OJ SIMPSON -RESS SAG PARTIOR WITNES NEVER WARNED TO TAKE IN DOCUSERIES (EXCLUSIVE)

Even three decades later, OJ Simpson re -develops the attempted murder attempt in the mind of those involved.

Simpson was famous for the murder on June 12, 1994 on his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman, a servant and hopeful actor who was brutally stabbed to death outside Nicole’s Condo in Brentwood, an exclusive neighborhood in Los Angeles.

A new documents, American Manhunt: Oj SimpsonAt Premiere on Netflix on Wednesday, January 29, relive Touchstone moments from both the murder investigation-Inclusive the notorious low-speed police, with Simpson sitting in the back of a white Ford Bronco-and the unforgettable moment in court when former Heisman trophy winner Tried on a blood -colored glove found on the crime scene.

But the series also focuses on more details under Radar, which quickly opened first aid supplies, potentially important witnesses who saw Simpson the night of the murders, but were never called to testify in court.

Nicole Brown Simpson, Ron Goldman.

Jim Smeal/Ron Galella Collection via Getty; With the permission of Netflix


“The audience gets listening to witnesses who were not called and considering evidence,” says director Floyd Russ. “I want them to feel like the jury.”

Here these witnesses tell people their stories:

Jill Shively: “When I saw it was OJ, I thought what the heck is his problem? He looks angry ‘

Jill Shively came over the flu on the night of June 12, 1994 and needed to get food in the stomach. Shively says she left her Santa Monica apartment before 1 p.m. 23 to drive to the Westward Ho market in nearby Brentwood and tried to get there before it closed.

Jill Shively.

With the permission of Netflix


Driving east on San Vicente Boulevard towards Bundy Drive, less than half a mile from where Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman had been murdered, hit almost almost a white bronco without headlights that had driven into the median to avoid hitting another car at the intersection.

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“I could see who it was and I knew it was a footballer, but I wasn’t sure who,” says Shively, now 63. “He shouted to another driver, ‘move, move.’ I recognized his voice because I had just seen a naked gun movie. It was OJ Simpson. ”

Proof photo of Ford Bronco.

With the permission of Netflix


But Shively’s testimony that could have set Simpson near the scene around the time of the murders was never heard in court.

Shively, who bred his young daughter at the time, sold his story to the tabloid -show -apirkopia. As a result, Marcia Clark, leading charges in the case, threw away from calling Shively as a witness.

“Marcia believed that it occupied any testimony she had to give,” says former prosecutor Chris Darden, Clark’s Co-advice on the case, in the case. American Manhunt.

For almost 30 years, Shively has lived with guilty that she was unable to testify to Simpson’s trial, only recently made peace with it. She is not sure that her testimony would have led to a conviction, but she claims that she has heard from juries since the trial that wish they could have listened.

“I’ve talked to jurist from the Simpson Case, who said,” I would have loved having heard your story, “says Shively. “I asked them if it would have made a difference. And they said, ‘Maybe.’

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W7DKAVX-OF4

Skip Junis over: ‘OJ held a bag and wouldn’t let anyone touch it’

Parquet outside Los Angeles International Airport just after 7 p.m. 23.30 on June 12, 1994, Skip June waited to pick up his wife, an American employee of American Airlines when he saw a limousine pull about 40 meters away. Out OJ Simpson stepped, he says.

Junis, an advertising manager who played baseball at UCLA, when Simpson was at the USC, recognized him immediately and found it strange that the A list had a cheap gymnastics bag.

Skip Junis over.

With the permission of Netflix


“OJ went to a trash and picked the bag on top,” remembers Junis. “What was really peculiar was when he unpacked the bag, he pulled a long object covered with a white cloth or cloth and put it in the trash.”

After he learned about the murders and that Simpson was a suspect, Junis says, he called both the prosecution and the defense teams to report that he could place him on LAX that night. But no team called him back.

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JUNIS, who would tell his story at parties, says lapd detective Philip Vannatter finally contacted him, and the police then took him to the prosecutor’s office, where he was asked to draw a picture of the bag he saw Simpson wear at the airport . They told him they would call him as a witness – but they never did.

“I think Marcia Clark forgot me,” he says.

Years later, Junis says he was told by detectives that Clark decided not to call him because she didn’t think she could confirm his story. The advertising director is still thinking about what he saw the fateful night.

“I have spent many, many years now thinking about what he would have had in the bag to throw without looking at it. Why should he have brought it from his house? It just doesn’t make sense. “