O.J. Simpson – one of the most infamous high-profile Americans of all time — is dead after a cancer battle.
The former NFL great — who stood trial for the double-murder of his ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend, Ron Goldman, in the ’90s, only to be acquitted — passed away Wednesday in Las Vegas … this according to his family.
They say he was surrounded by his children and grandchildren when he died Wednesday night. Simpson’s attorney also confirmed his death to TMZ.
O.J. had reportedly been battling prostate cancer in recent years, and his health took a turn for the worse of late — with him landing in hospice care within the past few months.
Word about O.J.’s cancer diagnosis first made the rounds in February, when a local outlet reported it, although the details were hazy … as was O.J.’s response to the news at the time, when he denied he was in hospice, but didn’t address the cancer report.
Adding to the mystery was the fact O.J. actually touched on a cancer diagnosis in 2023 in a video he posted on X — when he said he’d “caught” some form of cancer, but suggested he’d beaten it. In any case, the cancer came back and claimed his life about a year later.
O.J. had been looking frail in the lead-up to his passing … including during an outing in January when he was spotted using a cane.
The last time O.J. posted was a video of himself talking about Super Bowl LVIII, where he said he was rooting for his former team the San Francisco 49ers. He seemed to be in good spirits then. He was seated in the clip and talking from the backyard of a home.
His death marks the end of a multi-decade saga of crime and intrigue surrounding O.J. — which peaked after the brutal slayings of Nicole and Ron in 1994, and in the aftermath of what was dubbed the Trial of the Century … when O.J. was prosecuted on national TV.
Even before he was apprehended by police for questioning in the immediate aftermath of the murders … O.J. led cops on a low-speed chase in his Ford Bronco on L.A freeways — a moment that was nationally televised, and one of the most dramatic, shared experiences in modern American history.