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TIME: Almanac 1995
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1995-02-26
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<text id=94TT1099>
<title>
Aug. 22, 1994: Crime:Who Are These Guys Anyway?
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Aug. 22, 1994 Stee-rike!
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
CRIME, Page 60
Who Are These Guys Anyway?
</hdr>
<body>
<p> A team of private investigators strives to undermine the case
against O.J.
</p>
<p>By Jill Smolowe--Reported by Richard Behar/New York and Elaine Lafferty and Jeffrey
Ressner/Los Angeles
</p>
<p> Aficionados of the O.J. Simpson case can be forgiven if in
recent weeks they've had trouble keeping track of just why the
former football star could not possibly have killed ex-wife
Nicole and her friend Ronald Goldman. First there was the bloody-glove
theory, in which a police detective was supposed to have planted
a mitt on O.J. Simpson's property. Then there was the mystery
witness, later identified as a con artist, who saw two white
men fleeing Nicole's house around the time of the slayings.
Last week came the mysterious frozen-dessert theory, which goes
something like this: shortly before the murders, Nicole stopped
at a Ben & Jerry's, picked up some ice cream--or yogurt--and brought it to her condo, where it was allegedly found around
midnight, still frozen. If so, then the defense might try to
argue that Nicole and Goldman were still alive when O.J. left
for the airport at around 11 that night.
</p>
<p> But the frozen-dessert evidence is mild stuff compared with
the theory provided to TIME last week by a defense-team lawyer.
"I think this is the work of a Colombian-type killer," he asserted.
"When you see a throat cut nearly through to the spinal cord,
that's often a message that the voice box has offended, or is
expected to."
</p>
<p> This blitz of intriguing, if often contradictory, speculation
was interrupted briefly last Thursday by the news that the defendant
was taken from his jail cell to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center,
suffering from swollen lymph nodes in his armpits and episodes
of night sweats. Doctors will analyze the nodes for cancer,
a disease that runs in the former football star's family. The
results are expected early this week.
</p>
<p> Simpson's hospital visit was a sharp dose of reality in what
has otherwise been a month of rumors, innuendo and wild theories.
While any good criminal-defense team is expected to do its best
to create reasonable doubt about its client's alleged guilt,
what makes the Simpson squad stand out is the lengths to which
it tries to use the media to mount its counteroffensive. Lead
attorney Robert Shapiro may be the master spinner, but he counts
on a formidable team of private investigators to dig up information
that will help his case. Heading this team is a seasoned duo
of private eyes. Ex-New York City cop John McNally, 60, is the
tough guy, with a reputation for playing hard, dirty and on
the side of the Mob. Vietnam vet Pat McKenna, 45, is the boy
scout who loves his kids, baseball and a good laugh over a few
beers. Both have lent their expertise to celebrated cases; both
have a reputation for extreme thoroughness.
</p>
<p> Of the two, McNally is by far the more colorful--and controversial.
Before retiring from the New York police department in 1971,
he collected 22 commendations and attained top standing as a
first-grade detective, despite several internal investigations
into his conduct. He is credited with collaring notorious jewel
thief Jack ("Murph the Surf") Murphy in 1964. Since going private,
McNally has provided his services to the defense of Patty Hearst,
Bernhard Goetz and John Gotti. Defense attorney F. Lee Bailey,
who is also part of the Simpson team, has tapped McNally's services
regularly, as have other top attorneys. "He's the defense lawyer's
ultimate secret weapon," says a high-ranking member of the N.Y.P.D.
"The only dark side of his life is that he's in the business
of keeping people out of jail who should be in jail."
</p>
<p> There is no question that McNally has stepped on a lot of toes,
including those of federal prosecutors. "McNally was a trusted
confidant of high-level Gambino crime-family members," says
Assistant U.S. Attorney David Shapiro. The FBI has investigated
McNally several times but has never brought criminal charges.
Law-enforcement sources told TIME that McNally is the target
of a current FBI investigation. Asked about this latest probe,
McNally responded that he is considering filing a suit against
the FBI. "Of course they're not going to like me," he says.
"I show up in every big case."
</p>
<p> McKenna, by contrast, is praised as a prince of a guy with a
sterling record. Criminal defense attorney Richard Lubin, who
has hired McKenna dozens of times, insists, "He's the kind of
guy you'd have baby-sit your kids, and you'd come home and he'd
be on the floor cutting paper dolls with them." In 1991, however,
McKenna was more likely to be found at the bar of the Brazilian
Court Hotel in Palm Beach, dishing dirt to reporters about the
woman who unsuccessfully pressed date-rape charges against his
client, William Kennedy Smith.
</p>
<p> According to the Simpson team, one member was recently fired
on suspicion that he had planted stories in the press. That's
not likely to end the leaks, of course. "The big hurrah in this
case is you fellas still don't know what's in ((Simpson's police))
statement," says Bailey of the press. Any hints? "I'll simply
say the statement will play a critical role in the defense."
Along with such tantalizing hints from the attorneys, you can
count on McNally and McKenna to keep digging.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>