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Post by Judge Smails on Apr 11, 2024 12:54:25 GMT -8
Will usc put # "32" or OJ on their helmets next year? How about an empty juice box?
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OJ
Apr 11, 2024 13:09:02 GMT -8
Post by wilkyisdashiznit on Apr 11, 2024 13:09:02 GMT -8
I am still upset that OJ played in front of Enyart for the Bills.
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Post by wilkyisdashiznit on Apr 11, 2024 13:31:01 GMT -8
Liable I believe. Not guilty in Civil court. But one of the lawyers here will know. That's correct....but he moved to Florida where his house along with his NFL pension were untouchable, so he never paid a dime. That is not really accurate. He declared bankruptcy and then moved to Florida, so that his pension would be untouchable. Florida has some of the strongest Homestead laws in the country (if not the strongest). It is difficult talking to Florida attorneys sometimes, because they keep talking about Homestead. I keep having to explain that there are Homestead laws elsewhere, but they are not nearly as powerful. The pension was only $28,000 per year. The fact that it is still a point of huge contention is silly. All of OJ's other assets were confiscated and sold, but, as I understand it, all of OJ's assets only added up to a couple hundred thousand dollars. The Goldmans even own OJ's infamous "If I Did It" book. And I am still unclear as to whether some of the assets that were sold were some of the same assets that OJ Simpson stole back in 2007, which led to his almost nine years in a Nevada prison.
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OJ
Apr 11, 2024 13:39:03 GMT -8
Post by Judge Smails on Apr 11, 2024 13:39:03 GMT -8
That's correct....but he moved to Florida where his house along with his NFL pension were untouchable, so he never paid a dime. That is not really accurate. He declared bankruptcy and then moved to Florida, so that his pension would be untouchable. Florida has some of the strongest Homestead laws in the country (if not the strongest). It is difficult talking to Florida attorneys sometimes, because they keep talking about Homestead. I keep having to explain that there are Homestead laws elsewhere, but they are not nearly as powerful. The pension was only $28,000 per year. The fact that it is still a point of huge contention is silly. All of OJ's other assets were confiscated and sold, but, as I understand it, all of OJ's assets only added up to a couple hundred thousand dollars. The Goldmans even own OJ's infamous "If I Did It" book. And I am still unclear as to whether some of the assets that were sold were some of the same assets that OJ Simpson stole back in 2007, which led to his almost nine years in a Nevada prison. He bought the Florida house before he filed bankruptcy to take advantage of their homestead law. Also, where did you get that number for his pension? Everything that I've read, it was much higher than that. He was living off of his NFL pension and $42K/yr in SSI, plus I think he may have been getting some money from SAG. The Goldman's were paid $133,000 from the sale of his personal memorabilia, but he never physically paid them any cash.
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Post by wilkyisdashiznit on Apr 11, 2024 14:16:16 GMT -8
That is not really accurate. He declared bankruptcy and then moved to Florida, so that his pension would be untouchable. Florida has some of the strongest Homestead laws in the country (if not the strongest). It is difficult talking to Florida attorneys sometimes, because they keep talking about Homestead. I keep having to explain that there are Homestead laws elsewhere, but they are not nearly as powerful. The pension was only $28,000 per year. The fact that it is still a point of huge contention is silly. All of OJ's other assets were confiscated and sold, but, as I understand it, all of OJ's assets only added up to a couple hundred thousand dollars. The Goldmans even own OJ's infamous "If I Did It" book. And I am still unclear as to whether some of the assets that were sold were some of the same assets that OJ Simpson stole back in 2007, which led to his almost nine years in a Nevada prison. He bought the Florida house before he filed bankruptcy to take advantage of their homestead law. Also, where did you get that number for his pension? Everything that I've read, it was much higher than that. He was living off of his NFL pension and $42K/yr in SSI, plus I think he may have been getting some money from SAG. The Goldman's were paid $133,000 from the sale of his personal memorabilia, but he never physically paid them any cash. The Tampa Bay Times and Yahoo! report the amount as $28,000 per year. Other websites say that that was the monthly number. Other websites say that other numbers are the number. The high-end calculated numbers are based on certain knowns. But even those high-end calculated numbers indicate that that is only if certain facts are true, which they do not know. Sports Illustrated's $500,000 per year number is based on the assumption that he did not take any payments before he left prison in 2017, which would allow the amounts that he was due to increase, because of interest. But no one is exactly sure, because whether or not he took out payments and the future payments are all protected by ERISA. I guess no one knows how much his pension was, because no one knows when he started taking payments. Yes, it makes sense to me that he would purchase the most expensive house in Florida possible to take advantage of Homestead.
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OJ
Apr 12, 2024 14:16:28 GMT -8
Post by Henry Skrimshander on Apr 12, 2024 14:16:28 GMT -8
I am still upset that OJ played in front of Enyart for the Bills. They played different positions. Enyart was a fullback, OJ a halfback. Both started as rookies in 1969. Bills always ran a two-back system in those days.
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OJ
Apr 13, 2024 9:42:19 GMT -8
via mobile
Post by larbeav on Apr 13, 2024 9:42:19 GMT -8
I am still upset that OJ played in front of Enyart for the Bills. Starting Enyart ( one of my all time favorite Beaver football players) is akin to starting Jonathan Smith over Troy Aikman..
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OJ
Apr 13, 2024 11:03:36 GMT -8
via mobile
kersting13 likes this
Post by gnawitall on Apr 13, 2024 11:03:36 GMT -8
I am still upset that OJ played in front of Enyart for the Bills. They played different positions. Enyart was a fullback, OJ a halfback. Both started as rookies in 1969. Bills always ran a two-back system in those days. so he literally did start in front of him
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