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Advertisement | O.J. Simpson's Vegas MisadventureMajor Events In The Notorious Football Legend's Armed Robbery, Kidnap Case
Aug. 21, 2007 Memorabilia dealer Thomas Riccio tells FBI agents that Simpson wants to televise a confrontation with a collector he believes is peddling stolen Simpson memorabilia.
(Photo: Getty)
Sept. 13, 2007 Simpson contacts former golf buddies, Clarence Stewart, of North Las Vegas, and Walter Alexander, of Mesa, Ariz., who also is in Las Vegas for the wedding. They discuss a plan to take sports memorabilia from dealers Alfred Beardsley and Bruce Fromong.
About 7:30 p.m., police say, the three men and three others meet Riccio, rush into a hotel room at the Palace Station casino and seize items at gunpoint from Beardsley and Fromong. Beardsley and Fromong report incident as armed robbery. Simpson is questioned at Palms hotel. (Photo: Getty)
Sept. 16, 2007 Simpson is arrested at The Palms, questioned by police and booked into the Clark County jail on felony armed robbery, assault and conspiracy charges. A judge orders him held without bail. Police announce they are seeking several other men.
(Photo: AP)
Sept. 17, 2007 Stewart surrenders to police, turns over items believed to be taken from Beardsley and Fromong, and is released on $78,000 bail. Fromong suffers heart attack, is hospitalized at Los Angeles hospital.
(Photo: AP)
Sept. 19, 2007 Judge sets $125,000 bail for Simpson, who posts bond, is released from jail and returns home to Florida. Beardsley is arrested in Las Vegas on California parole violation. Charles Cashmore, of Las Vegas, surrenders.
(Photo: AP) Sept. 21, 2007 Cashmore is arraigned and Charles Ehrlich, of Miami, turns himself in at court on felony charges. Judge sets bail for Ehrlich at $32,000 and $28,000 for Cashmore. Oct. 15, 2007 Cashmore and Alexander cut plea deals in return for testimony against Simpson. Cashmore agrees to plead guilty to being an accessory to robbery, Alexander to conspiracy to commit robbery. Oct. 24, 2007 New charges of felony coercion are filed against Simpson, Stewart, Ehrlich and McClinton, bringing the total number of charges to 12.
Oct. 29, 2007 McClinton agrees to plead guilty to robbery and conspiracy to commit robbery in return for testimony against Simpson. McClinton's lawyer says his client will tell the court Simpson asked him to bring guns to the hotel room.
(Photo: AP)
Nov. 8, 2007 Simpson appears in Las Vegas Justice Court for a preliminary hearing. The session was marked by dramatic audio recordings and a collectibles broker who testified he set up the meeting that ultimately led to armed robbery charges against the former football star.
(Photo: AP)
Nov. 9, 2007 Day 2 of the preliminary hearing. The proceedings were continued until Nov. 13 after Charles Cashmore, who made a plea deal with prosecutors, testified about his role in Simpson's effort to retrieve sports memorabilia and personal items he claimed were his. Four of eight witnesses expected to be called by prosecutors had yet to take the stand.
(Photo: AP)
Nov. 13, 2007 Simpson's preliminary hearing resumes and two former co-defendants took the stand. Michael McClinton, 49, testified that Simpson asked him to bring guns and told him to use them to intimidate memorabilia dealers. Walter Alexander, 46, testified that Simpson instructed McClinton to draw his weapon before the group entered the room at the Palace Station hotel-casino. Simpson's attorneys seemed to diminish the credibility of the two men during cross-examination.
(Photo: AP)
Nov. 14, 2007 The preliminary hearing wraps up and a Las Vegas justice of the peace rules that O.J. Simpson and two other men should stand trial on all 12 charges they face, including kidnapping and armed robbery charges that could land Simpson in prison for the rest of his life. The defendants are to enter formal pleas to the charges on Nov. 28.
(Photo: AP)
Nov. 28, 2007 Simpson and co-defendants Clarence "C.J." Stewart and Charles "Charlie" Ehrlich pleaded "not guilty" at their arraignment on 12 charges, including kidnapping and armed robbery of two sports memorabilia dealers.
(Photo: AP)
Jan. 16, 2008 An angry judge doubled Simpson's bail to $250,000 for violating terms of his original bail by attempting to contact a co-defendant in his armed robbery case. Simpson, sitting clad in jail attire in the Las Vegas court, grimaced as the amount was announced and meekly acknowledged that he understood. Simpson posted the newly established bond and was released from jail just after 11 p.m.
Sources: CBS, AP, Las Vegas police arrest reports, Las Vegas Justice Court records | Advertisement Could D.C. Bribery Have Cost Troop Lives?Exclusive: In Finding How IED Targeting Went Awry, Investigator Found Trail Of Gifts And Earmarks |
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