RadarOnline.com supposedly uncovered evidence that has been buried for 25 years, including legal documents tying the would-be killer and drug dealer, Bill Wasz, to Robert Kardashian.
Months before Nicole and Goldman were found murdered outside of Nicole's condominium, Robert, the late father of reality TV sisters Kim, Kourtney and Khloé, allegedly hired an unemployed 31-year-old cocaine dealer and career criminal, Bill Wasz, to take Nicole out.
Robert was O.J.’s best bud and closest confidant throughout his infamous trial. He even reactivated his law license to get client-attorney privilege and carried O.J.’s suit to court every day.
Robert was so loyal to O.J. that Robert sneaked that garment bag, which a lot of people have speculated it contained the murder weapon, out of his house.Wasz claimed the scheme to wack Nicole began to unfold in January, 1994, when Kardashian paid him $1,000 to spy on Nicole and take pictures of any men she met. Wasz took pictures of Nicole kissing O.J.’s pal, retired NFL player Marcus Allen, on January 6th and 7th, 1994, in a restaurant parking lot in Encino, California. Waz gave two rolls of undeveloped film to the Rob.
When Rob showed the pictures to O.J., he flipped out.
Wasz claims that , “He told me O.J. went ballistic. Robert said, ‘That bitch Nicole is costing O.J. $35,000 a month. She’s the mother of his kids and she’s still [having sex] with everybody. I want her gone, a bullet to the head.’ ”
Wasz said that Robert offered him $15,000 to carry out a bizarre two-part murder plot.
In documents allegedly seen by Radar, a email from 1998 from an anonymous whistleblower included a leaked proffer from Wasz’s lawyer, Larry Longo.
It read: “On about January 14 Bill Wasz met Robert Kardashian at his Encino home. At this meeting Kardashian offered Wasz $15,000 if he would kill Nicole with a .25 caliber bullet to the head. Robert Kardashian also told Wasz he was to steal [O.J.’s then-lover] Paula Barbieri’s car and use it during the murder.”
The same document also claimed Wasz later met Robert and was given $7,500, “which was to be a partial payment for the killing.”
Wasz began to wonder if he’d be framed for the murders, so he didn't go through with the plan.
Wasz did steal the SUV, but then robbed four stores across Los Angeles on Jan. 31, 1994, making off with $500 and a case of beer.
He led police on a high-speed chase, fled on foot after crashing into several cars and was arrested.
When Wasz was finally apprehended, inside the SUV, a small notebook was found, in which Wasz had detailed his earlier surveillance of Nicole. The notebook also contained unlisted 1994 phone numbers for O.J. and Barbieri, and was retained by police as evidence.
Wasz’s attorney said: “There’s no reason for him to steal that car, except as part of a plan for something else.”
Wasz interviewed after Nicole and Ron's death in 1994. According to official documents, during that meeting, the officers asked Wasz if he knew Robert.
His reply was recorded as: “Mr. Wasz advised the detectives to look into the background of Mr. Kardashian as he is not all that clean.”
Wasz was sentenced to 20 years and served ten for his crime spree and his allegations were under the carpet.
Apparently a murder conspiracy didn’t fit with the district attorney’s case, which argued an enraged O.J. acted alone in the murders.
Deputy District Attorney Bill Hodgman made moves toward indicting Robin,but no charges were ever filed against him.
Investigative journalist Joseph Bosco met with Wasz and presented his findings to Time magazine, but they canceled the story just minutes before going to print in 1998.
In jailhouse interviews, Wasz continued to blame Robert and claimed the police were trying to suppress his story that including how he’d sold cocaine to Robert and O.J. was a bookie in his spare time.
Robert Kardashian died in 2003 from cancer of the esophagus.
Wasz was released from prison in 2004 and was discovered dead, at age 41, in “mysterious circumstances” in March 2005.
A coroner estimated Wasz had been dead three days by the time he was found. The death was never investigated by West Los Angeles homicide detectives and remains a mystery to this day.
Wasz was released from prison in 2004 and was discovered dead, at age 41, in “mysterious circumstances” in March 2005.
A coroner estimated Wasz had been dead three days by the time he was found. The death was never investigated by West Los Angeles homicide detectives and remains a mystery to this day.
Wasz's memoirs are available in a book you can find on Amazon.com