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FILE--In this Oct. 3, 1995 file photo, Christopher Odle, 26, a legal clerk from Crown Heights in the Brooklyn borough of New York, wipes away tears moments after hearing the news that O.J. Simpson was found not guilty of killing Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman. For an earlier generation, OJ Simpson was a symbol of racial tension and uneven justice.  While the issues around race and policing remain today, Simpson's racial symbolism is largely seen as a relic. (AP Photo/Clark Jones, file)

FILE--In this Oct. 3, 1995 file photo, Christopher Odle, 26, a legal clerk from Crown Heights in the Brooklyn borough of New York, wipes away tears moments after hearing the news that O.J. Simpson was found not guilty of killing Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman. For an earlier generation, OJ Simpson was a symbol of racial tension and uneven justice. While the issues around race and policing remain today, Simpson's racial symbolism is largely seen as a relic. (AP Photo/Clark Jones, file)

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