1 season available
The defense is convinced that the police not only did a poor job processing the crime scene, but even planted evidence to frame O.J. Simpson for the murders of his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman.
The defense critiques the police's handling of key evidence, claiming they actually contaminated it; the attorneys focus on a lack of fingerprinting, officers walking over the bodies, and items moved before and after they were photographed.
The defense tries to show jurors that the police did not preserve the crime scene as they are legally required to do; Judge Lance Ito allows the jury to visit the crime scene, while O.J. Simpson waives his right to go along.
A huge security detail normally reserved for heads of state accompanies the jury on its tour of the condo where O.J. Simpson's ex-wife and her friend were killed; the defense drills a police officer about police procedures done at the crime scene.
One of two lead detectives who took over the case after it was reassigned to the Los Angeles Police Department's Robbery Homicide Division testifies for the state; evidence includes a bloody glove, bloody footprints and blood droplets.
The lead detectives are briefed by the detectives who have been handling the case, make preliminary searches of the entire property noting the clues before police can fully process the area, and begin asking questions to all those involved.
The detectives scramble to get answers as to what happened to Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman; her ex-husband, O.J. Simpson, is out of town and their two children are at the police station.