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I bet it's fake. I bet the guy had a knife he used to tell people was the murder knife, someone ratted on him, and he's turned it in hoping he won't have to admit to lying about it all these years.
The early bird might get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.
Funny how this knife has turned up after being in someone's possession all these years just as the TV series about the OJ case is screening. (It's a good series, by the way. I'm enjoying it!)
I don't trust it much - the lengthiness of it's hidden existence makes one suspicious. But as for "double jeopardy" it would depend on what can be said of it's original discovery and the police detective's holding onto it. Suppose it turned out he could prove Johnny Cochrane bribed him not to say anything about the knife? It might actually put the original verdict into jeopardy, as court's do reconsider the "double jeopardy" standard if there were such evidence of willful evidence tampering by either side (usually the prosecution, it is true, but it could be the defense). The so-called "playing field" would be shown not to be fair.
If it were proven that such was the case here, the verdict might be set aside, and O.J. would have to undergo a new trial - without the idiot group of the District Attorney's office prosecuting, nor with his half dead (such as Cochrane) "dream team", plus with a jail record hanging onto him from Nevada. It is most likely not going to prove to be this, no matter what wish fulfillment we might want, but if it were, boy would O.J. have a nightmarish future to consider facing in California's prison system.
In the unlikely case this is the murder weapon and it can be linked to OJ, could he be tried in federal court for civil rights violations? It's a stretch, admittedly.
Authorities are going to test the knife, but experts seem doubtful any DNA would be useful after all this time.
Story is that a construction worker found it (possibly buried) in the late 1990s when the Brentwood House was torn down. He later gave it to "a former police officer" who has kept it all this time and is now bringing it forward.
They're asking the original finder of the knife to contact them and confirm the policeman's story.
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