Mark Fuhrman en el papel de...
Self - L.A. Police Detective
- Mark Fuhrman: [repeated line when questioned on the witness stand] I wish to assert my fifth amendment privilege.
- Mark Fuhrman: [on his first encounter with OJ Simpson when he was a uniformed policeman] It was late December 1985. We got this call, and I didn't know whose house it was. I had never been on a call there before, but there had been ten, eleven, maybe twelve officers from my precinct that had been on various domestic disturbance calls in L.A. over the years... but not at that house. Simpson is standing on the left side of the driveway, by the shrubs, holding a baseball bat. Nicole is sitting on the front part of a 450SL Mercedes... the windshield smashed in, and she's bawling, heaving, I mean, almost uncontrollably. He's got this look on his face... like he's going to do battle. And I say, "Put the bat down." And he's got this look... this rage look. I said, "Put the bat down." He didn't do it the second time. I took out my baton, and I said firmly, "Put it down, now!" And then all of a sudden there was this calm that came over his face, he dropped it, and he goes, "Oh, sorry, Officer." And I went over, and she was still crying, and I said, "Do you want to make a report?" And she goes, "No." I remember saying this because it was... I think expressing my displeasure that she was allowing herself to be treated like this. I said, "It's your life."
- Mark Fuhrman: [after studying the crime scene] Simpson's left hand was perhaps around Ron's chest and in the course of a short exchange which could've included some taunting, Simpson "poked" Ron in the right cheek five times and drew the knife away twice across his throat.
- Mark Fuhrman: For you, this is a documentary. For me, it's the end of my life. I'm going to tell you a story: in 1989, I was married, I had a house, I had a daughter who was born in 1991, my son was born in 1993. I had this group of friends, unbelievable friends. Every one of them was different from me though. They all came from intact families, with fathers, houses they still go back to, rooms they still have, but they welcomed me into this group. I thought I had it made. I finally was really happy for the first time in my life.