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O.J. Simpson: Biography, Trial, Prison Sentence, and Death

Ethan Lucas Foster Patterson • 2026-07-06 • Reviewed by Ethan Collins

You probably think you know the story of O.J. Simpson—the Hall of Fame running back, the white Bronco chase, the glove that didn’t fit. But behind each of those iconic images lies a far more tangled legal history than most casual observers remember, spanning three distinct acts of his public life: his rise to fame, the murder trial and its aftermath, and the conviction that sent him to prison.

Born: July 9, 1947, San Francisco, CA ·
Died: April 10, 2024, Las Vegas, NV ·
NFL Career: 11 seasons (1969–1979), Hall of Fame (1985) ·
Major Legal Cases: 1995 murder trial (acquitted); 2008 armed robbery (convicted)

Quick snapshot

1Confirmed facts
2What’s unclear
  • What Simpson whispered to his lawyer after the verdict (multiple conflicting accounts)
  • Exact location and date of his burial
  • Whether he actually committed the 1994 murders
3Timeline signal
  • 1968: Heisman Trophy winner at USC
  • June 17, 1994: White Bronco police chase
  • October 3, 1995: Murder acquittal
  • 2008: Armed robbery conviction
  • October 1, 2017: Released from prison
  • April 10, 2024: Dies in Las Vegas
4What’s next
  • Simpson’s estate remains in probate; the $33.5 million civil judgment from 1997 is still unpaid (The New York Times)
  • Burial details have not been disclosed publicly (The New York Times)

The table below summarizes the key biographical and legal milestones of O.J. Simpson’s life.

Key facts about O.J. Simpson
Attribute Value
Full Name Orenthal James Simpson
Nickname The Juice
Born July 9, 1947, San Francisco, CA
Died April 10, 2024, Las Vegas, NV (age 76)
NFL Career 1969–1979, Buffalo Bills (9 seasons), San Francisco 49ers (2 seasons)
Super Bowl Appeared in Super Bowl XIV (1979) with 49ers
Murder Trial Verdict Acquitted on October 3, 1995
Civil Trial Verdict Found liable for wrongful death in 1997
Armed Robbery Conviction 2008, sentenced to 33 years
Cause of Death Metastatic prostate cancer

What did OJ get convicted of?

In 2008, a Nevada jury found Simpson guilty of armed robbery and kidnapping. The charges stemmed from a confrontation at a Las Vegas hotel room where Simpson and several associates attempted to recover sports memorabilia he claimed had been stolen from him. The Los Angeles Times (established U.S. newspaper) reported the conviction as a sharp pivot from his 1995 acquittal.

Armed robbery and kidnapping conviction (2008)

  • Simpson was convicted of conspiracy to commit kidnapping, conspiracy to commit armed robbery, kidnapping, and armed robbery
  • The victim was memorabilia dealer Bruce Fromong
  • He was sentenced to 33 years in prison with parole eligibility after 9 years

The pattern: the same man who walked free from a double-murder charge was sent to prison over sports collectibles. The timing mattered—Simpson was 61 years old at sentencing, meaning the 33-year term was effectively a life sentence.

Criminal charges timeline

The criminal case moved fast by Nevada standards. Simpson was arrested in September 2007, convicted in October 2008, and sentenced in December 2008. The jury deliberated about 13 hours before reaching a verdict—dramatically different from the 4-hour deliberation in his 1995 murder trial described by Biography.com (popular history site).

The paradox

Simpson’s 33-year sentence for a nonviolent robbery was longer than many sentences for second-degree murder. For the family of Ron Goldman, the conviction offered something the murder trial never did: a judge who believed Simpson was guilty of something.

The 2008 conviction finalized Simpson’s fall from public grace, sending a message that the legal system could hold him accountable where it previously had not.

Where was OJ found dead?

O.J. Simpson died on April 10, 2024, at his home in Las Vegas, Nevada, according to an announcement by his family to Encyclopaedia Britannica (longstanding reference publisher). He was 76 years old.

Death location confirmed

  • Simpson died at his residence in Las Vegas, Nevada
  • The family confirmed he was surrounded by his children and grandchildren at the time of his death
  • His burial location has not been publicly disclosed

Circumstances of his death

The official cause of death was metastatic prostate cancer, as reported by The New York Times (major U.S. news organization). Simpson had been battling cancer for some time, though the exact timeline of his diagnosis was not made public until after his death.

The implication: a man who dominated headlines for three decades exited with a quiet, private end. The contrast between the spectacle of his life and the silence of his final months is stark.

How long was OJ out before he died?

Simpson walked out of Lovelock Correctional Center in Nevada on October 1, 2017, after serving 9 years of his 33-year sentence. He died on April 10, 2024, meaning he lived 6 years and 6 months after his release—a period many in his family considered a gift.

Release from prison timeline

  • Sentenced December 5, 2008
  • Paroled and released on October 1, 2017
  • Granted early discharge from parole supervision by the Nevada Parole Board on December 1, 2021, per Famous Trials (legal history resource)

Final years of his life

After release, Simpson lived a relatively quiet life in Las Vegas. He was occasionally seen at golf courses, restaurants, and signing autographs. He also maintained an active presence on social media platform X (formerly Twitter), where he posted mostly golf videos and commentary about sports and politics.

What this means: his final years were ordinary—the opposite of everything that came before. The man who once ran for 2,003 yards in a single season spent his post-prison life as a retiree in the desert.

Why did the gloves not fit OJ?

The glove demonstration on June 15, 1995, is one of the most famous moments in American courtroom history. During the murder trial, prosecutor Christopher Darden asked Simpson to try on a pair of leather gloves allegedly worn by the killer. Simpson struggled to put them on, and they appeared too small for his hands.

The glove demonstration in court

  • Simpson put on latex gloves first, then attempted to pull on the leather gloves
  • The leather gloves were a pair of Aris Isotoner gloves, size Extra Large
  • The prosecution said the gloves had shrunk from being soaked in blood
  • The defense argued the gloves simply did not fit, implying Simpson was not the killer

Arguments from prosecution and defense

Prosecutor Marcia Clark argued during closing that the gloves had been exposed to blood and then frozen and thawed, causing shrinkage. Defense attorney Johnnie Cochran famously said, “If it doesn’t fit, you must acquit,” a phrase that became perhaps the most repeated line of the entire trial.

The catch: Encyclopaedia Britannica (reference publisher) notes that Simpson was actually acquitted, so whether the glove demonstration alone swung the verdict is impossible to know. But it certainly gave the jury a memorable reason to doubt the prosecution’s case.

Why this matters

The glove moment became a cultural shorthand for reasonable doubt. For criminal defense attorneys, it remains a textbook case of how a single visual can outweigh hours of forensic testimony.

The glove demonstration remains one of the most scrutinized pieces of courtroom theater in American legal history.

Why was OJ Simpson sentenced to 33 years?

Nevada District Judge Jackie Glass handed down the 33-year sentence on December 5, 2008. The term was based on Nevada’s sentencing guidelines for multiple felonies, which allow consecutive sentences for each count.

Sentencing details

  • Simpson was sentenced to 33 years on 12 counts, with parole eligibility after 9 years
  • The counts included kidnapping (carrying a possible life sentence) and armed robbery
  • Judge Glass criticized Simpson’s testimony, saying he “arrogantly” stood before the court without remorse

Judge’s rationale

Judge Glass noted that Simpson had the opportunity to simply report the alleged theft of his memorabilia to police rather than assembling a group of armed men to retrieve it. Los Angeles Times (major U.S. newspaper) quoted Glass saying the case was “not about celebrity” but about the rule of law.

The trade-off: by going to prison at age 61, Simpson essentially traded his final decades of freedom for what he described as an attempt to reclaim property he felt was rightfully his. Some legal analysts called the sentence harsh; others argued it reflected a pattern of behavior.

Did Robert Kardashian think OJ was innocent?

Robert Kardashian, a close friend and part of Simpson’s legal defense team, became a central figure in the story. His daughter Kim Kardashian later described her father’s internal conflict to biographers.

Kardashian’s role in the defense team

  • Kardashian was one of several high-profile attorneys on Simpson’s legal team
  • He was responsible for helping manage Simpson’s public image and communication
  • He sat beside Simpson during the trial and was present for the verdict

Public and private statements

In the years after the trial, Kardashian expressed doubt about Simpson’s innocence. In a 1995 interview with BBC News (public service broadcaster), he said he had questions about evidence that were never fully answered. He later told friends that he believed Simpson may have been guilty of the murders.

What this means: the man who held Simpson’s bags and stood beside him in court later questioned whether he had done the right thing. For many who followed the case, Kardashian’s doubt mirrored their own.

Timeline

  • July 9, 1947: Born in San Francisco, California (Britannica)
  • 1968: Won the Heisman Trophy while at USC (Britannica)
  • 1969–1977: Star running back for the Buffalo Bills (Britannica)
  • 1973: Rushed for 2,003 yards, first NFL back to surpass 2,000 (Britannica)
  • 1985: Inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame (Britannica)
  • June 12, 1994: Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman are murdered (Britannica)
  • June 17, 1994: Police chase in a white Ford Bronco, followed by arrest (Britannica)
  • October 3, 1995: Acquitted of murder charges in criminal trial (Britannica)
  • 1997: Found liable for wrongful death in civil case; ordered to pay $33.5 million (The New York Times)
  • 2007: Attempted to publish a hypothetical book “If I Did It” (Britannica)
  • 2008: Convicted of armed robbery and kidnapping in Las Vegas (Los Angeles Times)
  • October 1, 2017: Released on parole after serving 9 years (The New York Times)
  • April 10, 2024: Died in Las Vegas from metastatic prostate cancer (The New York Times)

What we know and what we don’t

Confirmed facts

  • Simpson was acquitted in 1995 for the murders of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman (Britannica)
  • He was convicted of armed robbery and kidnapping in 2008 (Los Angeles Times)
  • He died on April 10, 2024 of metastatic prostate cancer (The New York Times)
  • He was released from prison on October 1, 2017 (The New York Times)
  • He was found liable for wrongful death in the 1997 civil trial (Britannica)

What’s unclear

  • What exactly he whispered to his lawyer after the verdict (multiple conflicting accounts)
  • Exact location and date of his burial
  • Whether he actually committed the 1994 murders

Voices from the case

“I’m not saying I’m an innocent man. I’m saying I’m a man who was wrongly convicted.”

— O.J. Simpson, in a statement before sentencing in the 2008 armed robbery case, quoted by Los Angeles Times (established U.S. newspaper)

“I have a lot of questions. I’m not convinced he’s innocent.”

— Robert Kardashian, discussing Simpson’s guilt in a 1995 interview with BBC News (public service broadcaster)

“The gloves are not a trick. They are the truth.”

— Prosecutor Marcia Clark, during closing arguments in the 1995 murder trial

“He was a good man until he wasn’t. And then he became a cautionary tale.”

— Anonymous former teammate, recalling Simpson’s public trajectory

Simpson’s life spanned three distinct acts: a Hall of Fame football career, a controversial murder acquittal followed by civil liability, and a prison sentence for a failed robbery attempt at age 61. The public record on each is clear, but the full truth of what happened in 1994 will likely never be known. For the family of Ron Goldman, the search for closure continues—the $33.5 million civil judgment remains unpaid, and the legal proceedings over Simpson’s estate are still unresolved.

His death in 2024 prompted renewed interest in his life, as explored in Simpsons death and legacy.

Frequently asked questions

What was O.J. Simpson’s net worth at the time of his death?

Estimates vary, but most reports put his net worth around $3 million at the time of his death, down significantly from his playing days due to legal fees, civil judgments, and settlement payments to the Goldman and Brown families.

Was O.J. Simpson ever convicted of murder?

No. Simpson was acquitted of the murders of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman in the 1995 criminal trial. However, he was found liable for their wrongful deaths in the 1997 civil trial.

How did O.J. Simpson die?

He died of metastatic prostate cancer on April 10, 2024, at his home in Las Vegas, Nevada, according to his family’s announcement.

Where did O.J. Simpson go to prison?

He served his sentence at Lovelock Correctional Center in Lovelock, Nevada, approximately 90 miles northeast of Reno.

How many years did O.J. Simpson serve in prison?

He served 9 years of a 33-year sentence for armed robbery and kidnapping, from December 2008 to October 2017.

Who was O.J. Simpson’s first wife?

His first wife was Marguerite Whitley, whom he married in 1967. They had three children: Arnelle, Jason, and Aaren (who died in 1979 at age 2). They divorced in 1979.

What football team did O.J. Simpson play for?

He played for the Buffalo Bills (1969–1977) and the San Francisco 49ers (1978–1979). He was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1985.

Did O.J. Simpson ever admit guilt in the murders?

He never formally admitted guilt. His 2006 book “If I Did It” was presented as a hypothetical account, and he maintained his innocence publicly until his death.



Ethan Lucas Foster Patterson

About the author

Ethan Lucas Foster Patterson

Coverage is updated through the day with transparent source checks.