F. Lee Bailey:
[cross-examining Mark Fuhrman] So, Detective, as an MP in the Marine Corps, what were your responsibilities?
Detective Mark Fuhrman:
They were varied.
F. Lee Bailey:
Lot of hacking D & D’s, huh?
Judge Lance Ito:
What does that mean, Mr. Bailey?
F. Lee Bailey:
Oh, that means arresting drunk and disorderlies. Sorry, Your Honor. Slipped into some marine to marine talk there. Detective, did you take a glove from the Bundy scene and then wipe it on the interior of the Bronco?
Detective Mark Fuhrman:
No.
F. Lee Bailey:
You did not?
Detective Mark Fuhrman:
No, I did not.
F. Lee Bailey:
Couldn’t you have fit this… [holding up a plastic bag containing a glove] into a plastic bag, then put it in your sock, and then place it at Mr. Simpson’s home, so that you could find it?
Detective Mark Fuhrman:
[incredulously] Uh, no. That’s nuts.
Marcia Clark:
I object to this line of questioning, Your Honor. This has no part in any search for the truth. That’s not the glove from this case. It’s a different size, and a different make. [takes the bag from Bailey] This seems to be some fantasy, woven by the defence, for which there is no factual or logical basis. It’s as dishonest as any number of Mr. Bailey’s tactics have been.
F. Lee Bailey:
Excuse me? [gets to his feet and faces Marcia] Are you accusing me of lying in courtroom? How dare you.
Marcia Clark:
You can’t get away with lying, Mr. Bailey. Not in this case. There are too many people watching.
Judge Lance Ito:
Ms. Clark, may I please see those gloves that you have over there? [She takes them over and hands them to him. He examines them] This is a Brooks Brothers, size small.
F. Lee Bailey:
They were out of extra-large, Your Honor.
Marcia Clark:
Size small. Must be Mr. Bailey’s.
[The gallery chuckles]
F. Lee Bailey:
Let me, uh, state very clearly… and I should point out that if Ms. Clark thinks [holding up his hand and the glove] that hand and this glove would ever work together, then her eyesight is as bad as her memory. Your Honor, the prosecution has opened this door, rather deliberately…
Judge Lance Ito:
I would advise caution. Please continue.
Johnnie Cochran:
[whispering quietly to Bailey] Lee. [gives him a nod of encouragement]
F. Lee Bailey:
I will ask a different question. [takes a sip of water] In describing people, Detective Fuhrman, do you use the word “nigger?”
[Everyone looks at him in surprise]
Detective Mark Fuhrman:
[quickly] No, sir. I do not use that word to describe people.
F. Lee Bailey:
Have you ever used the word “nigger” in the past ten years?
Detective Mark Fuhrman:
Not that I can recall, no.
F. Lee Bailey:
You mean if you called someone a nigger, you have forgotten it?
Detective Mark Fuhrman:
I’m not sure I can answer the question the way that you phrased it, sir.
F. Lee Bailey:
Let me put it simply. Are you saying, under oath, that you have not addressed any black person as a nigger, or spoken about black people as niggers in the past ten years, Detective Fuhrman?
Detective Mark Fuhrman:
Yes, that’s what I’m saying.
F. Lee Bailey:
So then anyone who comes to this court and quotes you as using that word in dealing with African-Americans would be a liar. Would they not, Detective Fuhrman?
Detective Mark Fuhrman:
Yes, they would.
F. Lee Bailey:
: All of them, correct?
Detective Mark Fuhrman:
All of them.
F. Lee Bailey:
Thank you. No further questions.
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