O. K., Kato, it's been ten years. That statute of limitations has probably run out on the accessory after the fact charge that scared you into lying and withholding information during the trial. You should work something out with the LA District Attorney's office that would give you immunity, and they should agree to it. Then you should tell the truth.
It is and has been clear that O. J. didn't have enough time to clean all that blood out of the inside of that Bronco, or the entranceway to his house, before the limo driver showed up to take him to the airport. It is also clear that you were the only other person at his home between the time he arrived back from Nicole's and the time the police arrived. You were the only one there. If O. J. told you to clean it up, you would have cleaned it up. And that's what you did.
Yeah, yeah, I know. The prosecution didn't go after you on it because they needed you testimony to establish a timeline against O. J. They thought that, if they could establish a time line, the DNA would be enough to get a conviction. It was a strategic calculation they made. They were wrong.
Why not come forward? Don't you think you owed it to the dead people to tell what you know? O. J.'s already been acquitted and he can't be tried twice for the same crime. What's the problem?
I don't know what Robert Shapiro, O. J.'s attorney, said to you when he spoke to you first, before the prosecution got to you. I don't know what he said to make you too scared to tell the whole truth. I don't know if or how much he paid you. But I would think that, by now, the effect of whatever he said or did would have worn off.