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The Los Angeles County district attorney said Sunday he anticipates that O.J. Simpson and his attorneys likely will argue that the former football star was mentally incapacitated and
therefore not responsible for the stabbing deaths of his ex-wife and a male friend. “It wouldn’t surprise me if at some point we go from, ‘I didn’t do it’ to ‘I did it, but I’m not
responsible,’ ” Dist. Atty. Gil Garcetti said. If that happens, he said, prosecutors will “be waiting” and “have no difficulty in overcoming that defense.” Simpson met with his attorney,
Robert Shapiro, at the Central Jail, but Shapiro declined to talk about his client’s defense until after an arraignment scheduled for this morning in Downtown Los Angeles. Simpson was
charged Friday in the June 12 stabbing deaths of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Lyle Goldman. The comments from the attorneys on both sides came during another day of impassioned nationwide
discussion and speculation about the case. Both sides have sought to influence public perceptions; Garcetti spent much of the weekend appearing on national television to focus attention on
the victims, while Shapiro described his client’s fragile mental state. On his way into the Sunday visit, Shapiro told a mob of reporters that Simpson “wished me a happy Father’s Day, and
told me to spend the morning with my children. And then he started to cry, and said, ‘I wish I could spend Father’s Day with my children.’ ” Shapiro also said he had delivered a “special
message” to Simpson from the Rev. Billy Graham. Asked how his client will plead at the hearing, Shapiro said only that “O.J. will be there.” When told of Shapiro’s comments in an interview
with The Times, Garcetti became agitated and said “there is no doubt that the heartstrings are being pulled.” “It annoys me that we are beginning to lose focus that the true victims in this
case are Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman, their parents and the children of Nicole Simpson,” he said. “Those are the people we should truly be feeling sorry for.” Sunday night, in a
taped interview for ABC’s “Good Morning America at Night,” two of Nicole Brown Simpson’s sisters, Dominique, 29, and Denise, 36, told of how the family has built a “shrine” to Nicole inside
their parents’ Monarch Bay house to help ease their grief during an emotional week. They also said they are continuing to shield O.J. and Nicole Simpson’s two children, Sydney, 9, and
Justin, 6, from new reports. The children are at the home of their grandparents, Louis and Juditha Brown. Although they tried to put a positive light on the family’s emotional state, Denise
Brown told the show’s co-host, Joan Lunden, “Joan, we’re just hanging in there.” They said they decided to speak publicly as an opportunity to show their sister in “a different light.”
Little was mentioned about their sister’s relationship with her former husband, including Simpson’s conviction for spousal abuse. When Lunden questioned them about the relationship, the
sisters spoke mainly of Nicole Simpson’s love for her children. At the Monarch Bay residence of the children’s grandparents, television sets are never turned on, to protect the children,
they said. Cousins of the two Simpson children are nearly the same age and are ready playmates. On the subject of emotion, the sisters said their father has made a special rule. In the
mornings, they’ve created “hug time,” an opportunity that has made it easier on the family, they said. Also, they’ve erected a shrine to their slain sister, made of pictures of Nicole and
candles. “Every morning I wake up,” Denise Brown said, “I go outside and light the candles, look at her picture . . . make some coffee and I talk to Nicole.” Among the public, there has been
an outpouring of public sympathy for the football Hall of Famer. Supporters gathered along freeways to shout encouragement to Simpson as he and his friend Al Cowlings, trailed by a
cavalcade of police cars, made a suspenseful journey Friday that ended with his surrender at his Brentwood mansion. His arrest by a police SWAT team was a spellbinding ending to a drama that
heightened with each day. Simpson emerged as a suspect soon after the bodies of his ex-wife and Goldman were found late Sunday outside her Brentwood townhouse. By week’s end, well-wishers
had put signs at the mansion’s gate with messages such as “We You O.J.” “He was someone to look up to all those years,” said Jeff Gibson, 24, of Placentia. “I just wanted to be here to show
some support.” While in jail Simpson can read books from the library and buy newspapers and magazines. After his arraignment he will be allowed one visitor per day, in addition to his
attorney and psychiatrist, Los Angeles County sheriff’s spokesman Larry Mead said. With the image of Simpson languishing in a 9-by-7-foot jail cell still sinking in, much of the country
spent Father’s Day trying to understand how he got there and searching for lessons to be drawn from the tragedy. Simpson and the events leading up to his arrest were the topic of discussion
on three major television network news programs. The drama was dissected for insights into the sometimes rocky relationship between Los Angeles police and the public; the difference between
celebrities and heroes, and the mishandling and misunderstanding of domestic violence. “People have been talking about O.J. Simpson as a hero,” said former Secretary of Education William
Bennett, appearing on CBS’s “Face the Nation.” “I don’t think he was a hero. We confuse real heroism with celebrity and we confuse celebrity . . . with significance.” Several of the
television shows also focused on the issue of domestic violence. Simpson pleaded no contest in 1989 to misdemeanor spousal battery of Nicole Brown Simpson but critics and prosecutors contend
he got off too lightly because he avoided jail time. “If O.J. Simpson had walked into his boss’s office and punched him in the face, as he apparently did to his wife, it would not have been
treated the same way,” said U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Donna Shalala on “Face the Nation.” “Violence, whether it happens in the home or outside the home, is sheer violence and
it’s unacceptable.” Deputy Dist. Atty. David Conn, who heads the special trials unit and who also appeared on “Face the Nation,” described Nicole Simpson’s slaying as a classic “domestic
violence killing.” The Simpson case not only dominated the television networks, it also found its way into the pulpit. During Mass at St. Martin of Tours Catholic Church in Brentwood, Nicole
Simpson’s parish, the Rev. Donie O’Ceochain said it was “almost prophetic” that the week’s scriptural readings “deal with storm and stress, fear, anxiety, unanswered questions,
helplessness, seeking answers and human vulnerability.” “It’s been a sad week in Brentwood,” he said. “We have all been touched.” The Brentwood townhouse where the killing occurred and
Simpson’s nearby mansion became familiar symbols of tragedy last week. Residents of the affluent Westside enclave tried Sunday to ease back out of the spotlight. Two police officers directed
pedestrian and vehicle traffic in front of the townhouse as curiosity-seekers continued to converge at the site where last week’s tragedy began. The crowds were so intense that the family
living next door moved out temporarily to escape the attention. Christian Coe, president of the the South Brentwood Homeowners Assn., said he spent part of the day talking with police and
traffic officials about where to install “no stopping,” “no parking” and “tow-away” signs to discourage visitors. “For God’s sake, people were butchered to death in there,” said Philip
Alexander, who lives about 75 yards away. “People think this is Disneyland or something.” In Dana Point, the family of Nicole Brown Simpson gathered at the Monarch Bay home for Father’s Day.
They went to brunch and then some family members went to the beach to relax. Meanwhile, court officials made hurried preparations for Simpson’s arraignment today. Throngs of reporters are
expected to attend the court hearing, and officials were worried that disruptive crowds of onlookers could gather. “We will have very heavy security,” said sheriff’s spokesman Mead. Rather
than being transported in a jail bus, the way most prisoners are, Simpson is to be taken alone. “Whatever route is taken to the Criminal Courts Building will be secret. We are not disclosing
any plans,” Mead said. Public interest in the Simpson case has been so intense that the Sheriff’s Department set up a special address for letters to the inmate given Booking No. 4013970:
P.O. Box 86164, Los Angeles. Garcetti said he expects the arraignment to be continued. Sources said Saturday that prosecutors have begun presenting evidence to a grand jury to win an
indictment of Simpson. Garcetti on Sunday would not deny but also would not confirm that the grand jury proceedings had begun. In any case, Garcetti has said the start of a trial is at least
months away, and he promised to make sure that Simpson is not released on bail. “He is not entitled to bail by law,” he said. “We will do everything in our power to be sure that he does not
have bail assigned to him.” The district attorney conceded that the prosecution’s “most profound challenge” will be selecting 12 jurors who will unanimously agree with the prosecution. “The
defense is always just looking for that one juror who might hang them up,” Garcetti said. Contributing to this report were Times staff writers Gordon Dillow, Matt Lait, Irene Garcia,
Kenneth Reich and David Reyes. MORE TO READ