Mark Fuhrman, a former detective with the Los Angeles Police Department, known for his involvement in the pivotal O.J. Simpson murder trial of 1995, has passed away at the age of 74.
Kootenai County’s Chief Deputy Coroner, Lynette Acebedo, verified Fuhrman’s death to Fox News on Monday, noting that he died the previous week. Reports from NBC4 also confirmed this.
According to TMZ, Fuhrman’s passing was the result of a battle with a particularly aggressive form of throat cancer.
Fuhrman gained national attention during the high-profile trial concerning the murders of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman. His role became crucial when he discovered a bloody glove at O.J. Simpson’s Rockingham estate, a piece of evidence that prosecutors argued matched another glove found at the murder scene.
During the trial for the murders of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman, Fuhrman became a key figure after discovering a bloody glove at Simpson’s Rockingham estate.
Prosecutors said the item matched a glove found at the scene where the two victims were murdered.
His involvement in the trial later led to significant controversy and damaged his credibility after audio recordings surfaced in which he used racial slurs, including the N-word.
Johnnie Cochran, Robert Kardashian, Barry Scheck, F. Lee Bailey, Shapiro and Alan Dershowitz comprised OJ Simpson’s dream team. (Sam Mircovich/AFP)
Despite previously denying such conduct under oath, the defense argued that the tapes raised questions about his credibility and whether evidence in the case had been properly handled.
The defense also used the recordings to suggest that Fuhrman may have planted the bloody glove to frame Simpson.

O.J. Simpson holds up his hands before the jury on June 21, 1995, after putting on a new pair of gloves similar to the infamous bloody gloves during his double-murder trial in Los Angeles. (Vince Bucci/Pool/AP)
Fuhrman was accused of lying on the witness stand and was convicted of perjury in 1996, making him the only person associated with the case to be convicted of a crime related to the trial.
After retiring from the LAPD in 1995, he remained in the public eye as a true crime author and a talk radio host.
-->