The Smithsonian turns down O.J. Simpson's suit, a possible "Brady" feud and other news from HLN's Showbiz Tonight.
Most of the sports memorabilia seized by authorities in the O.J. Simpson armed robbery case in Las Vegas is headed to California and, eventually, to Fred Goldman.
Judge Jackie Glass says she is "not here to sentence Mr. Simpson for what's happened in his life previously."
O.J. Simpson faces the prospect of spending the rest of his life in prison after he and co-defendant Clarence "C.J." Stewart were found guilty on 12 charges, including armed robbery and kidnapping.
A Las Vegas jury finds O.J. Simpson and his co-defendant guilty of all charges. CNN's Ted Rowlands reports.
Developments in the murder trial of O.J. Simpson from August 28-September 1, 1995
Prosecutors on Tuesday filed numerous criminal charges against former NFL star O.J. Simpson and three other men in connection with an alleged armed robbery at a Las Vegas hotel last week.
Additional audiotape from TMZ.com of a confrontation in a Las Vegas hotel room involving O.J. Simpson and sports memorabilia.
It's as if O.J. Simpson was afraid that Michael Vick or Adam "Pacman" Jones was a threat to his title of America's Most Reviled Sports Figure, so he decided to get himself back in the news and remind us that when it comes to athletes who have ruined their once-good names, Simpson is still the undisputed heavyweight champion. No one athlete has ever sunk lower than the Juice.
O.J. Simpson was contacted by Las Vegas law-enforcement authorities after he was named as a suspect in an armed robbery of "various sports-related products" in a hotel room, police said Friday.
If you're hoping to buy the new edition of O.J. Simpson's "If I Did It," don't expect to find a copy at Barnes & Noble.
A federal bankruptcy judge Monday awarded 90 percent of the proceeds from the sale of the rights to O.J. Simpson's book "If I Did It" to the family of Ron Goldman, who was slain alongside Simpson's wife Nicole Brown Simpson in 1994.
A federal bankruptcy judge on Friday ruled that the father of Ron Goldman can pursue the publishing rights to a book by O.J. Simpson, which speaks in hypothetical terms about the 1994 murders of Goldman and Simpson's ex-wife, Nicole.
In what may be an unprecedented legal move, Fred Goldman is asking to have control over O.J. Simpson's publicity rights to his own likeness, name and persona to satisfy a multimillion-dollar wrongful death judgment.