Jury acquits Simpson of assault in Miami road-rage spat

Associated Press

MIAMI — O.J. Simpson was acquitted Wednesday of grabbing another driver’s glasses and scratching the man’s face in a road-rage argument the former football star insisted was started by the other guy.

After the verdict, Simpson put his hand to his chest and mouthed, "Thank you" as he nodded toward the jury. He then hugged his lawyers.

"I’m a little bit angry and a little bit happy — a lot happy," Simpson said as he left the courthouse.

The 54-year-old Simpson faced up to 16 years in jail had he been convicted of auto burglary and battery for last year’s dispute with Jeffrey Pattinson in their suburban Miami neighborhood. The jury deliberated for about 90 minutes.

The two men offered vastly different accounts of what happened. Pattinson said Simpson ran a stop sign, then acted like "a madman" after Pattinson got him to pull over by flashing his lights and honking his horn.

Simpson accused the other man of "sitting on his horn." He said he thought Pattinson was seeking an autograph or was trying to tell him about a problem with his car, which was also carrying Simpson’s two young children.

He denied reaching inside Pattinson’s car to take the glasses and said the two men confronted each other outside their vehicles.

Simpson said Pattinson lied about staying in his car, which prompted the prosecutor to ask whether Simpson would ever lie. Simpson responded, "I’ve never been put in that position to have to lie with my life on the line."

Simpson offered no explanation for the scratch on Pattinson’s face but explained his thumbprint on the glasses by saying it must have happened when he brushed them away as he broke off the 30-second, profanity-laced confrontation.

Simpson was cleared of criminal charges in the 1994 slayings of his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ronald Goldman, but a civil jury later ordered him to pay $33.5 million for their deaths. He moved to Florida last year.

Copyright ©2001 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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