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For Families, the $25 Million Is Anticlimactic

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TIMES STAFF WRITERS

They had just won $25 million, but there was no exultation, no sense of elation on the faces of the families of murder victims Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Lyle Goldman.

No one pumped fists in front of television cameras like they did last week. And their public comments Monday afternoon had a mournful tone.

The money was just not as important, they said, as the civil jury’s previous determination that former football great O.J. Simpson was liable for the June 1994 slayings.

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“First and foremost, the jury’s decision of last Tuesday was the only decision that was important to us,” said a subdued Fred Goldman, father of the slaying victim. “Having the killer of my son found responsible was important to my family.”

Flanked by his wife and daughter at a hotel near the Santa Monica courthouse, Goldman spoke calmly, and his eyes welled up briefly, as he praised his team of attorneys headed by Daniel Petrocelli.

“Ron would have been proud of them,” he said.

Other relatives of the victims spoke of their lack of emotional closure--despite the jury’s ringing denunciation of Simpson.

“This has taken 2 1/2 years out of all our lives, and this will affect us for the rest of our lives,” said Kim Goldman, Ron’s sister. “I don’t know what that word ‘closure’ means. I have a real hard time with that.”

She paused, sobbing.

“I will be glad when all the cameras are gone and when we can sort of sit and look at our family and be proud of what we have done and be able to go to the cemetery as a family and tell Ron that we did it,” Kim Goldman added.

At a separate news conference later, Tanya Brown, Nicole’s sister, also spoke of the lingering impact of the slayings.

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“There will never be closure,” she said. “Nicole is forever gone. Her kids will forever be without a mother.”

The situation is particularly complicated for the sisters and parents of O.J. Simpson’s ex-wife.

In December, Nicole’s parents, Lou and Juditha Brown, had to hand over their grandchildren, Sydney, 11, and Justin, 8, to their father, Simpson, after losing a bitter custody battle in an Orange County court.

The Browns said Monday that they have not yet decided whether to appeal that custody ruling.

At a news conference separate from the Goldmans’, the Browns spoke of how the $12.5 million in punitive damages awarded Monday to the children’s estate would not ease their pain over the custody decision or the loss of Nicole.

“They do have a grandmother, they have a grandfather, they have three wonderful aunts who really, truly care about them, who still carry the blood of Nicole with them,” said Tanya Brown. “But as far as closure, there will never be. Nicole is not here anymore.”

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Still, Lou Brown praised the civil trial jury. “We are very, very happy with the reaction of a jury. They listened. They considered all the evidence.”

Nicole’s mother held back tears as she described her own struggle over her daughter’s death.

“Every day is a step of healing,” she said. “Life goes on normal. I’m not going to make myself bitter about it.”

Brown said she was feeling “somewhat relieved.”

“I knew justice would be done some day,” she added, “but I always said, ‘I’d still like to hear it.’ And I did.”

Dominique Brown said that dealing with the pain of her sister’s death was doubly hard because of the children who have been left behind.

“We’ve dealt with seeing the pain and shielding the pain from the children, as we continue to do so.”

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The Browns said they had told Simpson’s two young children nothing about trial proceedings, even though the youngsters were living at their Dana Point home during both of Simpson’s trials.

“We tried to protect the children in every way, shape and form from all of the bad news,” said Lou Brown, the chief executive of the Nicole Brown Charitable Foundation. “The children get most of their information from their father, I’m afraid. As far as information concerning the proceedings of the criminal trial and this trial, very little has come from us.”

Brown and his wife also talked of their almost instantaneous feeling more than two years ago that their former son-in-law was responsible for the stabbing death of their daughter.

“I received a telephone call and I knew,” Juditha Brown said.

“There was an immediate reaction,” Lou Brown said. “I was still in bed. My wife reached over and took the telephone and said . . .”

“He killed her,” Juditha Brown said, finishing her husband’s sentence.

Ronald Goldman’s biological mother, Sharon Rufo of St. Louis, did not attend Monday’s court hearing. But her attorney, Michael Brewer, said Rufo was relieved that the 2 1/2-year legal saga had finally come to an end.

“She’s very emotional,” Brewer said. “She’s extremely pleased that it’s over. I think that she can now focus on the rest of her life. That’s what I told her. I said, ‘This chapter is behind you. Now it’s time to get on with the rest of your life.’ And that’s what she’s going to do.”

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At his news conference, Fred Goldman thanked the jury for its diligence and “clear thinking” in presenting its verdict. Asked to describe the difference in his reactions between the civil and criminal trials, Goldman said: “I think the only difference for me was having a jury finally hold him [Simpson] responsible. That’s all we ever wanted.”

(BEGIN TEXT OF INFOBOX / INFOGRAPHIC)

The Balance Sheet

In setting punitive damages, jurors had to decide between two very different pictures of O.J. Simpso’s financial health. Here’s a recap of his finances.

*--*

Simpson’s Plaintiffs’ Claim Claim Checking account $6, 137 $6,137 Legal defense fund 471 471 Bank account 240 240 Owed Simpson by Orenthal Productions 1 265,727 Orenthal Productions 1 1 Pigskins Inc. 242,500 242,500 May Medical Bldg. 42,000 42,000 Rockingham home 3,700,000 3,700,000 San Francisco condo 1 250,000 Pension funds 4,121,479 4,121,479 NFL pension 0 175,592 Personal furnishings, art 500,000 500,000 Electric bicycle 4,350 4,350 Suburban automobile 64,069 64,069 Value of name, etc. 0 24,880,568 TOTAL ASSETS: $8,681,249 $34,253,134 n Liabilities Legal fees, custody case $208,493 $208,493 Rockingham mortgage 2,300,000 2,300,000 Condo mortgage 1,959 1,959 IRS, 1993 taxes 7,811 7,811 Legal fees, criminal and civil trials 2,897,635 2,897,635 TOTAL LIABILITIES: $5,415,898 $5,415,898

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Bottom line

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Assets in excess of liabilities $3,265,351 $28,837,236 Estimated income taxes 4,121,503 13,133,707 ASSETS IN EXCESS OF LIABILITIES, AFTER TAXES: -$856,152 $15,703,529

*--*

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