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Simpson's currently trying
to enjoy life in Nevada after recently
being paroled from prison. But now he's complained in a lawsuit that he's been "left with no time to earn a living" — because Fred Goldman is still pursuing a financial settlement after Simpson was found responsible for his son's death!
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An insider reported that Simpson had put together an estimated $9 million between the time he was arrested and found innocent in 1995. "O.J. bragged to me that the Browns and Goldmans will never see a dime of his money," said the source — claiming that the disgraced NFL star had already
moved his finances into offshore banks.
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"Everyone expects
O. J. to lose the civil case," added a court insider at the time. After the 1997 ruling, members of both families stated that they had actually pursued the court case to guarantee that Simpson would be found responsible for the murders of their loved ones — and Ron's sister Kim revealed in 2017 that Simpson had paid less than 1% of the debt!
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Simpson had earlier listed a net worth of almost $11 million during his 1992 divorce from Nicole. The scandal over her death put an end to his $500,000 a year job representing Hertz Rent-a-Car, plus his $700,000 yearly salary as a commentator for NBC Sports. But after being found innocent, Simpson quickly arranged a $2 million payday off the bizarre
"confessional" book "If I Did It."8 of 10
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Sources claimed that Simpson had picked up an additional $2 million from behind bars by signing sports memorabilia. He also sold the stock of at least four companies where he served on the board of directors, and made $3 million when selling his 50% stake in the Honey Baked Ham Company. There was an additional $1 million profit on a Manhattan condo that he put on the market.
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Simpson had also had made a deal to prevent the Browns and Goldmans from claiming his Hollywood mansion — using the property as collateral on a $3 million line of credit to pay his attorneys, giving them first equal shares on any profits from selling the property. He even blocked the families by going after his liability insurance by allowing another insurance company to buy out his existing policy.
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By 2002, Fred Goldman was selling shirts at a department store in Arizona while Simpson was living large in Miami. The celeb's latest legal move shows that Simpson still plans to hold on to his money while on parole in Nevada. But the insider had warned the Goldmans and Browns in 1997 about Simpson's schemes — saying the star was set to be "thumbing his nose at the legal system and the families!"