 
that's in the stack of disputed ones because of the way they had 
written it, they had added something to it. But the definitional 
part, we have no objection to, as long as it's straight -- 
MR. BAKER: The bracketed paragraph. 
MR. GELBLUM: No. You said we needed to prove that he killed them by 
clear and convincing evidence. 
MR. BAKER: Oh. 
MR. GELBLUM: The definitional part, as long as it's straight from 
BAJI, is fine with us. 
THE COURT: Okay. Add on this instruction, the definition of clear 
and convincing evidence, and -- 
MR. BAKER: Your Honor, on 14.7, 2.1, I don't think you need the 
despicable conduct paragraph because that's not what they're talking 
about if the jury finds Mr. Simpson liable -- 
MR. GELBLUM: That's a term used under oppression, your Honor. In 
fact, it probably should be proved up between oppression and malice 
because the term is used in the definition of oppression. 
MR. BAKER: I think malice is the only one that makes sense. We 
object to anything other than malice in this case. 
THE COURT: Then you also had a -- the last paragraph; you should 
consider all evidence bearing upon every issue. 
MR. GELBLUM: That's from 2.62? 
THE COURT: Yeah. 
MR. GELBLUM: Okay. 
THE COURT: 15.00, 15.20, 15.22, 15.30, 15.31, 15.33, 15.35. I'm 
going to omit the second sentence as much as we will be managing the 
jurors' movements. 
MR. GELBLUM: Are you on 15.35? 
MR. BAKER: Are you on 15.40? 
THE COURT: 15.40. 
MR. GELBLUM: Oh. 
MR. BAKER: Got ya. 
MR. GELBLUM: We removed the second sentence. 
THE COURT: Yeah. Second and third sentence. 
MR. BAKER: You're probably not going to allow just the evening 
recess, correct? 
THE COURT: Right. 
MR. BAKER: All right. 
THE COURT: 15.52. Has anyone prepared a verdict? 
MR. GELBLUM: I think defendants submitted part of one. We have not 
submitted a complete one yet. We have some disagreement about what 
this should look like. It's very basic. I think we agree there's 
three questions, and we question whether it's two separate forms or 
one form. 
THE COURT: Okay. These are disagreed instructions. 2.26, admission 
implied from silence or evasion. Who's request is this? 
MR. GELBLUM: Plaintiff, Your Honor. 
THE COURT: Okay. Go ahead. 
MR. GELBLUM: We believe there's -- 
MR. PETROCELLI: Cowlings. 
MR. GELBLUM: There's an instance in the evidence of a conversation 
where the parties present -- where Nicole Brown Simpson, Al 
Cowlings, and OJ Simpson -- Nicole said something about being hit 
by Mr. Simpson, and there's no evidence of his denying that at the 
time. 
MR. PETROCELLI: It was on the basis that I -- the Court, among other 
reasons, permitted that testimony. 
MR. BAKER: Your Honor, we object to that on hearsay grounds. My 
recollection is the Court let it in because he was in the room, but 
there was no indication that he heard it, or would have heard it, or 
anything else to that effect. They never proved that up. So we don't 
think 2.26 is applicable to any of the evidence. Without foundation 
in this case. 
THE COURT: Okay. I'll give this, but we'll call it an incident, and 
strike made an evasive answer, strike accident, and strike to be 
true. 
MR. GELBLUM: Your Honor, will you give me -- will I be able to take 
it back with me? 
THE COURT: You can have the whole thing. You're going to have to 
redo this anyway. 
MR. GELBLUM: Terrific. 
THE COURT: This is plaintiffs requested 1.03, as modified. The fact 
that an estate of a deceased person is a party -- the fact that an 
estate of a deceased person is a party must not prejudice you in 
your deliberations or in your verdict. Do not discriminate between 
an estate of a deceased person, on the one hand, and natural 
individuals, on the other. Each is a person in the eyes of the law 
and entitled to the same fair and impartial consideration and to 
justice by the same legal standards. What is the objection? 
MR. BAKER: Submitted. 
THE COURT: Given. Plaintiffs' requested instruction reads as 
follows: As I have told you, this is a civil case. You may know that 
defendant Simpson was already tried in a criminal case for the 
murders of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman and that 
defendant Simpson was acquitted in that criminal trial. You must not 
consider anything that occurred at the criminal trial in deciding 
this civil case. Therefore, you should understand the following 
rules: The acquittal in the criminal case has no effect on this 
case. Even though defendant Simpson was acquitted in the criminal 
case, you can still find him liable for killing Ronald Goldman and 
Nicole Brown Simpson in this civil case. The burden of proof in the 
criminal case was materially different than the burden of proof is 
here. In the criminal case, the prosecution had the burden of 
proving that defendant Simpson murdered Ronald Goldman and Nicole 
Brown Simpson beyond a reasonable doubt. In this case, as I have 
told you, the parties need only prove the facts that they have the 
burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence. Three; this is 
a separate civil action brought by plaintiffs. It is not an 
extension or retrial of the criminal case. The District Attorney's 
office is not involved in any way in this case. The Los Angeles 
Police Department is only involved because its officers investigated 
the murders of Ronald Goldman and Nicole Brown Simpson and collected 
evidence and, therefore, some of them were necessarily witnesses in 
this case. Four; the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Constitution does 
not prohibit a civil case brought by victims of the crime even after 
an acquittal in an earlier criminal trial. His acquittal means that 
he cannot be prosecuted in a criminal case again or go to jail for 
the deaths of Ronald Goldman and Nicole Brown Simpson. However, the 
plaintiffs have a right to pursue this civil action even though 
defendant Simpson was acquitted at the criminal trial. Five; if you 
rule in favor of the plaintiffs in this case, you will be asked to 
determine what amount of money defendant Simpson must pay to the 
plaintiffs as compensation for killing Nicole Brown Simpson and 
Ronald Goldman. No matter what your verdict is in this case, 
defendant Simpson will not be punished by imprisonment. Objections? 
MR. BAKER: Your Honor, that's a speech. And when he -- the language 
contained therein is exceptionally pro plaintiff. And it is 
essentially, as I view it, a summary of the jury instructions, and 
it's without precedence to give a summary of the jury instructions 
that are going to be given. And to say that the burden of proof is 
materially different, you only have to prove by a preponderance, 
seems to negate, and is indeed argument. When they try to distance 
themselves, the plaintiffs, from the D.A.'s office and the LAPD's 
office, they're trying to instruct away -- have you instruct away 
the bias that the LAPD has in favor of the plaintiffs. It takes away 
a lot of our case. I don't think that's appropriate to give them any 
such instruction whatsoever. They were voir dired on this issue. We 
spent approximately six weeks in voir dire. These people are all 
well aware of the double jeopardy. They're all well aware that this 
is a civil case. They're all well aware there is a separate burden 
of proof. This is argument. The plaintiffs can argue the law, but 
they can't summarize what they believe the law is, and tell them 
that the LAPD and the D.A.'s office, for example, are not involved, 
and you only have to prove by a preponderance, and the burden of 
proof is materially different. I think it's improper to give this 
kind of -- of instruction to these jurors after all we've gone 
through in voir dire. These jurors should be instructed pursuant to 
BAJI, as in every other wrongful death case. 
MR. PETROCELLI: Your Honor, to deal with Mr. Baker's point about the 
D.A.'s office and LAPD, we will -- although we certainly don't agree 
with what he said, we will withdraw everything following the second 
sentence in paragraph 3; the references to the D.A.'s office and the 
LAPD. We would agree to withdraw those sentences. So in paragraph 3, 
it would be the first sentence only. In regard to the balance of 
what Mr. Baker said, he made a continual point of referring to the 
criminal trial throughout his examination of witnesses. He even 
elicited from Mr. Simpson how many days he spent in jail, and he 
talked about how Mr. Simpson was agreeable to hiring experts in the 
criminal case, and let the chips fall where they may. He didn't go 
one witness, I don't think, without his bringing up this criminal 
trial. And the reason was he wanted this jury to somehow believe 
that the acquittal in the criminal case has some application or 
effect on them. And we need to make this crystal clear. Now, we did 
some of this in voir dire. I wasn't permitted to get involved in 
this area in opening statements. I certainly want to make it very, 
very clear to the jury in closing argument that this is not the 
criminal case, we're dealing with different burdens of proof, and 
that the criminal case has no application whatsoever to this case. 
And many of the jurors were absolutely confused about this. And this 
case is, in some sense, virtually unprecedented in the sense that we 
have this civil case following a criminal acquittal. And I think 
that given the tenor of Mr. Baker's examination of witnesses, and 
the theme that I know we're going to hear in argument, this kind of 
instruction is necessary. It simply states the law. There's nothing 
argumentative about any of this, especially if you remove those 
paragraphs or those sentences that I described. 
THE COURT: You ready to submit it? 
MR. PETROCELLI: Yes. 
MR. BAKER: Just one more thing, Your Honor. For him to say in here 
that there is a material difference in the burden of proof, then we 
have to instruct this jury on what is the difference. I think we 
have to instruct on the issue of the beyond a reasonable doubt 
standard. They can determine for themselves whether or not it's 
materially different, whether it's not materially different. I don't 
think it's appropriate to put before a jury, No. 1. And No. 2, the 
assertion that this case is sui generis is preposterous. This 
happens -- has happened in my career more than once, that you try a 
civil case after a criminal acquittal. 
THE COURT: Not -- 
MR. PETROCELLI: Not with this publicity, as we saw in jury 
selection. 
MR. BAKER: The publicity -- 
THE COURT: Excuse me. I don't need cross argument. If you just state 
your argument to perfect your record, then submit it, I'll rule and 
go on. 
MR. BAKER: Paragraph 4 has plaintiffs received compensation for 
killing Nicole and Ron. What the plaintiffs want you to do is, they 
want to put the imprimatur of the Court in their argument. He can 
argue any of this, but the imprimatur of the Court ought not to be 
put upon it. Submit it. 
THE COURT: Okay. Thank you. The Court is going to strike the second 
paragraph, that is the second paragraph from the top of the 
instruction. I'm striking the number 1 in the following paragraph, 
leaving the rest of the paragraph intact. 
MR. BAKER: Well, Your Honor, just one thing. Ron and Nicole? We 
can't have first names. They've got to put in here at least the 
names of the people. 
MR. GELBLUM: You have the old version. 
THE COURT: They do. 
MR. BAKER: Oh. They never gave us the new version. I'm sorry. 
THE COURT: Okay. I'm striking the entirety of the paragraph that's 
starts with paragraph 2. The next paragraph that has a number 3, I'm 
striking the entirety of that paragraph. The paragraph that starts 
with paragraph 4, I'm striking the number 4. I'll leave the rest of 
it. On paragraph 5, I'm striking number 5. I will not read that. 
MS. BLUESTEIN: Your Honor, if we may have a moment, please. 
THE COURT: Yes. 
MS. BLUESTEIN: Thank you. Peter. 
MR. GELBLUM: Yes, ma'am. 
MS. BLUESTEIN: May we see what you have after the judge has done 
this revision. 
(Mr. Gelblum hands document to the Ms. Bluestein.) 
MS. BLUESTEIN: Thank you. 
MR. LEONARD: Your Honor, we were looking at, I guess, an earlier 
version, so we have to conform it -- we struck the wrong paragraphs 
based on our -- 
THE COURT: Counsel. 
(Clerk handed document to counsel.) 
MR. BAKER: Your Honor, let me reopen for just one thing on this 
paragraph 5 -- 
THE COURT: Yes. 
MR. BAKER: -- what you struck. The last paragraph is simply 
argument: No matter what your verdict is in this case, defendant 
Simpson will not be punished by imprisonment. I mean that already 
says that in the -- basically, when you talk about the double 
jeopardy and -- 
THE COURT: Well, it's the Court's intention to re-enforce that 
point. 
MR. BAKER: Can we go back one second? I apologize. 
THE COURT: Yes. 
MR. BAKER: On the admission -- imply by the observation, would you 
please read the first line of that. They're talking about an 
incident involved in this case, and I think the inference and the 
extent of 2.26 is, for example, when you say you're talking about 
the incident of the criminal -- 
THE COURT: Show it to me. 
(Clerk handed document to counsel.) 
MR. BAKER: See there. The incident involved in this case would go to 
the issue of the murders. 
THE COURT: No, it isn't. 
MR. BAKER: I think that's the way it reads. 
THE COURT: I don't think so. 
MR. BAKER: Relating to the incident. 
THE COURT: An incident. 
MR. BAKER: Read the statement concerning such parties conduct in 
relation to the incident. 
THE COURT: Yeah. Referring to the first, an incident, in the 
sentence. I think that's correct English. 
MR. GELBLUM: You replaced the word "the" with the word "an." 
THE COURT: On the first incident. On the second -- subsequent one, I 
left it "the." 
MR. PETROCELLI: That's the antecedent to the word "the." 
MR. BAKER: What the silence -- I mean it's -- it's confusing 
relative to this case because we're talking about a 1989 incident 
contrasted to a 1994 incident. Okay. I've made my record. 
THE COURT: You've made your record. Are you finished with the other 
one? 
MS. BLUESTEIN: Thank you. 
(Ms. Bluestein handed document back to the Court.) 
THE COURT: 1.00.5; the juror forbidden to make any independent 
investigation. Okay. There's a defendant's version and a plaintiffs' 
version. Anybody want to make their record, make it. 
MR. BAKER: I think ours comes right out of BAJI and ought to be 
given. Theirs tends to try to emphasize relative to the criminal 
case, and with the instruction the Court has just given, or just 
indicated it's going to give, I don't think we ought to do it 
twice. I don't think it's necessary. I think it's argument. I think 
they're getting the Court to do their arguing through the 
instructions if you give it. 
THE COURT: Again, I'm going to give this modified instruction under 
an abundance of caution. This case is peculiar because of the 
circumstances of the two trials and I think it's important that the 
jury be aware of the difference in the law that's involved. 
MR. BAKER: If you're going to do that, Your Honor, I would request 
that you strike the last two sentences, and most definitely the last 
sentence; that is certainly contrary to the law. I mean it's 
contrary to other instructions that we have in this case. 
MR. PETROCELLI: The last sentence? 
MR. GELBLUM: You must not consider any evidence that has not been 
presented in this case. 
MR. BAKER: There is -- point being that it is contrary to -- I think 
it can be implied that it's contrary to BAJI 2. -- 
MR. PETROCELLI: That's argument. That's an argument, Mr. Baker. They 
can't consider -- 
MR. BAKER: This whole thing is argument in my opinion. 
MR. PETROCELLI: They can't consider any evidence not presented in 
this case. That can't be -- 
MR. BAKER: They can consider the failure to present evidence. That's 
why I take issue with it, the last two sentences, and more 
particularly the last sentence. 
MR. PETROCELLI: We repeated that sentence in the jury selection like 
a thousand times. 
THE COURT: Okay. Submit it? 
MR. GELBLUM: Yes. 
MR. BAKER: Sure. 
THE COURT: Okay. I'll give it as is. Okay. Issues in the case. Is 
this a plaintiffs' request. The purpose of this trial is to decide 
the issues raised by the plaintiffs' complaints. Complaints arise 
out of the June 12, 1994, deaths of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald 
Lyle Goldman. In order to arive at a verdict in this case you will 
have to decide several questions. One; The first is whether 
defendant Simpson caused the deaths of Nicole Brown Simpson and 
Ronald Goldman. Two; Depending on how you decide the first question, 
there may be further questions that you will have to decide: A; What 
is the amount that defendant Simpson should be required to pay 
plaintiff Goldman for having caused the death of Ronald Goldman. 
B; What is the amount that defendant Simpson should be required to 
pay plaintiff Rufo for having caused the death of Ronald -- that 
should be Goldman. C; What is the amount that defendant Simpson 
should be required to pay the estate of Ronald Goldman for having 
caused the death of Ronald Goldman. D; What is the amount that 
defendant Simpson should be required to pay the estate of Nicole 
Brown Simpson for having caused the death of Nicole Brown Simpson. 
Okay. Any argument? 
MR. BAKER: Your Honor. That is argument, No. 1. No. 2, the 
information contained herein is supposed to be contained in BAJI 
2.60 and the verdict form, and the way this is written is, in my 
view, terribly argumentative. It is. For example, I don't think that 
-- that we ought to use the California Forms of Jury Instruction. We 
are required, it seems to me, to use BAJI, No. 1. No. 2, if you look 
at how this is worded, it doesn't say if you find; it just says 
depending upon how you decide the first question. And then it gives 
you all of the inferences that they should decide this case in one 
way. Now, I think it would be improper. Again, this is simply 
argument. The BAJI instructions have -- have taken care of such 
issues and what they're to decide from 2.60 through and including 
the verdict form, and I -- Again, I just don't think that the 
Court's imprimatur should be put on this argument in this case. 
MR. GELBLUM: I think it's very neutral. I don't see anything 
argumentative about it at all. It states very simply and 
straightforwardly the claims and the issues to be decided. 
MR. BAKER: In every verdict form it says if you decide. That isn't 
what it said in number 2. Number 2 says just depending on how you 
decide the first question. It doesn't say if you decide in favor of 
Mr. Simpson you need not answer the rest of the questions. It says 
depending upon how you decide. Then it goes into the pejoratives 
that are set forth underneath numeral 2. 
THE COURT: Which pejoratives? 
MR. BAKER: I think what is the amount, that is what they have to 
decide -- they have to decide first, obviously, whether or not they 
find Mr. Simpson responsible for the deaths of Nicole Brown Simpson 
and Ron Goldman. If they --then they have to find the amount that 
Simpson should be required to pay to plaintiff Goldman for having 
caused the death. That isn't the law in this state, never has 
been. The law, as I understand, is to compensate Mr. Goldman for the 
loss of society, care, and comfort of his son if they decide against 
Mr. Simpson, not the amount required to pay. 
MR. PETROCELLI: All you have to do is say what is the amount of 
damages; that takes care of your whole point. 
MR. BAKER: Why don't we follow the BAJI instruction and the law in 
this state? 
MR. PETROCELLI: This clarifies what the issues are in this case. 
It's a very complicated factual scenario over many, many months. We 
have to make sure the jury understands what they're deciding. 
MR. BAKER: The issues in this case are not -- the legal issues in 
this case relative to this are not complex at all. 
MR. PETROCELLI: That's what this explains. 
MR. BAKER: Well, that's both sides of the issue. 
MR. LEONARD: Skillful lawyer. 
THE COURT: Well, it does have some redundancy to it. But in terms of 
framing the issue, I think it could be framed a little more simply. 
MR. BAKER: Can't we stick to 2.06 as we have in every other wrongful 
death case? 
MR. PETROCELLI: Your Honor, how about number 2, if we say if you 
decide in favor of plaintiffs -- as Mr. Baker suggests, if you 
decide in favor of plaintiffs, then you will have to answer the 
following questions, and then add what is the amount of damages, the 
words "of damages" after amount, and that will take care of the 
issue. 
MR. BAKER: It doesn't take care of the issue. 
MR. PETROCELLI: Well, it took care of the ones you presented so far. 
MR. BAKER: No, it doesn't, because the amount of damages for what? 
MR. PETROCELLI: For causing the deaths of Ronald Goldman and Nicole 
Brown Simpson. 
MR. BAKER: It's not for the deaths, it's for the loss of Ronald 
Goldman. You're on the wrong side of the equation. As I understand 
the law in California, it's not punishment for Mr. Simpson causing 
the death, it's compensation for Mr. Goldman's loss, if they decide 
in favor of Mr. Goldman. 
THE COURT: You know, I think it is redundant. I think the 
instructions are more specific in 2.60 and in the damage section, so 
I'll refuse this. Personal representative, plaintiffs requests. 
What's the objection to this? 
MR. BAKER: I think this is redundant to 1.00.3 as we modified it, 
and it's -- it's absolutely wrong besides that. Other than that, 
it's perfect. 
THE COURT: Okay. What's wrong with it? 
MR. BAKER: Well, plaintiff Brown has the same right to bring a 
lawsuit against defendant Simpson that Nicole Brown Simpson would 
have if "he" were alive -- first, it's she -- and is entitled to 
recover any damages that Nicole Brown Simpson would have been 
entitled to recover. In a wrongful death case that's not true, No. 
1. In a battery case, that's not true. I don't think Nicole Brown 
Simpson is suing for battery. You can't, obviously, sue for wrongful 
death if you are alive. It's an improper statement of the law. 
MR. GELBLUM: Ther're only bringing the survival claims. Personal 
representatives, that's exactly -- they survive, they have the same 
right to sue. It goes significantly beyond the other instruction. 
THE COURT: Excuse me. 
MR. GELBLUM: It goes significantly beyond the other instruction in 
terms of 1.03 in explaining what a personal representative is. 
THE COURT: Is there an equivalent BAJI instruction on this one? 
MR. GELBLUM: No, Your Honor. It's from California Jury Instructions. 
I'll look again, but we couldn't find one. 
THE COURT: Okay. I think that's the law but it gets a little 
awkward. 
MR. BAKER: That's the law. 
THE COURT: I'll give it. 
MR. BAKER: Your Honor -- 
THE COURT: Yes? 
MR. BAKER: The form that they're using, of course, is not a 
sanctioned form by our court system. But in any event, if you think 
it's necessary, the last paragraph seems to me -- of this form, 
seems to me to be the one that is less argumentative and less biased 
because it at least mentions that we have a right to defend the 
lawsuit, which they have kind of omitted. 
MR. LEONARD: How did that happen? 
MR. PETROCELLI: We have no objection to that. 
MR. LEONARD: Spill some coffee on the bottom of that or what? 
THE COURT: Okay. 
MR. PETROCELLI: You can add that. Redo it and put it in. 
MR. PETROCELLI: Put in the right to defend? 
THE COURT: Right to defend. 
MR. BAKER: It's now -- Yeah, that's a little better. I think a 
first-year law student wrote it, but -- 
THE COURT: Okay. Goldman's burden of proof. 
MR. BAKER: Where are we, Your Honor? These aren't numbered. 
THE COURT: Yeah, I know. This is Goldman's burden of proof. 
MR. PETROCELLI: That right to defend language was not in our version 
of the instructions, by the way. That's why we left it out. 
THE COURT: It says plaintiff Goldman has the burden of proving by a 
preponderance of the evidence all of the facts necessary to 
establish the following claims asserted in his complaint: 1, his 
claim as an individual against defendant Simpson for wrongful death; 
and 2, his claim against defendant Simpson for battery on behalf of 
Ronald Goldman, as Ronald Goldman's personal representative. 
MR. GELBLUM: Your Honor, backing up on the prior one, that section 
is from the defendant, is the deceased -- the nature of that 
sentence -- 
THE COURT: Well -- well -- 
MR. GELBLUM: This the plaintiffs deceased, this is from the 
defendant deceased. 
MR. BAKER: Well, I want the later. 
MR. LEONARD: He wants it anyway. 
MR. BAKER: I want it anyway. 
THE COURT: All right. You got any objection to Goldman's burden of 
proof? 
MS. BLUESTEIN: Your Honor, we're trying to locate it. 
MR. BAKER: Is that one you just gave me? 
MR. GELBLUM: This one. 
MR. BAKER: Your Honor, I disagree with that. I think the essential 
elements of the case and what they have to prove, rather than the 
titles which are meaningless, should be put in 2.60 because they 
then separate those out and fail to mention what their burden of 
proof is on the individual elements of the claims. I mean the titles 
of the claims are meaningless. 
THE COURT: I don't think they're meaningless. 
MR. GELBLUM: Your Honor, the real purpose of this one like the -- 
THE COURT: I think it frames the case with regards to each of the 
parties. Okay. Wrongful death. Plaintiff seeks to recover damages 
for the losses as a result of Ronald Goldman's death. The essential 
elements of his claim for wrongful death are: 1; defendant Simpson 
wilfully and wrongfully caused Ron Goldman's death; 2; plaintiff 
Goldman has suffered damages as a result of Ronald Goldman's death. 
MR. BAKER: That isn't a proper statement of law. 
THE COURT: Well, what's the proper statement according to you? 
MR. BAKER: Well, No. 2 is that he suffered damages and the amount 
thereof, that's their burden of proof. 
THE COURT: Okay. You would like the amount thereof? 
MR. BAKER: I don't care. 
MR. GELBLUM: Add it at the end of the sentence. 
MR. BAKER: Do whatever you like. 
THE COURT: Okay. Battery. This is 7.50. 
MR. BAKER: The other objection I have, while we're on the record, is 
that that should say that he has the burden of proving by a 
preponderance of the evidence, those elements, because the way they 
have done it, which is in my view inappropriate, is to set it forth 
in two separate instructions, when it's supposed to be set forth 
under BAJI 2.60 in one instruction. They're separating the burden 
from the claim. The burden goes to the elements, it doesn't go to 
the claim. 
MR. GELBLUM: Your Honor, the way that we anticipated it being 
structured, we haven't gotten to -- 
THE COURT: I don't mind repeating the burden, the preponderance of 
the evidence. 
MR. GELBLUM: The way we had it set up, the burden of the 
preponderance of the evidence -- 
THE COURT: I understand. But if the defendant feels they want to 
have preponderance of evidence repeated again, I'll be -- I don't 
have any problem doing that. I'm going to be speaking for only an 
hour, while you gentlemen are going to be speaking for hours and 
hours and hours on this. It's not too much of a burden. Where would 
you like to put that, Mr. Baker? 
MR. BAKER: Well, I'm just objecting to the two being separated, and 
my objection goes to the fact that we ought to have 2.60. Other than 
that, I saieth not. 
THE COURT: Okay. Put in preponderance of the evidence. 
MR. PETROCELLI: Okay. 
MR. GELBLUM: Somewhere. 
MR. PETROCELLI: We'll put it in. 
MR. GELBLUM: I'd suggest -- 
THE COURT: Battery. 
MR. GELBLUM: That's 7.50? 
THE COURT: Yeah. 
THE COURT: What's the modification? 
MR. GELBLUM: I'm trying to find it. I think it's simply putting in 
the names in the introductory paragraph, that it's Ronald 
Goldman's personal representative that is seeking -- I think it's 
just the names of the parties. 
THE COURT: Okay. Give it. You know, with regards to -- 
MR. BAKER: Your Honor. 
THE COURT: Just a minute. 
MR. BAKER: I'm sorry. 
THE COURT: With regards to the instruction on the wrongful death 
part 4, where we're talking about the preponderance of the evidence 
-- 
MR. GELBLUM: Yes. 
THE COURT: -- rather than putting it there, put the definition of 
preponderance of the evidence in the instruction which says 
Goldman's burden of proof. Put the definition of preponderance of 
the evidence there. 
MR. GELBLUM: The first sentence of that one has the phrase, 
preponderance, so you want to add the definition at the bottom 
their? 
THE COURT: Yes. Same with Rufo burden of proof. If you find 
preponderance of evidence, I'll give that. On Rufo there's two of 
them that seem partially redundant. 
MR. BREWER: Well, they mirror the Goldman instructions. What I would 
propose is really just consolidate, in light of Mr. Baker's 
comments, just stating that plaintiff Sharon Rufo has the burden 
of proving by a preponderance of the evidence all of the following, 
colon. Then on the other instruction where it has the two items that 
-- defendant Orenthal James Simpson wilfully and wrongfully caused 
Ronald Goldman's death is number 1, and then number 2, plaintiff 
Sharon Rufo suffered damages as a result of -- upon Ronald Goldman's 
death and the amount thereof. That consolidates both those 
instructions. 
THE COURT: Consolidate these two. Okay. This is plaintiff Louis 
Brown's personal representative, same as -- 
MR. BAKER: On battery, Your Honor, are you going to give that as 
they indicated? 
THE COURT: Excuse me? 
MR. BAKER: Did we get back past the one on battery, BAJI 7.50? 
THE COURT: As to -- 
MR. BAKER: Both Goldman and Brown. 
THE COURT: We got -- we did it as to Goldman. We haven't gotten to 
Brown yet. 
MR. BAKER: I believe under Garcia versus Superior Court that battery 
claims do not include damages for pain and suffering, disfigurement. 
I think you have to put in there conduct caused the property damage. 
MR. GELBLUM: Straight from BAJI, Your Honor. 
MR. BAKER: I know, but this -- the BAJI -- the BAJI is for battery 
when the plaintiff is a living human being. 
MR. GELBLUM: 7.50 lays out the elements. It doesn't lay out the 
recoverable damages. That would be a separate instruction. 
THE COURT: Okay. As to personal representative instruction, the same 
as the Goldman, I will give that battery as to Brown as to the 
elements, give that. Brown's burden of proof incorporate the 
preponderance of the evidence. Okay. This is plaintiffs' proposed 
instruction Simpson burden of proof: That a particular person 
planted a particular item of evidence, that particular items of 
evidence were collected, tested and were contaminated, that the 
photographs were altered. 
MR. BAKER: What was the last part of that? 
THE COURT: Particular photographs were altered. You got that? 
MR. BAKER: Your Honor, I don't think that we have, obviously, any 
burden of proof in this case and -- 
THE COURT: Okay. I think that -- let's address the 664 issue, and 
that seems to be -- 
MR. BAKER: There's the -- 
THE COURT: Yeah. Go ahead. 
MR. LEONARD: Do you have another copy? 
MR. GELBLUM: Of this instruction. The 664 reduction instruction? 
MR. KELLY: Go ahead. 
MR. GELBLUM: That's not it. 
MR. KELLY: That's not it. 
MR. BAKER: I thought -- 
MR. PETROCELLI: We were waiting for you, Mr. Baker. 
MR. KELLY: The burden's on you. 
MR. BAKER: I think we gave the Court the cases, and that if there is 
a challenge for the very foundation of evidence, shifted the burden 
and we challenge the evidence and that shifts the burden directly 
back to the plaintiffs, but I think this is an overreaching of the 
plaintiffs relative to Evidence Code Section 664 because there's no 
specific specifications or regulations they're talking about and 
they haven't proved any specifications or regulations. As a matter 
of fact, what we proved is SID didn't even have a manual, much less 
that they complied with any regulations or specifications, so I 
really don't think under the cases that we've cited to you earlier 
today and -- that -- that they cannot pursue 664 of the Evidence 
Code and shift -- attempt to shift the burden to us. You wouldn't 
let us talk about standards. When we attempted to get into 
standards with members of the LAPD before this jury, you precluded 
us from getting into standards by sustaining their objections. And 
now, in our view, certainly not have it both ways, that now they're 
talking about some ambiguous standards that I don't know what they 
are and saying those standards and specifications require us to 
prove particular items of evidence and shift the burden to us when 
we have put on evidence of what we believe the circumstantial case 
that the jury can conclude that there was tampering, that there was 
planting, that there was contamination. And I think that's -- 
THE COURT: That really didn't go to the issue of the defense burden 
of proof as such that -- you're not connecting those two arguments. 
MR. BAKER: Well -- 
THE COURT: You accept the fact that you have the burden of proving 
that the evidence was planted, that it was contaminated and that 
photographs were altered? 
MR. BAKER: No. I don't accept that at all. I don't accept that under 
the law -- 
THE COURT: Tell me -- 
MR. BAKER: -- of wrongful death, I have the burden of proving 
anything. I have a burden of going forward to put evidence on to say 
that their evidence isn't worthy of belief, and that's what we 
have done. I don't have the burden of proving anything in this case. 
They have the burden of proving everything. And to pick out 
particular pieces of evidence and say you have the burden of proving 
that I believe is a fallacy. I have a burden of putting on a case to 
challenge the authenticity and veracity of their case. We think 
we've done that. It's now up to the jury to decide. I certainly 
don't have a burden of proving by any preponderance anything in this 
case. 
THE COURT: Well, that's your defense, isn't it? That it was altered, 
that it was contaminated, that it was planted? 
MR. BAKER: That's not an affirmative defense. It's a defense, and 
we're entitled -- our obvious defense is he didn't do it, and this 
is -- the reason they have that evidence is because they planted it, 
they contaminated it and they altered it, and their evidence is not 
worthy of belief. 
THE COURT: What's your response to that? 
MR. PETROCELLI: He's entitled to deny that he performed -- that his 
client committed these murders, but by going one step beyond, 
putting his client on the stand and saying he didn't do it, he has 
attempted to convince this jury of -- affirmatively of what happened 
and why that evidence is there. And he has accused the Los Angeles 
Police Department and others of deliberately putting it there to 
frame Mr. Simpson. He has contended they performed certain 
procedures in their handling of the evidence to contaminate it and 
cause the evidence to misidentify Mr. Simpson. And he has contended 
that pictures, true and correct on their face, which we have fully 
authenticated are, in fact, fabrications. He has the burden of 
proving those things. We don't have to disprove alteration of a 
photograph. We don't have to disprove or negate planting of 
evidence. We don't have to disprove or negate contamination. And we 
go right to the Evidence Code, 664, which talks about presumptions 
affecting the burden of proof when you're saying -- when you're 
dealing with the actions of officials, they're presumed to have been 
performed in regularly, and if you want to contend otherwise, you 
have to present evidence rebutting that presumption. They're not 
conclusive presumptions. They're rebuttable presumptions. One he 
presents evidence meeting and beating the presumption, the 
presumption vanishes. That's right in 664, 660, and 6604 I mean 
there's no -- our case in chief, Your Honor, doesn't include 
negating planting of evidence. Our case in chief doesn't require us 
to prove some alteration that we don't contend ever occurred with 
regards to photographs. We produced the evidence. We made a prima 
facie showing that the evidence is valid and is what it purports to 
be, and he came back and not only denied these things but has 
offered alternative theories and explanations and claims as to why 
it is there. It's just like if I prove up the contract and the other 
side says that contract was induced by fraud, he has to prove that 
up, that's his burden, just like these photographs. Yes, the 
photographs are there, but they were fabricated by some grand 
conspiracy out of Buffalo, New York, and here are the facts and 
here's the evidence why that is so. That's his burden. I don't have 
to disprove that. I mean -- 
THE COURT: Okay. 
MR. BAKER: Your Honor, just one second. First of all, Mr. 
Petrocelli's argument is inappropriate, because what he's talking 
about is he puts on evidence and I can negate that evidence, it's 
not an affirmative defense. When he talked about a contract, which 
he's more familiar with, and the inducement by fraud, that's an 
affirmative defense which the defendant carries the burden of, and 
that's by law, and you have to raise that, as you're well aware, in 
the answer. 
THE COURT: I agree with you. 
MR. BAKER: Well, I'll be quiet. 
THE COURT: But on the other hand, I think the cases you cited and 
the plaintiffs cited does set the -- the minuet, if you will, of 664 
the burden each of the parties with respect to a 664 type 
presumption. 
MR. BAKER: But the Davenport case is the only case I saw, and maybe 
I missed it, that sets forth what 664 goes to. In other words, 66 -- 
what the plaintiffs' theory would have you believe is that 664 says 
that every public official is presumed to comply with and do their 
jobs properly. Okay. That's what Davenport says, is that what is 
actually presumed under Evidence Code 664 is compliance with 
statutory and regulatory standards. And that's what we're talking 
about, statutory and regulatory standards, and there is none 
relative to the issue we're talking about here. And so I don't think 
664, to start with, is applicable, number one, but secondarily, 
we've put evidence before this court -- 
MR. PETROCELLI: 664 says that officials are presumed to perform 
their regular duties. He contended officials committed felonies, 
committed crimes. That's not part of their official duties. They're 
presumed to have performed their jobs. If he's saying they committed 
crimes by framing a man for double murder by planting evidence, he's 
got to overcome that presumption. That's not our burden. He can't 
get around 664, Your Honor. That's his basic problem. He can't. No 
matter what the duties of the officials of SID and LAPD are, they do 
not include, you know, specifications that they do not frame people 
for double murder. Okay. Doesn't have to be written down in some 
piece of paper that thou shalt not frame an innocent man for a 
double murder, thou shalt not plant evidence. That is not what this 
means. If you want to prove that they affirmatively broke the law 
and committed felonies and altered photographs and all these other 
things, you have to rebut the presumption that they regularly 
performed their duties and you're permitted to rebut that 
presumption by admitting evidence and overcoming the presumption 
affecting the burden of proof under 606 
(sic). 
MR. BAKER: Well, in response to that, first of all, I don't agree 
under the case interpretation -- that's one of the broader sentences 
I've seen in an Evidence Code, but in any event, the cases 
interpreting that don't give it the broad construction that Mr. 
Petrocelli would have this Court believe. And, in fact, the 
Davenport case goes on to say that if, in fact, there is 
introduction of evidence that the official standards were in any 
respect not observed, the burden shifts to prove that the test was 
reliable, okay, so that the burden shifts back instantly. So in 
either -- I don't think it's applicable to start with, but if it is, 
in fact, applicable, then we have put on evidence of contamination, 
we put on evidence of planting, we put on evidence that would shift 
the burden back to them. But I don't think that's the issue. I just 
don't think it is applicable in this case, anything they fail to 
prove, that there is any statutory or regulatory standards. He wants 
to start quoting the ten commandments. I can tell you one thing, if 
the ten commandments were all the law that existed, we wouldn't have 
as huge a library as we do. 
MR. LEONARD: Your Honor, can I make one point that I think is 
obvious? Unless I missed something, I never heard that Harry Scull 
or Flammer were officials of any kind, or MacElroy, their agent. 
MR. PETROCELLI: Doesn't apply. 664 doesn't apply to Scull photos. 
MR. GELBLUM: Or Flammer. 
MR. PETROCELLI: Or Flammer. It applies to the conduct of all the 
officials that you're contending did things irregularly. 
MR. BAKER: We put on evidence of -- of misrepresentations to this 
jury by numerous officials. That seems to me the -- 
MR. PETROCELLI: It can't be the law. 
THE COURT: Submitted? 
MR. PETROCELLI: We'll submit. 
MR. BAKER: Submit. 
THE COURT: All right. The plaintiffs' requested instruction re 
Simpson burden of proof, I'm going to deny that, I don't think there 
is an affirmative defense with regards to those three items as such. 
With regards to presumption of official duty, I'll give that. 
MR. BAKER: You're going to give that, Your Honor? 
THE COURT: Yeah. 
MR. BAKER: But that's -- 
THE COURT: Well, you made the argument and, you know, I think your 
argument is that you did rebut the evidence, and therefore the 
presumption should apply -- should not apply. So the instruction, I 
think, meets your needs as well. 
MR. BAKER: But there's nothing in this instruction that they 
proposed that shifts the burden back to them. At least I haven't 
seen it. Maybe I missed it. I'll read it again. 
MR. PETROCELLI: Let me see. 
MR. BAKER: I mean -- 
THE COURT: I agree. It is weighted. If you want to rewrite it and 
offer a neutral language instruction, I'll be happy to entertain it. 
MS. BLUESTEIN: Your Honor, if I may Wilson versus Zolin 9 Cal.Ap. 
1104. 
THE COURT: I read it. 
MS. BLUESTEIN: It says once the burden shifts back -- once the 
defense has met the burden, it shifts back, then the DMV in this 
case no longer has the benefit of Evidence Code 664, it seems to be 
gone. Then -- 
MR. PETROCELLI: That's true, once it's rebutted. 
MS. BLUESTEIN: Then you don't get an instruction on it. 
THE COURT: Why don't you prepare one. 
MR. BAKER: Okay. 
MR. PETROCELLI: Once the presumption is rebutted. 
MR. BAKER: Wheeler versus DMV a March '94 case. 
THE COURT: Okay. 
MR. BAKER: That's at 34 Cal.Ap. 4th at 235. 
THE COURT: Okay. I'm contemplating giving the presumption and a 
burden of proof regarding alleged planting and alleged contamination 
instructions. I would like to give it in a more neutral tone and 
more reflective of Wilson versus Zolin and those cases, and so I'll 
give it -- I'll hear -- I'll give defense an opportunity to draw it 
up. 
MR. BAKER: I'm not -- 
THE COURT: If you don't want to -- 
MR. BAKER: No, I'm not clear -- 
THE COURT: -- you don't have to. 
MR. BAKER: I want to get some clarification. You're going to give 
the burden of proof but you're going to give it on particular items, 
that is planting and contamination? 
THE COURT: I'm not going to give the burden of proof instruction 
because I'm satisfied you don't have an affirmative defense issue 
here. 
MR. BAKER: Okay. 
MR. LEONARD: Okay. 
THE COURT: I am satisfied that the plaintiff can make a plausible 
argument on the presumptive 664 theory of shifting the burden. 
That's a lot different from an affirmative defense instruction the 
way I see it, unless you understand the law differently, so what I 
am suggesting is that the defense might want to make an offer of an 
instruction that is more reflective of their view of what those 
cases hold. 
MR. BAKER: Okay. 
THE COURT: Okay. 
MR. BAKER: We'll do that. 
MR. GELBLUM: So I'm clear, I just want to make sure I know which 
ones -- we have some titles here on the list. I don't know what 
you're reading off of. 
THE COURT: Presumption that official duty has been regularly 
performed, burden of proof regarding alleged planting, burden of 
proof -- 
MR. GELBLUM: Got it. 
THE COURT: -- regarding alleged contamination. 
MR. GELBLUM: Total of four pages? 
THE COURT: Yeah. 
MR. BAKER: I'll submit an alternative, Your Honor, of course without 
waiving our objection that this should not be included as an 
instruction at all. In other words -- 
THE COURT: That's all or nothing. 
MR. BAKER: Huh? 
THE COURT: You want to go all or nothing? 
MR. BAKER: No, I'm taking the Court's suggestion -- 
THE COURT: Yeah. 
MR. BAKER: -- that says I will type up an alternative, without 
waiving my objection. 
THE COURT: Yes. 
MR. BAKER: -- That this should not be included at all. That's all 
I'm saying. 
THE COURT: Fine. Okay. I thought maybe you were -- 
MR. BAKER: No. 
MR. PETROCELLI: It's not an implied admission, Mr. Baker. 
THE COURT: Okay. Okay. Then there are measure of damages death of 
adult child, Goldman and Rufo. What are the objections on this? 
MR. BAKER: Mike, I don't have the instruction. 
MR. BREWER: It's the same. 
MR. GELBLUM: 14.50 and 52, Your Honor. 
THE COURT: Yes. 
MR. BAKER: Your Honor, I think that we should do it as per BAJI 
14.50, 14.52 which they have modified in determining that, which is 
the second paragraph to 14.52, it's -- it is -- it relates to an 
unemancipated child, and they have combined the two of -- 1450 and 
1452, and I think it is clear that these cases are defined under 
14.50. I think -- 
THE COURT: Tell me what part you are objecting to. 
MR. BAKER: If you look at 1450. 
THE COURT: I'm looking. 
MR. BAKER: Okay. There is no financial support. So you strike 
paragraph 3. Okay. Then, what they have done, in determining -- in 
striking paragraph 3 at 1450, is they put in paragraph 2 -- part of 
paragraph 2 of 1452, and they have essentially requested this jury 
to give them a double recovery because they say in determining 
that loss, the jury finds for Goldman, they want to award reasonable 
compensation for the loss, and will suffer in the future with 
reasonable certainty by being deprived of his love, companionship, 
comfort, and that is the loss, it's not -- 
MR. GELBLUM: That's what it says in determining that loss, that's 
what it says. 
MR. BAKER: Your Honor, I don't know why we don't stick with measure 
of damages, measure of an adult, 14.50. That's what the law is, 
that's what's proven to be and that's what's accepted by the 
committee and the courts of this state. Why do we want to alter 
everything and add this language because they think it is advisable 
-- beneficial to them? That isn't the law. 
THE COURT: I'm looking at 14.50. What is it that they put in that 
you don't like? 
MR. BAKER: In determining that loss you may award reasonable 
compensation for the loss he has suffered. Okay. 
THE COURT: Okay. That's right there in 14.50, isn't it? 
MR. BAKER: 14.50 sets out exactly with specificity the loss suffered 
and then sets forth the elements. And that's what it seems to me we 
ought to stay with. I mean -- 
THE COURT: Wait a minute. 
MR. BAKER: Paragraph 2 should read, under the acceptable jury 
instruction, by the death of Ronald Goldman, instead of his child. 
The next -- 
THE COURT: Wait a minute. 
MR. PETROCELLI: I don't understand at all Mr. Baker's argument, 
other than he wants the word child that -- their child, or words to 
that effect, replaced by Ronald Goldman. 
MR. BAKER: Let me -- 
MR. PETROCELLI: The same language appears in both 14.50 and 1452. 
MR. BAKER: It doesn't appear. 
MR. PETROCELLI: Yes, it does. What are the differences? 
MR. BAKER: For example, where they said in paragraph 3, line 3, "by 
being deprived of Ronald Goldman's love, companionship, comfort and 
affection." 
THE COURT: Yeah. 
MR. BAKER: That is not what the jury instruction is supposed to say. 
It measures in -- in kind of punitive nature they say on the last 
page they talk about, incur funeral services in Ron Goldman's memory 
and for the disposition of his body. Your Honor, this is -- 
MR. GELBLUM: That's a stipulated amount anyway. 
MR. BAKER: That stipulated amount isn't what we're talking about. 
MR. BAKER: The pejoratives you put in the jury instruction -- 
MR. PETROCELLI: These are not pejoratives. 
MR. BAKER: Their argument. That's why we have a BAJI committee. 
MR. PETROCELLI: The same words appear in both sections. 
MR. GELBLUM: The memory of disposition are right in 14.50. 
MR. BAKER: Whatever you like. I made my record. 
THE COURT: Okay. On that paragraph the Court will strike services 
after -- services after the word funeral, and then after Ronald 
Goldman, strike parenthe -- hyphen -- that's not a hyphen. What do 
you call that? 
MR. GELBLUM: Apostrophe. 
MR. PETROCELLI: Apostrophe. 
THE COURT: Apostrophe -- after apostrophe s, striking to -- that to 
the end of the sentence. 
MR. GELBLUM: So, for the funeral of Ronald Goldman. 
THE COURT: Yeah. 
MR. BAKER: Your Honor, you know, I -- again, it's laid out in what 
they're to determine, and it is highlighted what they're not to 
determine in 14.50. So they put it in a paragraph to try to hide 
or minimize what they're not to consider. And I just object to not 
using the exact form of 14.50; and there's a reason for it; and it's 
to highlight that they're not to consider pain and suffering, grief 
or sorrow, or the heirs poverty, the wealth of any heir. It's 
highlighted they're not to consider that, because that's the law of 
this state, that -- top paragraph of -- and -- and it shouldn't say 
Ron Goldman's death or pain or suffering by Ron Goldman. It should 
be in the form of -- of BAJI. And as this Court well knows, well -- 
THE COURT: Where's the pain and suffering by Ron Goldman? 
MR. BAKER: Well, it's on what they gave me. It says: In determining 
the loss to plaintiff Goldman, you're not to consider any pain and 
suffering that he suffered by reason of Ron Goldman's death, or pain 
and suffering by Ron Goldman by his death, or Plaintiff Goldman's 
wealth or poverty. That's not supposed to be in these instructions. 
And when we start to bastardize these instructions as -- as they've 
done, we run into trouble. That's what we're in, because now we have 
to rewrite the -- 
MR. PETROCELLI: The instruction has the word "heir," and I think 
we're entitled to substitute the name of the decedent in lieu of the 
word "heir." 
MR. BAKER: If that were true, there'd be a bracket and a blank spot 
for the name of the decedent. It isn't there. If these things are 
gone over in great detail, and for them to -- to attempt to marry 
14.50, when obviously both of the victims of these crimes were 
adults, to marry the death of an adult with the death of a child 
instruction, is, I think, erroneous; and I think it's error. And 
that's what they attempted to do. 
THE COURT: I'll hear from the plaintiff as to why the Court should 
allow 14.52 language to be interpreted with 14.50. 
MR. PETROCELLI: Well, going with 14.50 means a lot to Mr. Baker. 
We're going to accede. 
MR. BAKER: Just have to be the law. 
MR. PETROCELLI: We do want to be able to put our client's name in 
lieu of the word "heir." 
THE COURT: You may put in the client's name. 
MR. PETROCELLI: Thank you, Your Honor. 
THE COURT: So that's something I'm not going to include in this 
pile. 
MR. GELBLUM: I got it. 
THE COURT: You redo it, and you redo it. Okay. Defense requested 
16.81, punitive damages bifurcated. It's not filled out. 
MR. BAKER: We'll take care of that. 
THE COURT: That was in the disagreed pile. 
MR. GELBLUM: That was the verdict form issue. 
THE COURT: Huh? 
MR. GELBLUM: That's part of the verdict form issue. We don't have a 
problem. 
THE COURT: You going to meet and confer over that one? 
MR. PETROCELLI: Yeah, over the weekend. 
MR. BAKER: First hole? 
(Laughter.) 
THE COURT: Okay. And then the two remaining are the 2.60 and the 
2.62 that the defense proffered. I think we included the clear and 
convincing evidence definition in the other instructions. 
MR. GELBLUM: Right. 
THE COURT: Burden of proof. I think we've already discussed that. 
MR. GELBLUM: Right. 
THE COURT: Okay. Then, other than that, you're going to be 
submitting the additional instructions that we discussed -- 
MR. PETROCELLI: I have a couple of matters. 
THE COURT: -- and the verdict form? 
MR. GELBLUM: I had one more on my list I didn't cross off. I'm 
trying to find it. 
THE COURT: What's that? 
MR. GELBLUM: The 14.00. Oh, we withdrew that one. Right. Okay. 
MR. PETROCELLI: I want to take up some matters, if it please the 
Court. 
THE COURT: It doesn't, but go ahead. 
(Laughter.) 
MR. PETROCELLI: Okay. I had a feeling you were going to say that. 
Plaintiff Goldman is going to, in order to correct and conform the 
pleadings in this case, and for the record, withdraw certain 
allegations of the first amended complaint. And I'd like, for the 
record, state what those are. On page 4, paragraph 15, we withdraw 
the words "negligently" on line 12, and "carelessly" on line 13, and 
"negligently" on line 15. We withdraw paragraph 16 in its entirety. 
We withdraw the words "negligently" on line 24 of page 7, 
"carelessly" on line 25, and "negligently" on line 27. We withdraw 
all of paragraph 30 on page 8. Our theory of the case is that 
these deaths were caused willfully and maliciously. And for that 
reason, we would like to conform the pleadings, Your Honor. 
MR. BAKER: Are they dismissing the negligence claim? Is that what 
they're doing? 
MR. PETROCELLI: We're dismissing all allegations of negligence. 
There isn't a separate cause of action named negligence, nor do we 
have any negligence jury instruction. 
MR. BAKER: Well, then, okay. 
THE COURT: Okay. 
MR. PETROCELLI: Also, Your Honor, we need to revisit the issue of 
whether or not -- whether the defense will be able to argue planting 
of particular items of evidence. Your Honor issued orders at the 
beginning of the trial that they were precluded from arguing that 
certain items of evidence were planted, unless they were to produce 
some additional evidence in the course of the trial. The Court's 
rulings, back on October 11, 1996, were that, based on all the 
discovery elicited, and based on papers filed for and against the 
motions for preclusion, the defense could not contend that the blood 
at Bundy, the knit cap at Bundy, and the glove at Bundy were 
planted, and could not contend that the Rockingham blood was 
planted. And in the course of this trial, there has been zero 
evidence in addition to, or other than what was contained in the 
interrogatory answers, that these items were planted. None. They 
have never identified a person -- they have never identified anybody 
who remotely did anything such as that. And I don't think that they 
ought to be able to argue something to the jury where there is 
absolutely no evidence. This is not a reasonable doubt case; this is 
a civil case. They have to have a basis for putting forth any issue 
in front of the jury, and they have no issue; they have no evidence 
that the blood was planted. They concede the results. They've never 
said anybody put it there at Bundy or at Rockingham or in the 
Bronco. They never said any of that. They never produced a witness 
to that effect. The Court permitted the defense to contend in 
opening statement that the Rockingham glove was planted, though you 
said it was a close call, and you would wait to see what developed 
in the course of the trial, Your Honor. At no time in the course of 
this trial did the defense ever put on any evidence that there was 
ever a second glove at Bundy to plant at Rockingham. They put on no 
evidence at all that anybody -- from which anybody could 
reasonably infer that a person or persons planted that glove. Nor 
did they identify anybody, Your Honor. And under People versus 
Kaurish, as the Court cited in the earlier rulings they have an 
obligation to provide some direct or circumstantial evidence linking 
a person or persons to these wrongful acts. I don't think that we 
should let this jury engage in wide-eyed, speculative theories. When 
they're deliberating, Your Honor, they ought to be confined to the 
evidence. There is no evidence in this case that there was a second 
glove at Bundy to plant at Rockingham. They can't say it was planted 
just because it was there, which is all they're saying. They have to 
have more than that. And so I would ask that the Court retain its 
prior prohibitions made on October 11, and that they and the Court 
would augment that ruling by prohibiting the defense from arguing 
that the Rockingham glove was planted. 
MR. BAKER: Your Honor, that's pretty interesting in that they have 
not produced one bit of evidence relative to motive and yet they're 
telling this jury that there is a motive, and the point is, I 
suppose, that we have produced evidence that the hat was underneath 
the fence. There was no dirt on it, it couldn't have got there by 
itself. We have produced evidence relative to the Bundy glove. Mr. 
Fung got up and said, under oath, in this courtroom, that he isn't 
even sure that's the glove that he picked up at Bundy. They got him 
to recant for whatever value that is. They can argue it. We talked 
about the Rockingham glove, the fact that it's back there. There's 
no blood around it, there's no insect activity, it's still wet, it's 
still tacky. If he thinks, that we ought to have somebody come in 
this court room and say, "I did it," that's not what argument is all 
about. Argument is to argue reasonable inferences from the evidence 
that's in this courtroom and we're not going to have anybody to come 
in here and say that they planted the glove. Because nobody would 
ever be crazy enough to do that and Kaurish, he is taking wild 
liberties with Kaurish. Kaurish doesn't say that you can't argue 
from the evidence that's in the courtroom, that this evidence was 
planted, contaminated or whatever. It said that they didn't have 
adequate evidence to say that a fellow by the name of, what was it, 
Jay-Jay Sheffner was the murderer instead of Mr. Kaurish. That's -- 
you've always been able to argue what from reasonable inferences 
that can be drawn from the evidence and their case is nothing more 
than a circumstantial case. And they're going to be arguing 
inferences from blood. They're going to be arguing inferences from 
whatever they think their best evidence is, pictures, whatever. That 
there's an inference from September of '93 that he had the same -- 
came home on June 12, changed into $300 shoes and went over to 
Bundy, they're going to argue that, and that's an inference that the 
jury can accept or reject and the jury can accept or reject that the 
hat was planted because of its location and didn't have any dirt on 
it. And Dr. Warner Spitz was trying to kick in the air or something, 
saying how it would get over there. They can -- we can argue that. I 
think that's a reasonable inference. We can argue, for example, that 
the gloves were planted. He says that these gloves are so tight that 
they're made skin tight; that they were skin tight, that's why they 
didn't fit Mr. Simpson when he tried them on at the criminal trial. 
We've seen the videotape and all of the sudden they fall off at 
Bundy and the other one falls off at Rockingham. I think those 
arguments are nowhere. We're entitled to argue the reasonable 
inferences from the way this evidence was found, from the way that 
this evidence was -- the location of the evidence and more 
importantly, I suppose, the way the witnesses have testified in 
this case. That the people who collected it, the people who were in 
charge of this crime-scene investigation in our mind are not to be 
believed. And under the BAJI instruction on willful 
misrepresentation of the truth, I think it's 2.25, we're entitled to 
argue that they can disregard all -- everything those witnesses 
said. And so I think that we're entitled to argue our case in its 
entirety. 
THE COURT: Mr. Leonard was waving his arm around. Were you going to 
say something? 
MR. LEONARD: No, Your Honor, I was -- Nervous habit. 
MR. PETROCELLI: He hasn't said anything at all about the Rockingham 
blood and the Bundy blood in his interrogatory answers, he conceded 
that there is no evidence that anyone placed those blood drops there 
or planted those blood drops there and that he would not be making 
that contention at this trial. 
MR. BAKER: I made -- obviously, we've talked about 47, which is a 
Bundy blood drop that they're switched and that -- 
MR. P. BAKER: We're talking about how the wet transfers on the 
bindles on items 47 through 52 when Mazzola testifies that they were 
dry. We talked about how she initialed them and they're not 
initialed on the Bundy blood drops. We're talking about the transfer 
of the swatches from 47 -- 42 on Rockingham. We talked about the 
smear if that happened, how could that happen that Parks, Kato and 
Simpson go back walking around the foyer. 
THE COURT: I don't know where you're directing your argument. 
MR. P. BAKER: To what Mr. Petrocelli said on the record. I wanted to 
address that. 
THE COURT: About? 
MR. P. BAKER: The Rockingham drops and the Bundy drops. 
MR. PETROCELLI: Now I'm even more baffled because their prior 
position in response to our motions for preclusion were that they 
were not contending that those drops at Bundy or at Rockingham were 
planted by anyone. 
MR. P. BAKER: We're saying that the Rockingham or the Bundy drops, 
the swatches were -- they go from being initialed and dry, to wet 
and not initialed. 
MR. BAKER: We're saying to the jury distrust every bit of evidence 
in this case because if you can't trust the messenger, you can't 
trust the message. That's what our argument is in this case. We're 
entitled to give that argument. 
MR. P. BAKER: In this case, they're suing us for money. We want to 
give the defense and let the jury decide. It goes to weight. They 
have the decision, if they want the money, we want the decision to 
be allowed by the jury. 
THE COURT: Anything else? 
MR. PETROCELLI: No, Your Honor. You have to have some factual basis. 
I want to argue a lot of things, Your Honor, but that's not the law, 
what your desire is, it's what the evidence is and now we've had a 
lengthy trial and they have struck out in trying to prove any of 
these -- any of these things, Your Honor. 
MR. BAKER: I know you told the media that, now it's time to let the 
jury make the decision. 
THE COURT: Mr. Baker, to me, don't argue to him. 
MR. PETROCELLI: I'm not making a decision here. 
THE COURT: Don't argue to him, argue to me. 
(Indicating to Mr. Petrocelli) 
(Laughter.) 
MR. BAKER: We have wide latitude in final argument, the Court is 
well aware of that. 
THE COURT: Everybody finished? 
MR. BAKER: Yes. 
THE COURT: All right. I'm not the jury and I don't intend to make a 
determination as to the -- The significance or lack, thereof. The 
various pieces of evidence that has been alluded to. I only will 
rule that based upon the evidence that we have received in this 
trial, I will permit the defense to argue planting evidence. 
MR. BAKER: Thank you, Your Honor. 
MR. GELBLUM: Your Honor, one more thing. 
THE COURT: Yeah. 
MR. GELBLUM: We made a motion which you granted before the trial 
started, compelling the defendant to produce various documents 
including updated financial information. We never got it. We'd like 
it through December 31, would be a convenient time. We'd like it on 
Monday or Tuesday. 
MR. BAKER: I can't make any representations. I'm not an accountant. 
I don't know what information is being provided. 
MR. GELBLUM: Your Honor, you made an order four months ago for them 
to produce it and they've never given it to us. We may have a 
punitive damages case to put on week after next. 
THE COURT: Let me talk to counsel in chambers. 
THE CLERK: Can we put something on the record real quick? Please. 
THE COURT: All right. 
THE CLERK: Thank you. I think that defendant -- plaintiffs' 
withdrawing exhibits 2287, 2288 and 2289, each previously marked for 
I.D. only. Steve took them this morning. They were just stipulated 
from Phil. 
(The instrument herein referred to as Plaintiffs'Exhibit 2287 was 
withdrawn.) 
(The instrument herein referred to as Plaintiffs'Exhibit 2288 was 
withdrawn.) 
(The instrument herein referred to as Plaintiffs'Exhibit 2289 was 
withdrawn.) 
MR. BAKER: What are they? 
THE CLERK: They're large boards. 
MR. GELBLUM: The large ones of the Scull photos. 
THE CLERK: Defendants have stipulated, from Phil Baker, they're -- 
defendants may withdraw 2359, 2360, 2365, 2366, 2368, 2369, all to 
be returned on Tuesday. Phil Baker has requested to withdraw exhibit 
2040. The correct exhibit was already received in evidence. 
(The instrument herein referred to as Defendant's Exhibit No. 2359 
was withdrawn.) 
(The instrument herein referred to as Defendant's Exhibit No. 2360 
was withdrawn.) 
(The instrument herein referred to as Defendant's Exhibit No. 2365 
was withdrawn.) 
(The instrument herein referred to as Defendant's Exhibit 2366 was 
withdrawn.) 
(The instrument herein referred to as Defendant's Exhibit No. 2368 
was withdrawn.) 
(The instrument herein referred to as Defendant's Exhibit No. 2369 
was withdrawn.) 
(The instrument herein referred to as Defendant's Exhibit No. 2040 
was withdrawn.) 
MR. P. BAKER: And the defense. 
THE CLERK: Defense objects to exhibit 1973, which is up here. 
MR. P. BAKER: The basis for the objection is that that was an 
objection made during the testimony of Dr. Spitz regarding other 
photographs not relevant to the scene. It was a stain and 
subsequently moved in with the litany of exhibits. 
THE COURT: Excluded. 
(The instrument herein referred to as Plaintiffs'Exhibit 1973 was 
withdrawn.) 
(At 4:15 P.M. an adjournment was taken until Tuesday, January 21, 1997 at 8:30 A.M.) 
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