OJ Simpson loses appeal of 2008 robbery conviction

LOS ANGELES, (Reuters) – Nevada’s Supreme Court yesterday refused to overturn O.J. Simpson’s 2008 robbery  conviction for a bungled attempt to recover his own sports  memorabilia.

The former U.S. football star, serving a prison sentence of  up to 33 years, appealed citing judicial misconduct and racial  make-up of the jury and other grounds. But in a 24-page  ruling, the Nevada court dismissed all eight issues raised in  the appeal.

Simpson, 63, was found guilty of the hold-up at gunpoint of  two sports collectors in a Las Vegas hotel room in 2007. He  said he was trying to retrieve possessions that were stolen  from him.

Simpson’s lawyer, Yale Galanter, suggested at the time that  the Las Vegas jury was giving Simpson a payback for his  controversial 1995 acquittal on charges of murdering his  ex-wife and her friend in Los Angeles.
“We are extremely disappointed with the court ruling today,  however it is not unexpected,” Galanter said yesterday, adding  that he planned to continue the fight.

Simpson is serving his sentence in Nevada and is eligible  for parole in seven years.
The Nevada Supreme Court judges ordered a new trial for one  of Simpson’s co-defendants. They said that Clarence “C.J.”  Stewart was not given a fair trial because of “the spill-over  prejudice from Simpson’s notoriety.”