O.J. Simpson's Daughter Calls Police After Fight With Father -- An Abuse Thing’

M I A M I, Jan. 30 — Miami-Dade police arrived at O.J. Simpson's Florida home earlier this month after his teenage daughter placed an emotional 911 call following an argument with her father, authorities said.  Sydney Simpson, 17, was crying when she made the call on the morning of Jan. 18 and asked police to assist in what she termed as "an abuse thing."  When they arrived, the girl said she and her father "got into an argument over family issues," according to the one-page police report. No charges were filed and the girl left the house to calm down, according to the report.  Police could not say Wednesday if Simpson was home when officers arrived. The former football star's attorney said he was not.  "There is nothing that occurred," said attorney Yale L. Galanter. "What I do know was Mr. Simpson wasn't there." 

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 Simpson was acquitted of the 1994 slayings of his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ronald Goldman, but a civil jury later held him liable and ordered him to pay the victims' survivors $33.5 million. 

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January 11, 2002 -- In a bid to rehabilitate his battered image, O.J. Simpson will tour the Big Apple today while making a self-serving documentary - and may even have the audacity to visit ground zero. 
The shamed grid great plans to hit the streets of Manhattan to shoot scenes for a new documentary he's making about his "life and times..."
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Simpson Has No Plans for Reality Show
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Contrary to widely circulated reports, O.J. Simpson said Thursday he won't be the star of a reality television show, but might consider becoming a news commentator for actor Robert Blake's murder trial.
"I have no plans in any way to do a reality show even though people have approached me about it," Simpson said in a telephone interview from his Miami home. "I'm not looking to do anything. I don't have agents out there looking for something for O.J."
Simpson said he's been contacted about a reality show that would chronicle his day-to-day life but he's not interested.
"There's no plans in the Simpson family to have any cameras coming in our house," he said.
But Simpson said he knows where the new reports came from: He's aware of video footage shot during his travels to a series of hip-hop concerts in 2001 and 2002.
"To be honest, this footage would get pretty boring," he said. "Maybe for a half-hour it would be interesting but not for a series."
He said the videos show him arriving at airports, signing autographs and talking at hip-hop concerts.
"I had a lot of fun," he said. "We were welcomed everywhere. But this was not meant to be shown anywhere except as rebuttal to those who say I'm a pariah."
Urban Television Network Corp., a Fort Worth, Texas, satellite and cable channel, and Miami production company Spiderboy International said they're planning to create 13 one-hour episodes of the show using archived footage of Simpson.
"We've got everything done, the reality show is coming," Spiderboy founder Norman Pardo said Wednesday. But Simpson's lawyer said he hadn't been contacted about it.
Urban America has about 70 affiliates and reaches 22 million households.
As for commenting on the Blake case, he said TV outlets have contacted him, but he declined to name them.
"I'd love to do it," he said. "I think I have a lot of insight. I don't know if he's guilty or not but I know there's no such thing anymore as innocent until proven guilty."
Blake is accused of murdering wife Bonny Lee Bakley in Los Angeles in 2001. He's free on $1.5 million bail and is scheduled for trial in October.
Simpson, a football Hall of Famer, was tried and acquitted of murder after the 1994 slayings of ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ronald Goldman, but a civil jury later held him liable and ordered him to pay the victims' survivors $33.5 million. He hasn't worked since then because any money he makes could be seized to satisfy that judgment, which remains largely unpaid.
"I'm well aware of my situation," he said Thursday. "I didn't commit the crime and I don't think these people deserve anything. I'm not putting myself in a position of having to give them anything."