911 CALL BY NICOLE BROWN SIMPSON Police released these 911 Calls, taped October 25, 1993. Nicole: Can you send someone to my house? Dispatcher: Whatīs the problem there? Nicole: My ex-husband, or my husband, just broke into my house, and heīs ranting and raving outside in the front yard. Dispatcher: Has he been drinking or anything? Nicole: No, but heīs cracy. Dispatcher: Did he hit you? Nicole: No. Dispatcher: Do you have a restraining order against him? Nicole: No. Dispatcher: What is your name? Nicole: Nicole Simpson. The dispatcher puts out a domestic violence call for any patrol car to respond to Nicoleīs adress in Brentwood. Less $than a minute later, she calls back. %Play Sample@@ 911C1 Dispatcher: 911 Emergency. Nicole: Could you get someone over here now, to 325 Gretna Green. Heīs back. Please. Dispatcher: OK. What does he look like? Nicole: Heīs O. J. Simpson. I think you know his record. Could you just send somebody over here? Dispatcher: What is he doing there? Nicole: He just drove up again. Could you just send somebody over? Dispatcher: What is he driving? Nicole: Heīs in a white Bronco, but first of all he broke the back door down to get in. Dispatcher: Wait a minute, whatīs your name? Nicole: Nicole Simpson. Dispatcher: OK. Is he the sportscaster or whatever? Nicole: Yeah. Dispatcher: Wait a minute. Weīre sending the police. What is he doing? Is he threatening you? Nicole: Heīs fucking going nuts. Dispatcher: OK. Has he threatened you in any way or is he just harassing you? Nicole: Youīre going to hear him in a minute. Heīs about to come in again. Dispatcher: OK, just stay on the line. Nicole: I donīt want to stay on the line. Heīs going to beat the shit out of me. Dispatcher: Wait a minute, just stay on the line so we can know whatīs going on until the police get there, OK? OK, Nicole? Nicole: (sigh) Dispatcher: Just a moment. Does he have any weapons? Nicole: I donīt know. He went home. Now heīs back. The kids are up there sleeping and I donīt want anything to happen. Dispatcher: OK, just a minute, is he on drugs or anything? Nicole: No. Dispatcher: Just stay on the line in case he comes in. I need to hear whatīs going on. Nicole: Can you hear him outside? Dispatcher: Is he yelling? Nicole: Yep. Dispatcher: OK. Has he been drinking? Nicole: No. Dispatcher: OK. (talking to police units) All units: More on the domestic violence at 325 South Gretna Green Way. The suspect has returned in a white Bronco. Monitor comments. Incident 48231. OK, Nicole? Nicole: (sigh) Dispatcher: Is he outdoors? Nicole: (sigh) Heīs in the back yard. Dispatcher: Heīs in the back yard? Nicole: Screaming at my roommate about me and at me. Dispatcher: OK. What is he saying? Nicole: Oh, something about some guy I know and hookers and keys and I started this --- (expletive deleted) before and ... And itīs all my fault and now what am I going to do, get the police in this? And the whole thing. Itīs all my fault. I started this before. (sigh) brother. (inaudible) kids (inaudible). Dispatcher: Okay, you donīt need any paramedics or anything? Nicole: (sigh) Dispatcher: OK. You just want him to leave? Nicole: My door, he broke the whole back door in. Dispatcher: And then he left and came back? Nicole: He came and he practically knocked my upstairs door down, but he pounded it and he screamed and hollered, and I tried to get him out of the bedroom because the kids are sleeping in there. Dispatcher: OK. Nicole: He wanted somebodyīs phone number and I gave him my phone book or I put my phone book down to write down the phone number that he wanted, and he took my phone book with all my stuff in it. Dispatcher: OK. So basically you guys have just been arguing? (Simpson is yelling inaudibly) Dispatcher: Is he inside right now? Nicole: Yeah. (Simpson still yelling) Dispatcher: OK. Just a moment. (More inaudible yelling by Simpson) Dispatcher: Is he talking to you? Nicole: Yeah. Dispatcher: Are you locked in a room or something? Nicole: No. He can come right in. Iīm not going where the kids are because the kids ... Dispatcher: Do you think heīs going to hit you? Nicole: I donīt know. Dispatcher: Stay on the line. Donīt hang it up, OK? Nicole: OK. (inaudible) Dispatcher: What is he saying? Nicole: What? Dispatcher: What is he saying? Nicole: What else. (Sound of police radio traffic) Nicole: O. J., O. J., the kids are sleeping. (More yelling) Dispatcher: Heīs still yelling at you? (Continuous yelling, Nicole sobbing into phone) Dispatcher: Is he upset with something that you did? Nicole: A long time ago. It always comes back. Dispatcher: Is your roommate talking to him? Nicole: No one can talk, listen to him. Dispatcher: Does he have any weapons with him right now? Nicole: No. Dispatcher: OK. Where is he standing? Nicole: In the back doorway, in the house. Dispatcher: OK. O. J.: I donīt give a --- (explitive deleted) anymore ... Nicole: Would you just please, O. J. O. J., O. J., could you please (inaudible) Please leave. O. J.: ... Iīm not leaving ... Nicole: Please leave. O. J., please, the kids, the kids are sleeping, please. Dispatcher: Is he leaving? Nicole: No. Dispatcher: Does he know youīre on the phone with police? Nicole: No. Dispatcher: Where are the kids at right now? Nicole: Up in my room. Dispatcher: Can they hear him yelling? Nicole: I donīt know. The roomīs the only one thatīs quiet ... god. Dispatcher: Is there someone up there with the kids? Nicole: No. (Yelling continues) Dispatcher: Whatīs he saying now? Nicole, you still on the line? Nicole: Yeah. Dispatcher: Do you still think heīs going to hit you? Nicole: I donīt know. Heīs going to leave. He just said that. He just said he needs to leave. O. J.: ... Hey! I can read this bullshit all week in the National Enquirer. Her words exactly. What, who got that, who? Dispatcher: Are you the only one in there with him? Nicole: Right now, yeah. And heīs also talking to my, the guy who lives out back is just standing there. He came home. Dispatcher: Are you arguing with him, too? Nicole: No! Absolutely not! Dispatcher: OK, OK. Nicole: Thatīs not arguing. Dispatcher: Yeah. Has this happened before or no? Nicole: Many times. Dispatcher: OK. The police should be on the way. It just seems like a long time because itīs kind of busy in that division right now. (More yelling) Dispatcher: (to police) Regarding Gretna Green Way. The Suspect is still there and yelling very loudly. Officer: (on police radio) 52 on Gretna Green. Dispatcher: Is he still arguing? (Knock on the door) Dispatcher: Was someone knocking on your door? Nicole: It was him. Dispatcher: Heīs knocking on your door? Nicole: Thereīs a locked bedroom and heīs wondering why. Dispatcher: Oh, so heīs knocking on the locked door Nicole: Ywah. You know what, O. J.? That window above you is also open. Could you just go, please? Can I get off the phone? Dispatcher: You want, you feel safe hanging up? Nicole: (inaudible) Dispatcher: You want to wait till the police get there? Nicole: Yeah. Dispatcher: Is he still arguing with you? Nicole: Heīs moved a little (inaudible) Dispatcher: But the kids are still asleep? Nicole: Yes. Theyīre like rocks. Dispatcher: What part of the house is he right now? Nicole: Downstairs. Dispatcher: Downstairs? Nicole: Yes. Dispatcher: And youīre upstairs? Nicole: No. Iīm downstairs in the kitchen ... in the kitchen. Dispatcher: Can you see the police, Nicole? Nicole: No, but I will go out there right now. Dispatcher: OK. You want to go out there? Nicole: Yeah. Dispatcher: OK. Hang up. OK. Numerous times during this call O. J. Simpson can be heard $yelling in the background. %Play Sample@@ 911C2 END