uary 22, )n entertai ugandp mhisdisf i Odds'N O.J.'s accuser: There's a killer in this courtroom' heme of. alights sc taneousj Ts. ckofAfc ■r isleiif inuteslc difficult ti vraDm mnderfi lan’swoii 1 and mas itionalS but doij! Wednesday Page 5 January 22, 1997 SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP)—Pointing his fin- eratan unflinching O.J. Simpson, a lawyer angri- niocked the football star’s explanations and told a XikeolirorsTuesday: “There’s a killer in this courtroom." gives to a he horses laintstk as “Specif, 'nix” con emselves out ofiln tieytake# their o® jeriences,' ind in# rtsinaftf if an artist work aral t. fork, and I ito,t/iei “That’s the man who attacked them, con- onted them and who killed them,’’ attorney laniel Petrocelli said in closing arguments in the ftongful-death case against Simpson. Again and again, Petrocelli raised images of ilood, fiber and hair, a hat, gloves and shoes that le said were indisputable proof that Simpson filed ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her riend Ronald Goldman on June 12, 1994. “Did Mr. Simpson explain why his blood nd DNA were found next to the victims?” etrocelli asked. “Did he explain why his glove vas found ... why his knit cap was at the scene, lid he explain any of that? Not one word.” Petrocelli made it clear that his most prized lew evidence — which he believes will turn the ase around — is a collection of photos showing impson wearing the same kind of Bruno Magli ihoes the killer wore. He said Simpson was quick o talk about football, his Heis- an trophy and golf, “but no runo Magli shoes.... Can you imagine? O.J. Simpson didn’t ay a word about it.’’ As Petrocelli showed ju rors bloody pictures of the [victims, he declared: "These pieces of evidence are the voices of Ron and Nicole speaking to us from their graves, telling us, telling all of you, that there’s a killer in this courtroom.” Simpson’s attorneys were to give their closing arguments after Petrocelli finished up Wednes day, and the case could be in the hands of the jury Thursday. The victims’ families are seeking millions in damages from Simpson. Behind Simpson sat his sister, Shirley Bak er, and a niece. Across the courtroom, the fam ilies of Ms. Simpson and Goldman wept quiet ly as pictures of the victims’ bloody bodies were again projected on a large screen. Petrocelli spoke of the victims clawing at their killer and leaving fingernail marks, forc ing the killer to drop telltale evidence along the way. And he said that while Ms. Simpson was killed “up close and personal” by a man in a rage, Goldman was slain to silence him about what he saw. “Had Ron lived, ladies and gentlemen, he would have been on this witness stand,” Petro- Simpson celli said, tapping on the witness stand. “And he would have told us what he saw.” The lawyer retraced Simpson’s movements the night of the slayings, using telephone records and testimony, and he dismissed Simpson’s claim that he was at home at the time. “OJ. Simpson does not have an alibi between 10 and 10:45,” Petrocelli said. “But all the evi dence in the case tells us he was not there. He was lying.... He got caught.” Petrocelli, a man with carefully groomed graying hair, paced in front of the jury box more somber even than Simpson, who sat across the room scribbling notes and sometimes shaking his head in disagreement. As the day wore on, Petrocelli’s attacks be came more personal. "If it isn’t Mr. Simpson, who is it?” he asked. He ridiculed Simpson’s explanation of the in famous Bronco run as a race to commit suicide and picked apart the note he left behind. “What kind of a suicide note is that? There’s not one word of sorrow in that note expressed for Nicole. Who signs a suicide note with a hap py face? Have you seen that note — O. J. with a smiling ‘O?’” Simpson, who chose not to take the stand at the criminal trial that ended in his acquittal, tes tified for four days during the civil trial. In a rapid-fire barrage, Petrocelli launched into a sneering attack on Simpson’s testimony and his character. “What kind of man takes a baseball bat to his wife’s car right in front of her and says she was not upset even though she called police for help? “What kind of man kicks in a door and says it was just a reflex? “What kind of man says his wife was lying on that tape when she says she was afraid and he was going — in her words — to beat the s— - out of her? “What kind of man says cheating on your wife isn’t a lie? “What kind of man when shown 30 pho tographs of him wearing Bruno Magli shoes says, ‘That’s me... that’s my head ... that’s my pants ... no, not my shoes’? “What kind of man says drat with a straight face?” Petrocelli answered his own questions: “A guilty man. ... A man with no remorse. A man with no conscience. This man is so obsessed with trying to salvage his image ... that he’ll come into this court and will smear the name and reputation of the mother of his children while she rests in her grave. This man has lied and lied and lied.” Pan-Hellenic Continued from Page 1 “Our fraternity is built on brotherhood,” Gardner said. “We feel we can better display that )y having less members.” Brewer said the Pan-Hellenic organizations ire small because their founders believed as long > they were productive and worked as a team, he organization’s size was irrelevant. “They don’t strive on numbers because of the |uality that their founders set forth,” Brewer said. He said most of the black Greek memberships Itarted with small classes ranging from three to 12 members. “A lot of it (small memberships) deals with it not branching out to where brotherhood and sis terhood is lost,” Brewer said. The Pan-Hellenic sororities and fraternities help with several community-oriented pro jects on and off campus. Alpha Phi Alpha members act as mentors at Southwood Valley Elementary School in College Station and par ticipate in A&M-sponsored activities such as Big Event. Gardner said he was attracted to Alpha Phi Al pha as a freshman because of the leadership roles the fraternity portrayed. “We strive to be leaders on campus, to show the community who we are and the students who we are,” Gardner said. Expert gives knife testimony in Routier trial KERRVILLE (AP) — The bloody knife found in Darlie Routier’s home could have made one of the wounds to her son’s chest, an expert testified Tuesday, while another witness said she didn’t find the boy’s blood on the weapon. Robert A. Poole with the Southwest Insti tute of Forensic Sciences said markings to the lower wound in Devon Routier’s chest could have been made by the so-called murder weapon. He could not make the same conclu sion in the upper incision. “My conclusion was that the characteris tics of the damage on the cartilage were mi croscopically similar to test stabs with the knife,” he said of the lower wound. Routier, 27, is charged with capital murder in the June 6 fatal stabbings of her sons, 5- year-old Damon and 6-year-old Devon. Pros ecutors say she also slashed herself and staged a crime scene to fool investigators. She is first being tried in the death of Da mon and could later be tried in Devon’s death. The trial was moved to Kerrville because of widespread notoriety the case has received in North Texas. Routier says an intruder dressed in dark clothing and a baseball cap attacked her and the boys before fleeing through the garage of their Rowlett home. Under cross-examination by defense at torney Doug Mulder, Poole acknowledged he could not determine whether the bloody knife actually cut Devon, only that he was attacked with a knife having similar characteristics. Another prosecution witness offered po tentially conflicting testimony. Judith Floyd, the forensic lab supervisor at GeneScreen Inc. of Dallas, a DNA testing lab, said she studied four stains taken from the knife. Two matched Routier, one matched Da mon and one was a combination of Damon and Routier. When pressed by defense attorney Richard Mosty about whether that meant that the knife wasn’t used to kill Devon, she replied: “It’s just consistent with his blood not being on the four places that were re moved for my testing.” Poole also testified that the knives found in a neighbor’s back yard “did not make at least one of the cuts” in Devon’s chest. Rowlett police Sgt. Thomas Ward testified earlier that he spotted two muddy knives in a yard across the alley from the sock. But he said he thought the knives had been used only for gardening. Monika Morgan, the financial secretary of Delta Sigma Theta and a senior finance major, said she feels her sorority has become more visible on campus by following the Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity’s lead in participating in non minority events. “We recently participated in Songfest,” Morgan said. “As a result of that, a lot of other organizations have asked us to participate in their functions that normally would not have asked us to.” Brewer said he thinks the historically black Greeks are starting to inherit visibility by making others aware of their positive attributes. “I think that is one strong goal they have for the new year, as well as to gain strong visibility and recapturing their vision,” Brewer said. OSBY Continued from Page 1 Meanwhile, the man police had oped might help them solve the lurder case was released after being Uestioned for eight hours. He had een surrounded by officers in a park- iglot in suburban Torrance Monday fternoon because his car was similar o a blue hatchback seen by a security Hard near the crime scene. The man, who was not identified »y police, was “candid and coopera- ive,” McBride said. He told police he ad gone to the hilltop Mulholland Mve area to look at the city’s lights. Cosby’s 27-year-old son had pulled iff Interstate 405 near Mulholland Mve to change a flat tire early Thurs- lay when he was shot to death. Police lelieve robbery was the motive. A $12,500 reward for the arrest md conviction of the killer was ap- toved Tuesday by the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors. The National Enquirer and Globe tabloids earlier posted a total of $300,000 in rewards. Across the country, the woman allegedly claiming to be the illegiti mate daughter of Bill Cosby was or dered held without bail in New York. Jackson, 22, of Los Angeles, and Jose Medina, 51, of Bethesda, Ohio, were arrested Saturday in the New York office of a Cosby lawyer, where they allegedly went to discuss a payoff. A federal complaint said the Cos by family had given Ms. Jackson money for education for several years, as the family has done for nu merous other young people in need of tuition assistance. Earlier this month, the com plaint says, Jackson sent a facsimile note demanding money. She warned that if Cosby did not send money, she would tell her story to the press, the complaint says. OnThursday, the day Ennis Cos by was slain, Jackson allegedly sent a fax to Bill Cosby’s representative saying it was “urgent that you con tact me to make certain arrange ments,” the complaint says. “I need monies and I need monies now.” CBS said it also received a fax on Thursday. The network said that one stated that Cosby’s show one of the network’s best properties and disclo sure that Ms. Jackson was the enter tainer’s illegitimate daughter would undoubtedly affect its ratings. Medina’s lawyer, Neil Check- man, said his client says he is a screenwriter and denies the charges. “I don’t believe he neces sarily knew that anything was go ing on,” Checkman said. Jackson’s lawyer, Robert Baulm, could not be reached for comment after business hours Tuesday. A call to the Legal Aid Society office where he works was not immediately returned. “Bill Cosby is quite content to let jurisprudence take its course,” Cos by publicist David Brokaw said of the New York developments. The publicist said he talked Tuesday with Cosby, who is at his estate in Massachusetts. “He’s obviously grieving and I know that it’s going to take a long time for the family to recover from this. But at the same time, every in stance I’ve spoken to him, he has his usual remarkable composure and his focus and his brilliant thinking, as well as his sense of humor,” Brokaw said. Cosby will return to work on his show on Monday, CBS spokesman Michael Silver said. The show aired as scheduled Monday night and drew the fourth- highest rating of the season, the network said. CBS opened and closed Mon day night’s episode with a tribute to Ennis Cosby. At the end, a pic ture of Bill Cosby’s son flashed on the screen with the message, “my hero, my son.” What makes a great classified ad? ■■r ESULT SI Action is what you want when you run a classified ad and action is what you’ll get from us! Our classi fieds really work and they bring RESULTS! If you've got something to sell or lease, have a ser vice to offer, or are looking for a job, don't settle for anything less than POSITIVE RESULTS! When results count, call 845-0569. The Battalion Let the Flu Help You! Do you have a fever? 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