MARK FUHRMAN DEAD AT 74 Cause of Death, Final Words & O.J. Simpson Trial Secrets Revealed

LOS ANGELES — Mark Fuhrman, the former Los Angeles Police Department detective whose crucial testimony and controversial past defined the 1995 O.J. Simpson double-murder trial, has died at the age of 74.

The Kootenai County coroner’s office in Idaho confirmed that Fuhrman passed away on May 12, 2026. According to his long-time manager, Lynda Bensky, the cause of death was throat cancer. Fuhrman had spent his post-police years living quietly on a 20-acre farm in Idaho, where he transitioned into a true-crime author and radio commentator.


The Cause of Death and Final Words

Fuhrman’s battle with throat cancer ended peacefully in Idaho, surrounded by family. In the wake of his passing, his representative described him as a “brilliant homicide detective who was thrust into the public eye.”

While Fuhrman did not issue a traditional deathbed statement, his legal legacy remains anchored by his ultimate public reflections. For decades, Fuhrman expressed deep regret over the courtroom testimony that derailed the “Trial of the Century.” In his most famous public reflection during a retrospective interview, Fuhrman admitted his undoing:

“I owe everyone an apology… I wish I would have just said yes when I was asked that question [about using racial slurs].”


The O.J. Simpson Trial Secrets and the Bloody Glove

In 1994, Fuhrman was one of the first investigators dispatched to the Brentwood home of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman, who had been brutally stabbed to death. Fuhrman became an instant celebrity—and target—when he reported discovering a matching, bloody leather glove on O.J. Simpson’s estate.

The defense, led by Johnnie Cochran and Alan Dershowitz, suspected police misconduct. The “Trial Secrets” that ultimately blew the case wide open centered on audio recordings obtained by the defense.

The Denial: On the witness stand, Fuhrman swore under oath that he had not used a specific racial epithet at any point in the previous decade.

The Tapes: The defense team dramatically produced taped interviews from the 1980s in which Fuhrman repeatedly used horrific, anti-Black racial slurs and boasted about police brutality.

This bombshell revelation utterly shattered Fuhrman’s credibility. The defense team successfully argued that Fuhrman was a racially motivated rogue officer who may have planted the bloody glove to frame the NFL star.


A Lasting Legal Legacy

Following Fuhrman’s disastrous testimony, the jury acquitted O.J. Simpson in October 1995. Legal strategist Alan Dershowitz recently reflected on Fuhrman’s role, stating he was a “much better detective than he was a witness,” adding, “Ultimately his actions helped us win the O.J. case.”

Fuhrman retired from the LAPD in August 1995 before the trial even concluded. In 1996, he pleaded no contest to felony perjury for lying on the stand, receiving three years of probation. Though he fiercely maintained until his death that he never planted evidence, his history made him the focal point of a case that exposed deep racial divisions in American law enforcement.