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OJ’s Parole Board Didn’t Consider 1989 Spouse Abuse Case

CARSON CITY, Nev. (AP) — Nevada's parole board didn't consider O.J. Simpson's 1989 conviction for misdemeanor spousal abuse when it granted him parole in July parole officials say because it wasn't listed in the federal clearinghouse of FBI crime data.

The disclosure comes as a Nevada lawmaker proposes legislation requiring the board to consider an inmate's domestic violence history before granting parole.

Victim right's attorney Gloria Allred joined Assemblywoman Lisa Krasner at a news conference in Carson City Tuesday after Krasner submitted a formal bill request.

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The board said in granting Simpson's parole it wouldn't consider a civil judgment that found him liable for the 1994 killings of his ex-wife Nichole Brown Simpson and her friend Ronald Goldman.

A board spokesman says the domestic abuse case wasn't included in a report from the National Crime Information Center.