The Juice Is Loose! O.J. Simpson Free On Bail

Bonaventure set bail at $125,000 for Simpson.

Simpson, standing shackled in court in a blue jail uniform and handcuffs, furrowed his brow as the judge read the list of charges against him.

He answered quietly in a hoarse voice and nodded as the judge laid out restrictions for his release, including surrendering his passport to his attorney and having no contact with co-defendants or potential witnesses.

Simpson did not enter a plea.

Unlike his arraignment more than a decade ago in the 1994 killings of his ex-wife and her friend Ron Goldman, when Simpson declared he was “absolutely 100 percent not guilty,” he was subdued throughout the proceeding Wednesday.

“Mr. Simpson do you understand the charges against you?” the judge asked.

“Yes, sir,” Simpson responded.

Attorney Yale Galanter said after the hearing that the $125,000 bond was reasonable. He said Simpson would plead not guilty to all 11 charges.

“He’s relieved. This has been a very harrowing experience for him,” Galanter said.

Simpson posted bond through the “You Ring We Spring Bail Bonds” company, said bondsman Miguel Pereira, who drove Simpson’s relatives and girlfriend to and from the courthouse in a black SUV.

Pereira said he wasn’t nervous about accepting the bond, which can cost between 10 and 15 percent of the $125,000, and for which the company is responsible for ensuring Simpson will make court appearances.

“He’s not a flight risk. I have a gut feeling and I’m good at my job,” Pereira said.

Security at the courthouse was tight for the arraignment hearing. People entering the courtroom were screened by security officers and Las Vegas police with bomb-sniffing dogs.

Simpson, 60, was arrested Sunday after a collector reported a group of armed men charged into his hotel room at the Palace Station casino and took several items that Simpson claimed belonged to him. He has been held since then in protective custody in a 7-foot-by-14-foot cell.

The Heisman Trophy winner was charged with kidnapping, robbery with use of a deadly weapon, burglary while in possession of a deadly weapon, coercion with use of a deadly weapon, assault with a deadly weapon, conspiracy to commit kidnapping, conspiracy to commit robbery and conspiracy to commit a crime.

“These are very serious charges,” Galanter said. “He is taking it very seriously.”

Authorities allege that the men went to the room on the pretext of brokering a deal with two longtime collectors, Alfred Beardsley and Bruce Fromong. According to police reports, the collectors were ordered at gunpoint to hand over several items valued at as much as $100,000.

Fromong, 53, of North Las Vegas, remained in the intensive care unit at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles after suffering a heart attack, but his condition was upgraded Wednesday from critical to fair, hospital spokeswoman Simi Singer said.

Beardsley told police that one of the men with Simpson brandished a pistol, frisked him and impersonated a police officer, and that another man pointed a gun at Fromong.

“I’m a cop and you’re lucky this ain’t LA or you’d be dead,” the man said, according to the report.

“One of the thugs — that’s the best thing I can call them — somebody blurted out ‘police!‘ and they came in military style,” Beardsley said Wednesday on NBC’s “Today” show. “I thought it might have been law enforcement or the FBI or something because I was ordered to stand up, and I was frisked for weapons.”

“At no time did Mr. Simpson hold any type of firearm at all,” he said.

Beardsley also cast doubt on the authenticity of a recording of the confrontation made by Tom Riccio, the man who arranged the meeting between Simpson and the two collectors.

“I do not believe that these tapes are accurate,” Beardsley said. He said information was missing and the recordings should be professionally analyzed.

“Simpson confronted me, saying ‘Man what’s wrong with you, you have a turnover order, you have a turnover order for this stuff, man,“‘ Beardsley said, but he said that part wasn’t on the tapes.

The Los Angeles Times reported that court records show Riccio has an extensive criminal history from the 1980s and ‘90s, including grand larceny in Florida, possession of stolen goods in Connecticut and receiving stolen property in California. According to the newspaper, Riccio acknowledged his past in a telephone interview late Tuesday.

Riccio said he was not concerned with how his past might affect his credibility “because everything’s on tape. That’s why it’s on tape.”

He also said he had been promised some form of immunity by prosecutors.

The memorabilia taken from the hotel room included football game balls signed by Simpson, Joe Montana lithographs, baseballs autographed by Pete Rose and Duke Snider and framed awards and plaques, together valued at as much as $100,000.

Although Simpson was acquitted of murder charges in the deaths of his ex-wife and Goldman, a jury later held him liable for the killings in a wrongful death lawsuit and ordered him to pay a $33.5 million judgment. On Tuesday, a California judge gave a lawyer for Goldman’s father a week to deliver a list of items Simpson was accused of taking from the hotel room, raising the possibility that they could be sold to pay off the judgment.

“He’s ordered to pay us millions of dollars,” Goldman’s sister, Kim Goldman, said Wednesday on NBC. “If he went to Vegas to go collect on those things so we wouldn’t, there’s some irony in that.”

She also said she felt some satisfaction with Simpson’s arrest.

“I’m not going to lie to you, I do feel a little bit of elation to see him in handcuffs,” she said. “I hope that in some way the pressure that we put on him for the last 13 years drove him to this.”

Two other defendants, Walter Alexander, 46, and Clarence Stewart, 53, were arrested and released pending court appearances.

Stewart turned in some of the missing goods and Alexander agreed to cooperate with prosecutors, authorities said. A fourth suspect, Michael McClinton, 49, of Las Vegas, surrendered to police Tuesday.

Bonaventure said he would schedule a hearing for October for Simpson and the other men.

Police were seeking two other suspects, whom they had not identified.