torture. Simpson, including a bloody glove. All But the Jury Hear Epithets on Fuhrman Tapes I was a reason the jury latched on to so they could feel good about themselves. There's just no way to do it all. PHILLIPS: Coming up O.J. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I'm very pleased. [4][5] In a taped interview to McKinney in 1985, Fuhrman bragged about his leadership in MAW, a secret organization within the LAPD that reportedly had 145 members in five of the city's 18 police divisions during its heyday in the mid-1980s. UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Every rank up through captain. So I just handcuffed him and went the scenic route to the station. HART MCKINNY: I just froze and said yes and then we left town, immediately, because I had no idea what to do. I really need work hard with these women at the police academy shadowing them so I'm clear to represent their voices. "[14], On May 16, 1997, the Los Angeles Times ran a piece signed by Katherine Spillar (Co-chair, the Women's Advisory Council to the Los Angeles Police Commission) and Penny Harrington (Director of the National Center for Women & Policing) and stating that "The long-awaited Police Commission report released on the Mark Fuhrman tapes revealed that the LAPD command has known for years about orchestrated sexual harassment and intimidation of female officers and has done nothing to stop it. Fuhrman, who is now 64, is also a frequent guest on Fox News. They go, hey Bubba, what's happening, like that.' HART MCKINNY: Bingo. HART MCKINNY: No. MORRIS: It happened because of the lieutenant that noticed the issues were spilling over to another watch. Did you ever try to find a bruise on a n*****. LAPD Detective Mark Fuhrman was the key police witness in the O.J. Transcript Providers Return to Transcripts main page CNN Special Reports After O.J. It was revealed around this time that she had completed her screenplay based on her interviews with Fuhrman, for a film she had decided to call Men Against Women. Mark Fuhrman told you he personally he felt trapped. [Women] don't pack those qualities." Then he and the other officers went out back according to Fuhrman and washed off the blood with a hose before returning to work. Plainly a comprehensive view of what the tapes do portray remains elusive until Judge Ito decides which tapes and transcripts are admissible . The prosecutor, the sergeant in arms stands by the defendant. HART MCKINNY: I was completely unprepared to be in a courtroom. "[8], Earlier in the trial, Fuhrman testified that he had not used the word "nigger" within the last ten years, which proved later to be perjured testimony with the admission of the tapes. Judge Ito's ruling on juror targeting by the prosecution. . PHILLIPS: Coming up, tribunals and kill parties. He had been the first to arrive at Simpson's home the night of the murders because he was familiar with the property, having been there in 1985 while responding to a report of domestic abuse made by Nicole against her then husband. Juror Interviews He didn't have to give up the tapes. PHILLIPS: By the late '80s allegations of excessive use of force had escalated racial tensions. The whole world would watch him implode. Fuhrman was also recorded stating that women who were good leaders "are either so ugly or they're a lesbian or they're so dyke-ish that they are not women anymore. (COMMERCIAL BREAK) [23:33:24] KYRA PHILLIPS, CNN CORRESPONDENT: By 1995 Laura Hart McKinny had settled down with her family in suburban North Carolina but back in L.A. her old friend Mark Fuhrman was back on the stand. HART MCKINNY: So they would hold these late night meetings and figure out how they were going to harass other male officers that were being nice to female officers. - On his hometown, 'When I came on the job all my training officers were big guys and knowledgeable, some n*****'d get in their face, they just spin 'em around, choke 'em out until they dropped.' Four suspects ran into a second-story. When I left, Dana goes, "No blood Mark.". We grabbed a girl that lived there, one of their girlfriends. Two of my. FUHRMAN: We have factions in five divisions. Numerous bones in each one of them. And he said I work with them and they're incompetent. . More than once though he is describing a violent incident, like when he tells a story about beating up a suspect in his custody. HART MCKINNY: I think those tape spoke volumes. Discussion of the O. J. Simpson Murder Trial Is On-Line as Well as on the Air -- N.Y. Times, February 14, 1995. Did he ever say why? Simpson murder trial. If leaks of the Mark Fuhrman tapes are accurate, it's a force that revels in heating, shooting, harassing, framing and intimidating suspects, among other finer police tactics. "[4], In further interviews, Fuhrman made the statements "we had them begging that they'd never be gang members again, begging us" and that he would tell black people "You do what you're told, understand, nigger? Ito steps aside on Fuhrman tapes issue. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Do you use in the word -- describing people? PHILLIPS: And whatever happened to McKinny's screen play? UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Do you use the word nigger? HART MCKINNY: There were bits of the puzzle I was unable to reveal at the time and I was unable to be as truthful as I really wanted to be. It's despicable, the fact that he can think about that and talk like that makes me think it's happening and so I have to find a way to reflect that. FUHRMAN: My ass is on the line, because if the media gets a hold of this, although we can say - well, we've been in negotiations for years, months whatever. We have no n****** where I grew up.' After learning that Fuhrman was a Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) officer and had strong views about the employment of women as LAPD officers, McKinny engaged Fuhrman as a consultant to provide background information about the reality of the experiences of LAPD officers and to serve as a technical advisor in the development of a screenplay. HART MCKINNY: Yes. The day after the tapes were played for the jury, Fuhrman once again took the witness stand and said to every question asked by the defense; 'I wish to assert my 5th Amendment privilege.'. That the other guys wouldn't talk with him. Simpson. PHILLIPS: Who lied on the stand. Fuhrman had previously been to O.J's home, years earlier, on a domestic abuse call. He wasn't going to help you. PHILLIPS: Is it true you were offered $250,000 for them? The LAPD detective answered Bailey, under oath, saying he had not used the word in the past 10 years as of that date, March 15, 1995. ', He also uses it when discussing his issues with his fellow Americans donating money to other countries, saying; 'You know these people here, we got all this money going to Ethiopia for what. In the transcript, Fuhrman tells screenwriter and professor Laura Hart McKinny about the investigation of a shooting at a housing project in the Hollenbeck Division, which includes Boyle. I thought I really need to step up my game here. 'Two guys, well, there was four guys. Screenwriter Laura Hart McKinny was interested in writing a screenplay and a novel about the experience of women police officers. HART MCKINNY: I was plummet why? Why had he been allowed to behave the way he did for so long and not be held accountable? At one point he also makes disparaging comments about the looks and work ethic of a female superior, Captain Margaret York, implying she advanced in the ranks through sexual favors. PHILLIPS: What do you mean brief encounters? UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Do you use the word nigger? What did he mean by that? Portions of the tapes were admitted into evidence during the 1995 O. J. Simpson murder trial. - Speaking against women on the force, 'No, we have to eliminate a choke hold because a bunch of n****** down in the south end of L.A. said this is bad.' They're like caught in between it's like half in a door and half out. Fuhrman was the detective who found a bloody glove on Simpson's estate. Simpson double-murder trial, recently retired Los Angeles Police Detective Mark Fuhrman said he and other officers Jack Walraven's Simpson Trial Transcripts Simpson -- that is until Simpson's defense team discovered recordings of Fuhrman speaking about his racist views, a career of police brutality, and routine evidence tampering to a writer. PHILLIPS: What if somebody had come towards you? McKinny also testified in the Simpson case without the jury present to determine if the tapes she recorded would be used at trial. 'They don't want anybody but good people in their town, and anyway you can do to get them out of there that's fine with them. People there don't want Mexicans in their town. Having found Fuhrman's use of the subject racial epithet to be relevant and admissible, the court must then analyze each usage under Evidence Code Section 352: "The court may exclude evidence if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the probability that its admission will (a) necessitate undue consumption of time or (b) create substantial danger of undue prejudice, of confusing the issues, or of misleading the jury." HART MCKINNY: No one, talking about me, should be profiting from this tragedy that people have to live with every day of their life. Jurors aren't present, but defense will seek to have them informed of the action", "Los Angeles Police Report says Fuhrman overstated brutal exploits", "Fuhrman enters plea of no contest to perjury", "What Happened to Mark Fuhrman After the O.J. I couldn't believe it. . This assertion is not supported by the record. : Fuhrman Tapes Revealed. PHILLIPS: Its fiction, and the title, the same as Fuhrman's real-life secret society, Men against women. The tapes include many racist slurs and remarks made by Fuhrman, including uses of the word "nigger," descriptions of police brutality perpetrated on black suspects, misogynist slurs and descriptions of the harassment and intimidation of female Los Angeles police officers by male officers. In the end no proof could be found that 17 of the incidents ever even occurred, and investigations into the other 12 did not find any concrete proof of misconduct. PHILLIPS: One member of that task force, Tia Morris. You've got 200 n****** that are trying to take you prisoner.' But in his 1997 book, murder in Brentwood, Fuhrman apologized, writing, in my heart I always knew it was wrong, even if I said them only to create a fictional story. Now a CNN exclusive, excerpts from the Mark Fuhrman tapes you've never heard and the woman who recorded him. There is the Rolling 60's, n***** group they went into a sporting good store and stole 50 Uzis, 3,000 rounds.' Was completing this book therapeutic for you after all these decades? PHILLIPS: Bernard Parks was an LAPD deputy chief when Fuhrman came up to promotion. PHILLIPS: What were you thinking when he was saying those things? 'We basically get impatient with him being so f****** stupid. I would have a very hard time today sitting here thinking of my sons and telling them that I destroyed something that I was proud that I had done. Veteran LAPD Detective Mark Fuhrman was the most important witness for the prosecution in the OJ Simpson trial as he discovered a bloody glove on the football player's property that matched the one found at the scene where his ex-wife Nicole was murdered alongside Ronald Goldman. ANNOUNCER: The following is a CNN special report. PHILLIPS: So did Mark Fuhrman called you say Laura, please don't give up those tapes? It's the man. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Detective Fuhrman, did you plant or manufacture any evidence in this case? I remember you got a lot of death threats.

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