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Mark Fuhrman

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Stephen C. Carlson (talk | contribs) at 05:58, 22 June 2003 (more about the post-OJ Fuhrman). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Mark Fuhrman was a detective in the Los Angeles Police Department who found the bloody glove that linked O. J. Simpson to the murder of his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson.

During the 1995 murder trial of O.J. Simpson, the defense accused Fuhrman of being a racist and planting evidence. Anthony Pellicano, a private investigator for Fuhrman, stated in the Washington Post (August 22, 1995), "[Fuhrman]'s life is in the toilet. He has no job, no future. People think he's a racist. [His] life is ruined. For What? Because he found a key piece of evidence."

During the trial, Fuhrman denied ever using the N-word for the previous the years, yet the defense was able to find an audiotape contradicting that testimony. As a result, the prosecution was forced to label their main police witness as a "bad cop." Fuhrman later plead no contest to a perjury charge and was sentenced to probation and fined $200.

After the trial, Fuhrman moved to Sandpoint, Idaho and wrote a book about the O. J. case, called Murder in Brentwood. For his next book, Murder in Greenwich, he investigated the then-unsolved 1975 murder of Martha Moxley and uncovered new evidence indicating that the murderer was Michael Skakel, a relative of the Kennedy family. This eventually resulted in Skakel's arrest and conviction for the murder.