Hit The Road O.J.

BobbyFord

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Steakhouse Owner Asks O.J. To Leave Eatery
(AP) LOUISVILLE, Ky. The owner of an upscale steakhouse in Louisville said he asked O.J. Simpson to leave his restaurant the night before the Kentucky Derby because he is sickened by the attention Simpson still attracts.

"I didn't want to serve him because of my convictions of what he's done to those families," Jeff Ruby said in a telephone
interview Tuesday. "The way he continues to torture the lives of those families ... with his behavior, attitude and conduct."

Simpson, an NFL Hall of Famer and Heisman Trophy winner, was found innocent in 1995 of killing his ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and Ron Goldman but was found liable in a civil trial that followed.

Ruby -- who owns restaurants in Cincinnati, Louisville and Belterra, Ind. -- said Simpson, who was in town for the Derby on Saturday, came in with a group of about 12 Friday night and was seated at a table in the back. A customer came up to Ruby and was "giddy" about seeing Simpson, Ruby said.

"I didn't want that experience in my restaurant," Ruby said, later adding that seeing Simpson get so much attention "makes me sick to my stomach."

He said he went to Simpson's table and said, "I'm not serving you." Ruby said when Simpson didn't respond, he repeated himself and left the room.

Ruby said Simpson soon came up to him and said he understood and would gather the rest of his party to leave.

Simpson's lawyer, Yale Galanter, did not immediately return phone calls Tuesday night seeking comment.

"It was the first time since 1994 he has ever shown any class," Ruby said. "He showed it that night in the restaurant"
by leaving quietly.

Ruby said after Simpson left, people in the restaurant started applauding. He said he has received about 100 positive e-mails since the incident.

The walls of Ruby's restaurants are decorated with celebrity photos. A photo of Simpson and Ruby used to be on display, but Ruby said he took it down after the killings.
 
I have major mixed feelings about this. He was found INNOCENT by a court of law. What you or I personally believe is irrelevent. If he was seated in the back, not causing a disturbance the man should be left alone and served like any other member of the public.
 
If the steak is not on the plate
For the door don't be late.

Yeah, he was found innocent. Maybe the treatment is not fair. There's a lot of things in life that's not fair. But, people have been found guilty with a lot less evidence. It isn't fair that truckloads of money can buy your freedom.
 
Had I been a patron there that night, I would have stood and applauded my approval also.

Just because they found 12 people stupid enough to believe that he was not guilty does not make him by any means innocent! The DNA evidence alone was irrefutable. The odds of DNA evidence being wrong are something like 4 billion-to-one. He murdered 2 people in cold blood and has no remorse for it at all.

I wouldn't have served him either. :einstein:
 
What I believe (GUILTY) doesn't matter. He was found NOT GUILTY and that sickens me, but he still has the right to eat wherever he pleases.
 
Good luck with that. A business owner has the right to refuse service to anyone as long as it isn't racially motivated.

The lawyer is supposedly saying it was a racial thing.

Which I don't believe after seeing the restaurant owner on TV. And I, too, believe that any business owner has the right to refuse service.

I've been in some nice places that I wished had had the courage to ask some people to leave --- especially those with totally out of control small children. Made dining and conversation impossible.
 
From Legalzoom.com...

Both federal and state laws prohibit businesses from denying public accommodation to citizens on the basis of race, color, religion or national original. The Federal Civil Rights Act guarantees all people the right to "full and equal enjoyment of the goods, services, facilities, privileges, advantages, and accommodations of any place of public accommodation, without discrimination or segregation on the ground of race, color, religion, or national origin."

So long as race, color, religion, etc. were not a factor in the business owner's decision for refusal of service I don't think there is anything O.J. can do. I don't believe there was any civil rights violation in this instance.

The article also states other (obvious) acceptable reasons to refuse service...

Patrons who are unreasonably rowdy or causing trouble
Patrons that may overfill capacity if let in
Patrons who come in just before closing time or when the kitchen is closed
Patrons accompanied by large groups of non-customers looking to sit in
Patrons lacking adequate hygiene (e.g. excess dirt, extreme body odor, etc.)

I can tell you one thing for sure...if I owned a restaurant or any other establishment O.J. Simpson would not be welcome.
I have my own personal reasons.
 
Jay Leno had what he said was an actual menu from that steakhouse that had "We reserve the right to refuse service to all double murderers" printed very clearly at the bottom of the page. Leno said it therefore was clearly not a racial issue.

I thought it was pretty funny myself ;)
 
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