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Chapter 31

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Chapter 30

A Whole New Ballgame

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The reason this chapter isn’t titled The Real French Connection is because I couldn’t get all of the letters to fit when I thought I knew where it was going. Then the Detroit connection took over and it was a whole new ballgame. If youwpeE6.jpg (2115 bytes) watch enough R-rated moves you notice that "French" is usually performed by the man on the woman unless the woman is a prostitute like the one who performs "French" on Officer Charlie Stewart in To Protect and Serve. Notable exceptions are Faye Dunaway in Bonnie and Clyde, Goldie Hawn in Private Benjamin, Jane Fonda in Coming Home, Kathleen Turner in Body Heat, Jennifer Jason Leigh in Single White Female, and Helen Mirren in The Cook, the Thief, His Wife & Her Lover. You should also note a little know actress named Melora Hurdin as Whitney in Soul Man with C. Thomas Howell as Mark.

Give you any ideas about why so many of Mark Fuhrman’s ties are decorated with white spots – particularly the ones he wore in court with Marcia Clark andwpeE7.jpg (4754 bytes) one he wore on camera with Dianne Sawyer? We’re not forgetting the fact that the white on red or white on blue-spotted tie appears on powerful figures in the movies like James Earl Jones as a Harvard Law professor in Soul Man, or powerful political figures in real life like Bill Clinton. Ever wonder why the trail of advice and betrayal that ended with Monica Lewinski saving the dress stained with Bill Clinton’s semen started with Mark Fuhrman – or did you attribute that to chance? Don't the neckties he wore in court and the glove he found remind you of the clothes stolen by Satan worshipers in Rosemary’s Baby to kill, to blind, and to advance one man’s career by destroying another’s?

Doesn’t it bother you that Fuhrman had ANYTHING to do with the impeachment of a President, or that his national status was enhanced by what he did? Judging by the way he described himself to Laura Hart McKinney, nothing would have stopped him from demanding the sexual tribute that Charlie Stewart demans just to "relieve stress" or to show who was boss. With his attitude toward black men and white women isn’t it odd that he recorded zero references to his encounters with actual black pimps and their white whores in his ten years as an abusive street cop? Well, not so odd if they were encounters that involved shakedowns and sex. The bottom line with Fuhrman is power, money and sex as instruments of power and both as powerful motives for murder.

According to Fuhrman’s discoveries, observations and theories, the case against O.J. was open and shut. If you’re experiencing a recall lapse we can fix that with four of director Paul Verhoeven’s biggest box office hits. In chronological order they would be Flesh and Blood (’85) with Jennifer Jason Leigh and Bruno Kirby, RoboCop (’87) with Ronny Cox, Total Recall (’90) with Ronny Cox and Sharon Stone, and Basic Instinct (’92). For the record, Ronny Cox is a detective in Joseph Wambaugh's The Onion Field ('79). He is Sharon Stone's homicidal psychiatrist in Scissors ('90). And what more can we say about Sharon Stone?

Sharon Stone goes from the fragile, naïve Patrice in Action Jackson to the tough, shrewd and deadly Lori Quaid in Total Recall. Doug Quaid (ArnoldwpeEB.jpg (19869 bytes) Schwarzenegger) visits a place where memory implants stand in for a real experience. Ray Baker (a cop in Physical Evidence) as Bob McClane (as opposed to John McClane in Die Hard), talks him into assuming a different persona for the trip. The procedure sets off a series of events that lead to a death struggle and multiple homicide. One of his victim’s is a "friend" named Harry whose real job was to watch him. Quaid sneaks into his home, hits the light switch with his bloody hands and sees himself in the mirror as a killer as Lori picks up the phone. When he come out, she tries to kill him. In the kitchen, she picks up a butcher knife and cuts him using first one hand then the other.

You know how much this sounds like Fuhrman’s story of why Nicole left the butcher knife out in the kitchen, the phone call he said she was going to make, the blood he said he saw on the light switch and the murderer he said O.J. saw in the mirror. That much you know. Have you guessed the part where Quaid hits Lori with a pounding blow that knocks her to the floor—on her left side—with her knees drawn up? Have you guessed the part about the blood in Quaid’s sink? Maybe you would have guessed those things if I had mentioned the technical error that Fuhrman corrected with his story about the blood on the light switch.

It stands to reason that O.J. would have had blood on his hands if he’d just dropped a bloody glove irrespective of whether he’d cut himself. In a state of panic it is highly unlikely that he would have been careful about where he put his hands from moment to moment. The light switch is a logical place to expect to see blood if Fuhrman’s scenario is correct. He said that O.J. turned on the light when he entered the room. Doug Quaid turns the light out. Well, he tuns the light in his living room out. He leaves on the one in the bathroom. After he hits the light switch he hits another one and another. He then goes to Lori, places both hands firmly on her bare upper arms and tells her his story of the death struggle. When he takes his wet, bloodstained hands away to show her proof of his violent deed, her arms are clean.

Fuhrman’s observation of blood on the light switch was a necessary improvement in the transfer of Total Recall ideas from the screen to his notes, interviews, tapes and his book about the O.J. investigation. Like Rodney, the mystery writer’s technical advisor aboard the Murder Train in Moonlighting’s "Next Stop Murder," Fuhrman was Laura Hart’s technical adviser on the proposed screenplay Men Against Women. His job was to make sure that errors like Quaid’s bloody hands coming away from Lori’s clean arms didn’t happen.

In RoboCop (’87), co-written by Michael Miner (another Miner), Detroit PolicewpeEC.jpg (28682 bytes) Officer Alex Murphy (Peter Weller) and his new partner Ann Lewis (Nancy Allen) track a drug gang in a white van to their hideout. They separate. Lewis and Murphy get knocked to the ground. The gang tortures Murphy the way Ron Goldman was tortured, with wounds inflicted to cause physical and psychological pain before he was killed. Murphy’s killers use guns (Fuhrman’s third note) instead of knives. The leader Clarence Boddicker (Kirkwood Smith) pins his arm to the floor and shoots off his hand. The hand flies away from his wrist. Blood gushes from the stump. He gets to his feet where the other gang members shoot off the rest of his arm and fill the rest of his body with bullets. Murphy staggers around for a long time before he falls. Boddicker puts a bullet in his head and leaves with the gang. Lewis, wearing the same kind of boots that Murphy has on, only smaller, steps in the pool of blood he’s lying in to get to him. Miraculously, he’s still alive, though barely. But the movie has a technical problem with the medical evacuation scene that even a miracle can’t explain. The rubber soles of Murphy’s boots are clean.

A 12-year veteran of he LAPD working as a technical advisor on a screenplay is no more likely to have missed a detail like that than a hitchhiker on the side of a road is likely to miss a rainstorm. When Fuhrman looked at the souls of Kato’s shoes after giving him a sobriety test he said they look similar but they were too small. Remember that?

This is for those who question the relevance of RoboCop to Fuhrman’s role as Laura Hart’s technical adviser or don’t recall what he said to her about the worthlessness of a female cop fighting "a 6’ 6’’ nigger." But before I do that, I have to be sure you recall his theory that O.J. struck Nicole with a pounding blow that knocked her out. Fuhrman said that she was out when Ron entered the killing ground. Knocking out Nicole was how her killer separated her from Ron. You also want to keep in mind the fact that Nancy Allen plays characters in two movies; Dressed to Kill (’80) and Blow Out (’81) who get their throat cut.

Remember that Detroit is a French name, French is another name for oral sex, and another name for oral sex performed on a man is a blowjob. Remember Sydney’s Christmas Joke in D.O.A. about Santa’s reindeer going into town and "blowing some bucks." Remember Sherilyn Fenn as Jain in Diary of a Hitman promising the hitman a blowjob to let her and her baby live. Remember that ideas are all about symbols and Fuhrman was big on symbolism (his explanation for the cartoon about the nazi swastika) and he was the one who found the bubble gum on Bundy that he argued may have been an important clue to what happened.

I think the bubble gum is a big clue to what happened. That is, the fact thatwpeEE.jpg (37146 bytes) Fuhrman thought it was so important is a big clue. When you watch the sequence in RoboCop that leads to Murphy being killed, I think you will agree….

Murphy and Lewis follow the gang to a vast industrial complex. They split up but stay in radio contact. Lewis catches the black gang member, Joe, in leather gloves taking a leak. She watches him from a hiding place chewing a wad of bubble gum and absentmindedly blowing a bubble before telling him to freeze. She makes him show her his hands, but instead of handcuffing him right away, she lets him turn around with his hands up—and his fly open. When he says, "Mind if I zip this up," and looks down, her eyes "go down." Joe smacks the gun from Lewis' hand and knocks her out with a left hook (Detroit boxer Joe Lewis, knockout punch, bloody leather gloves). When Murphy gets into trouble Lewis is unable to assist him, thus illustrating Fuhrman’s point about women cops.

Note the ease with which related ideas flow into each other. When I saw the pristine soles of Murphy’s new shoes, the first thing I thought of was the bloody imprints of virgin Bruno Maglis on Bundy. Then I pictured the blood drops next to them and how easy it would have been to switch the samples. I did a mental rewind to Lewis watching Joe take a leak and automatically recalled M.P. drug testing with urine samples when I was in Vietnam and Fuhrman’s job as an M.P. aboard ship in Vietnam.

The only way to be sure an illegal drug user didn’t switch his sample with a non-user for testing was to watch him. If you can switch a sample of one bodywpeAA.jpg (4662 bytes) fluid for testing you can do it with another. I know that I covered that history lesson in another chapter, but the point I’m making here is specific to RoboCop, the ideas borrowed from RoboCop to make The Naked Gun 2 ½ (’91) and the ideas borrowed from both movies to frame O.J. Simpson for murder. You remember the scene in The Naked Gun 2 ½ were Nordberg’s legs and feet stick out (how’s that for an idea) from under a white bus with tinted glass (like his Bronco’s) bound for Detroit and the TV commercial with the urine test. I’m certain that the Bundy killer did. There is just too much that says he did and all of it fits too well.

The error of blood missing from the soles of Murphy’s brand new boots in RoboCop and the arms of Lori Quaid in Total Recall appear to have been corrected in a merging of the two ideas on the Bundy murder scene. Perhaps youwpeF2.jpg (2090 bytes) noticed how distinctive the soles of Murphy’s boots are and how easy it would be to trace the bloody imprints of boots like that to a Detroit police officer. Did you picture Carl Withers in Action Jackson or Bob Minor (the Choirboys) wearing his clothes? Perhaps Bob Minor carrying the package reminded you of The Package with Gene Hackman, and the assassin who switches identities with a soldier to frame him for murder.

Hollywood hasn’t produced an abundance of movies featuring Detroit police officers. That makes it hard not to think of the few that have. Beverly Hills Cop (’84) with Eddie Murphy is one you might recall. I don’t think it’s an accident that most of these men are black, that Eddie Murphy and Alex Murphy share the same last name, or that Ronny Cox (remember Courtney Cox in Mr. Destiny?) had a big part in both smash hits. Ronnie Cox starred in Beverly Hills Cop (’84), RoboCop (’87) and Total Recall (’90). He’s the guy in RoboCop who causes a young executive to wet his pants in sheer terror of his presence. He is the kind of guy that Fuhrman said he was pretending to be on the McKinny tapes. You will remember that Fuhrman called that persona a cross between Dirty Harry and Atilla the Hun (’54).

Josef Sommer who plays the lead detective in The Rosary Murders made his big screen debut in Dirty Harry. When a nun named Ann is murdered in herwpeAC.jpg (2886 bytes) bathtub (Nicole's bath water/the knife box that Fuhrman said was on O.J.'s bathtub rim) Sommer follows a priest, a janitor and a parade of cops with flashlights through the narrow passage of a tunnel and comes out on a stage. Remember that Fuhrman is the only detective in the case who talks about being on stage and the only one who compares the Rockingham crime scene to a movie set (Capricorn One). That scene is immediately preceded by a sequence of quick shots that show lit candles (Nicole's lit candles around her bathtub) and a man in a black knit cap and leather gloves.

A detective who has gone off on his own calls the lead detective and tells him, "You have to look at this." These were Fuhrman's words to Det. Vannatter when he went off on his own and found the blood on the Bronco door inches below the tinted side glass. He said something similar when he went off on his own and found the brown leather glove in the narrow passage next to Kato's bungalow. The maverick detective in The Rosary Murders peals back a piece of cardboard from a door window with his pocketknife and finds a broken stain glass. Fragments of the stained glass lie at the feet of the janitor who is the only man in the group wearing brown, leather shoes. Fuhrman examined Kato's shoes before he went outside and found the brown leather glove.

The Rosary Murders does not have a black cop in a lead role, but it was filmed entirely on location in Detroit and a black cop in that movie does play a lead role in the Bundy murders. You see the black cop briefly as he runs through a kitchenwpeAD.jpg (3134 bytes) where a nun and a fellow cop have just been shot to death by the incestuous father of a girl named Katherine who hanged herself three years before. The birthday on her tombstone is June 21 (Michael Jordan's number/12 in reverse). As soon as the cop gets outside, he sees the killer in a black knit cap and orders him to freeze. The killer whirls and shoots him. The black cop, in his dying act, returns fire wounding the killer in his left leg. His wound marks him as the killer even though he manages to get away. The black cop falls to his left side and expires in nearly the identical position that Nicole's body was found in on Bundy.

Now consider the events leading up to the discovery of the nun's bloody body in the bathtub… Donald Sutherland, as the priest, goes to the kitchen of the church across the street from the convent. The cook has been trying to contact the nun by phone. She is carrying a pitcher of O.J. (orange juice). The time on the kitchen clock is 10:04. O.J. ended his last phone call to Paula Barbiari before the murders at 10:04.

You will recall that one of the black cops that Mark Fuhrman played basketball with wore the jersey of Detroit Piston superstar Isiah Thomas, # 11. You will recall that the murders occurred in the sixth month and that O.J.'s number when he was named The Juice in Buffalo was 32. In The Rosary Murders, a priest who wears a black knit cap and dark brown leather gloves to go jogging (Nicole, Fuhrman and Dirty Harry were joggers) ends up as a murder victim. His body is found by a railroad track next to the John Kronk (boxer Tommy "Hitman" Hearns – bloody gloves) Park. His birthday is 11/6/32. He was born in Buffalo New York.

Before we get too far away from Dirty Harry and RoboCop we have to look at leather gloves and hats of all kinds that are associated with the Bundy murders in the Fuhrman collection. You'll want to keep in mind the black (or is it dark blue?) baseball cap that Spinell wears in The Ninth Configuration, the one with the marksmanship badge attached.

Fuhrman says in Murder in Brentwood that he was one of the best shots in the LAPD. In the firing range scene of Magnum Force with David Soul as a killer cop named Davis, we learn that Davis and his rookie friends were Army Rangers (black berets). In Robocop, the black killer is wearing the kind of gloves that don’t protect your fingers from being cut—the kind that the bleeding killer wore in Moonlighting’s "Gunfight at the So-So Corral" with Pat Corley (the lawyer in The Onion Field) as the aging hitman.

In an episode of the TV series Magnum P.I. (‘80-’88) Tom Selleck as Thomas Magnum meets Detroit Tigers Lou Whitaker, 1978 American League Rookie of the Year, and Alan Trammell, Most Valuable Player of the ’84 World SerieswpeF4.jpg (4081 bytes) (won in 5 games on October 14. The action in Total Recall begins on the fifth day of the World Series). Magnum wears a Tiger baseball cap. To understand how all of these things are related you have to know that C. Thomas Howell wears a Tiger baseball cap in To Protect and Serve. You have to know that C. Thomas Howell appears in The Hitcher with Jennifer Jason Leigh as Nash. The chase scene with Lewis and Murphy in RoboCop has Joe in the black beret in the same frame with Bobby (Dressed to Kill) in the gray knit cap and Ray Wise as Nash. The name Nash was the inspiration for my hitchhiker in a rainstorm analogy. In retrospect I can see that I borrowed it from a scene in The Hitcher.

All human beings make associations the same way I made mine when I was searching for a metaphor to say how unlikely it was for Fuhrman not to have noticed the clean soles of Murphy’s shoes. That process had to be at work inwpeF5.jpg (7197 bytes) Murder in Brentwood when Fuhrman made three movie links in six consecutive paragraphs. Page 82 is where he calls himself one of the best pistol shots in the department with Brad Roberts a close second. Two paragraphs later, at the top of page 83 he makes a cop movie analogy followed in three paragraphs by an analogy to being on a movie set. Reading those passages was like watching Clint Eastwood and David Soul as the ex-Marine and the ex-Ranger in Magnum Force, Mel Gibson as the ex-Green Beret in Lethal Weapon and Peter Weller as the dead cop resurrected to become RoboCop. The same association process had to be at work when Fuhrman linked the story of O.J. killing Ron and Nicole with the story he told for the first time in 1989 of O.J. breaking the windshield of his car. These things have all become action movie cliches.

The broken windshield is as much of an action movie cliché as the knit cap, the leather gloves and the three-way death struggle with a handsome hero coming to the rescue of a beautiful woman in distress. That’s Fuhrman’s explanation for the items so close to his hand in the pointing finger photo—the knit cap, the leather glove, the envelope with the glasses inside, the three blood drops and the bloody heelprint.

Note how many of those elements are present in the chase scene with the gang’swpeF6.jpg (20138 bytes) white van in RoboCop. The guy in the knit cap is also wearing leather gloves. His feet are the only ones you see kicking open the doors of the van (Bundy gate). Note how close his left hand with the leather glove is to his right heel. Murphy shoots him in the right leg. Boddicker (Kirkwood Smith) orders his men to pitch him out of the van into the windshield of the pursuing police car. Note how close Boddiker's glasses are to Bobby's knit cap and the leather glove of the bleeding man? Note where Bobby's left glove is in relation to his knit cap as he lies on the ground.

Paul Verhoeven uses the city of Detroit as a metaphor for all of America’s crime ridden inner cities. I did the same thing in my first novel, The Random Factor, because the image of the city has so often been used as a subtle racist code and image warfare is a theme that runs through all of my books. Being a resident of Detroit gives me an advantage in capturing a realistic sense of place. Verhoeven didn’t even want to create a realistic sense of place. Unlike the maker’s of Action Jackson and Beverly Hills Cop who included enough Detroit landmarks to set the stage for where the action was supposed to be taking place, Verhoeven didn’t bother to use anything but the name. That was enough to call up televised images of the city from the ’67 riots to the violence outside of Tiger Stadium following the 1984 Tiger’s World Series victory over the San Diego Padres.

It was probably around that time that Fuhrman dropped in on O.J. and Nicole when O.J. cracked the windshield of his Mercedes Benz with the baseball bat. It’s probably one reason the Fuhrman collection contains so many references to Detroit. Fuhrman never does anything for one reason. Nobody does — but most people think that everybody does. I don’t think that Fuhrman’s decision to frame O.J. for murder had anything to do with the World Series victory of the Tigers in 1984. I don’t think he even knew what he would do to capitalize on O.J.’s name until the incident of New Years Day 1989 gave him a structure for manipulating the media that he could build on. I think that the ’84 series made connections in his brain to O.J. in The Naked Gun 2 1/2, to Nicole by way of Belinda Bauer in The Rosary Murders and RoboCop 2, and to Tracie Savage just because of its timing – connections that he couldn’t break.

Fuhrman was attracted to symbols of greatness. Ty Cobb, a hardcore racist, was one of the greatest baseball players ever to put on a Major League uniform. On his cap was the Old English D of the Detroit Tigers. Fuhrman was also sensitive about his MF initials. Only one MF in history was named Rookie of the Year, Tiger pitcher Mark Fidrych.

To Protect and Serve (’87) is the kind of mystery thriller that Charlie Lattimore in Murder 101 ('91) teaches his students to write. It features Soul Man’s C.wpeF8.jpg (17203 bytes) Thomas Howell as Phil Eagan, a cop in conflict with himself after watching fellow officers beat a robber to death with their night sticks and plant a knife on him (Fuhrman shot an ATM robber five times in 1987 and planted a knife on him). Eagan is something of a cowboy (Howell was a champion rodeo cowboy in real life) and he has an ex-girlfriend who is given to him as a partner to keep him in check. Note the Detroit Tiger baseball cap he’s wearing and the glasses he takes off when he gets into the car with her. The glasses that Ron brought to Nicole’s the night they died were found by a waitress next to a curb where she saw Lewis, Juditha, Dominique and Denise Brown getting into Dominique’s Jeep. Does the name "Lewis" remind you of Joe and Lewis in RoboCop? Do the glasses remind you of Murder 101? Doesn’t the whole damn case look like the applied lessons of Charlie Lattimore?

If you haven't seen the made for television movie Murder 101 you can read all about Charlie Lattimore's lessons in Chapter 3 of The Smoking Gun 2. I didn't mean to throw you a curve. The movie just popped out of the context of what I was writing. I decided to leave it where it was to underscore the automatic nature of putting familiar content into a familiar context the way the killer and the Robbery/Homicide detectives did on Bundy and Rockingham.

In Murder 101, Charlie Lattimore is a creative writhing professor and best-selling author of a book about a famous murder case in which his testimony helps to convict an innocent man. He has a formula for committing the perfect murder, which includes creating a false alibi and using someone without anwpeF9.jpg (16369 bytes) apparent alibi to take the fall. Fuhrman’s stories before the Bundy murders of being Nicole’s secret lover and afterwards of O.J. killing her in a jealous rage follow Lattimore's third rule for writing a murder mystery right down the line. Many other parts of Fuhrman's stories are variations on Murder 101 themes including the part about the real killer being the victim's secret lover, a family man with a girl about Sydney’s age and the lead detective in the case

It may appear that we have taken another sidetrack with Murder 101. We have only made a stop on the same tracks running through several movies To Protect and Serve to pick up a passenger. You’ll know him when you see him in the context of Charlie’s escape when the authorities think he’s a killer.

Charlie switches clothes with a student named John (O.J. in Capricorn One) and has John wear his hair like Charlie. John, hiding his face, walks the way CharliewpeFA.jpg (16520 bytes) does to Charlie’s office past a staff worker. Meanwhile, Charlie walks past the cops in John's baseball cap and fingerless leather gloves and escapes in the trunk of his wife Laura’s (Dey Young) car (Fuhrman’s suggestion that plastic in the rear cargo area of O.J.’s Bronco was for a body). A cop (Jack Thibeau of Action Jackson with Carl Withers and Bob Minor, and The Hitcher with C. Thomas Howell and Jennifer Jason Leigh) stops Laura at a roadblock and finds a man’s shoe in the back seat. He lets her go when she tells him that the shoe belongs to her brother.

Here we have the old switch-a-roo again, with police following clothes without questioning who’s wearing them. In the Bundy case, police did the same thing with the shoes, the cap, and the gloves that they presumed were O.J.’s because of where they found them. That’s what happens to C. Thomas Howell as Jim in The Hitcher and why you may be getting flashes of the TV series Twin Peaks.

Twin Peaks? Where the hell did Twin Peaks come from?

Think about all the names and actors we’ve seen in this chapter. Think of all the "French connections" and how all of that comes together with Fuhrman’s theory of O.J. planning to wrap Nicole’s body in the plastic that he found in the storage compartment of the Bronco. Jack Thibeau’s role in Murder 101 connects him to Laura and a body in a trunk. The Hitcher connects him to Nash (Jennifer Jason Leigh), a murder victim. Her name connects her to Nash, a brutal killer in RoboCop. Ray Wise who plays Nash the killer in RoboCop is Leland Palmer in Twin Peaks—the father of Laura Palmer. For most of its 29 episodes it’s a series that asks the question, who killed Laura Palmer? Her father killed her. Her body was found wrapped in plastic. Series regulars include Lara (remember the names Laura and Sarah in Sleeping With the Enemy?) Flynn Boyle and Sherilyn Fenn (Laura in Fatal Instinct/ Jain in Diary of a Hitman) as Audrey.

For my French connection hypothesis to be correct, any reference to oral sex would have to involve Sherilyn Fenn’s character Audrey. What do you think of this: When a guy name Bobby Briggs asks Audrey whether she prefers her ice cream in a cup or on a cone she tells him that she prefers the cone. She says, "I like to lick."

Now ice cream becomes a French connection. We know that Nicole stopped for ice cream with the kids on the 12th. The kind of ice cream she had probablywpeFC.jpg (25815 bytes) didn’t matter to the killer as much as the fact that she went to the ice cream parlor that night, which links her to the ice cream parlor scene with Nick Nolte, Juliet Lewis and Jessica Lange in Cape Fear. Until I reached this part of this chapter I never would have given Nicole’s or Jessica Lange’s ice cream a Freudian interpretation. Now when I think what Lange licked off of the straw in that scene I don’t think, milkshake. I think, French Vanilla milkshake—and the milk that has to spill into the ice cream to make it. That’s how the Fuhrman collection’s spilt milk relates to the ice cream on Bundy and to Fuhrman’s explanation that had it in her hands. He says she put it down to pick up one of the kids—an eight year old girl or a six year old boy.

In that context milk isn’t milk anymore and ice cream isn’t ice cream. What do you think now of Fuhrman’s advice about the Presidential "cream" on Monica Lewinski’s dress? That was the third thing I thought of when I saw what Jessica Lange—wearing a thumb ring like Nicole’s—did with the milkshake on the straw. The second thing I thought of was the scene in The Terminator where the boy drops a scoop of ice cream into the pocket of Sarah Connor’s apron. I went back to the tape and checked the sequence for anything relevant to Nicole. I found it in the date on Sarah Connor’s time card (5/19/’84 – Nicole’s birthday) and the other Sara Connor, age 35 (Nicole’s age when she died) and mother of two that the terminator kills. The first thing I thought of was the prostitute in To Protect and Serve wiping her mouth on the cop’s tie.

Consider the scene in To Protect and Serve, where a prostitute runs out of awpeFD.jpg (50481 bytes) client’s apartment barefoot too see about her car being towed away. When she returns, the client has been killed and a nightstick shoved in his mouth. She flees, leaving her shoes behind. Later, Det. Eagan (C. Thomas Howell), who has been set up to look like a murderer, gets a call that brings him to the hooker’s apartment. He follows a woman dressed like her to an alley where she reveals herself as his partner Harriet (Lezlie Dean) wearing a wig and the prostitute’s clothes. The real killer is their police captain who appears from the shadows and knocks Harriet to the ground. She falls to her left side. In one freeze frame the wig covers her face (like Nicole’s hair) and the position of her body is nearly identical to one in Fuhrman’s book of Nicole’s body, only you can see that she is wearing shoes. In another scene she takes off her shoes—which is consistent with the recurring Fuhrman collection themes of ghosts, walking dead (D.O.A) and the resurrected dead. Fuhrman is the only person connected to the case who talks about Nicole taking off her shoes.

If we added the pool of blood and the position of Nick Nolte’s body lying on his side in the blood in Cape Fear we’d have another significant component of thewpeFE.jpg (16522 bytes) picture in Fuhrman’s book of Nicole’s body on the murder scene. Take another look at the position of Nicole’s body in the pool of blood and the position of Harriet’s body as a decoy cop wearing the prostitute’s clothes in To Protect and Serve—the prostitute who took off her shoes before going outside and becoming involved in a murder. Remember Maria in The Legacy (’79), the Italian former prostitute (pizza menu under Nicole’s feet) drowned by black magic in Jason Mountolive’s swimming pool? If we put her swimsuit on the cop posing as a prostitute in To Protect and Serve, how close do you think we’d come to the crime scene photo of Nicole in the pool of blood? Factoring in the position of Maria’s body on the bottom of the pool and Fuhrman’s references to O.J.’s swimming pool where his two-year-old daughter drowned in 1979, which explanation makes more sense, coincidence or inspiration through the Eyes of Laura Mars?

I saw The Legacy shortly after reading the book. I thought that Katherine Ross as Margaret and Sam Elliot as Pete were miscast. Also, the way Maria drowned was so original and surprising to me that I had to read the passage two or three times to be sure I got it right. She bumped her head on the hard surface of the water. It was as though the surface had suddenly become an impenetrable layer of ice like the Detroit River in Hudini. In the Legacy movie it looked like a flexible plastic sheet. The clouded color and diffusion of the water as her body settled to the bottom only reinforced the idea that I was seeing her through a sheet of plastic.

The book also made it clear that Maria had been the lowest kind of street whore before rising to the level of the highest class of madam. She was the first to die. The question of how she was killed and who might have done it was thus wrapped up in the question of whether or not her past or present occupation had anything to do with the killer’s motive. None of that came across in the movie. What came across to me in the position of Nicole’s body was that it was carefully posed. I thought at first that the killer’s inspiration came from the famous Mathew Brady photo of the dead Confederate soldier in the Devil’s Den at Getteysberg. The reason that photo is so powerful is because Brady composed it that way.

The drowning scene in The Legacy gave me another candidate for the killer’s inspiration. Fuhrman’s idea of the body wrapped in a plastic sheet lent more credence to that idea—an idea that had to have come from the movie, as opposed to the book. But the fact that the murdered woman and her murderer were Devil worshipers linked Brady’s Devil’s Den photo to the movie in a way that few people would have been able to see. Mark Fuhrman did not say he was a Civil War buff. He kept his interest in war and history as general as possible by saying only that he was a "war and history buff." Seeing Charlotte Rampling, who shares Fuhrman’s birthday, in the role of a Devil worshiper and astrologer named Margaret answered any question I had on Devil links to Fuhrman and the "artistic" placement of Nicole’s body at the foot of her stairs.

I started this exploration of Fuhrman and the movies with Jack the Ripper, the 1988 television movie about the 1888 unsolved murder of prostitutes in the Whitechapel district of London, England. In the first half hour I saw so many links to Mark Fuhrman’s description of himself that I knew in my bones there would be many more. My bones didn’t lie.

The picture of the stereotypical black pimp abusing his white whore that Fuhrman drew of O.J. and Nicole in the baseball bat incident had bull shit written all over it. His description of O.J. as a Jekyll and Hyde personality had a truer ring to it, but only because I had seen that character so many times in the movies. When I saw it again in Jack the Ripper along with a lead detective with dark brown leather gloves who was as brilliant as Fuhrman claimed to be, I knew I had something.

The display of Annie Chapman's body at the foot of her stairs and the constellation of clues at her feet which correlated item for item with the clues at Ron Goldman’s feet, made Jack the Ripper the smoking gun. The odds of that arrangement appearing in a photo with Fuhrman pointing his finger are beyond calculation. In almost every movie I tracked from the first movie in the Fuhrman collection to the last, I found another smoking gun. The position of Harriet’s body in To Protect and Serve and the cop's body in The Rosary Murders are only two examples. You've seen others. In The Smoking Gun 2 you will see more.

In Murder in Brentwood Fuhrman mentions a rabbit named Cookie, the name of Charlotte Rampling’s incestuous daughter in D.O.A. Rampling's character in D.O.A. has the initials M.F., like Miguel Ferrer as the cocaine-snorting Bob Morton in RoboCop. Morton tells the resurrected Murpny that he is going to bewpeFF.jpg (24094 bytes) "a bad motherfucker." Fuhrman does not mention his first supervisor's criticism of his "over eagerness to make the big arrest." In Murder in Brentwood Fuhrman cites "rumors" that O.J. was using cocaine. In To Protect and Serve, rabbits are drug runners. The station wagon the police are looking for has the license plate number 2K OJ 779. I don’t know what the 2K could have meant to anyone, but the OJ is self-explanatory and the 779 couldn’t be more O.J. The seventh month is July. July 7 is the date O.J. sometimes gives for his birthday. His real birthday is the ninth. And what of the station wagon? How do you think the driver parks it when the police close in for the big arrest?

Take a wild guess.

            

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