**EXCLUSIVE: FIVE YEARS AFTER the NICOLE BROWN SIMPSON MURDERS, MARK FUHRMAN FILES for COPYRIGHT on “THE GLOVE” – CLAIMS HE OWNS the “DESTINY” of EVIDENCE**

EXCLUSIVE: FIVE YEARS AFTER THE NICOLE BROWN SIMPSON MURDERS, MARK FUHRMAN FILES FOR COPYRIGHT ON “THE GLOVE” – CLAIMS HE OWNS THE “DESTINY” OF EVIDENCE

Los Angeles, CA – In a move that has left legal scholars and conspiracy theorists equally baffled, disgraced former LAPD detective Mark Fuhrman has quietly filed a U.S. Copyright Office registration for “The Glove” – specifically, the infamous bloody Isotoner found at the Bundy crime scene.

According to documents obtained by this outlet, Fuhrman claims “exclusive intellectual property rights” over the artifact, arguing he “discovered, curated, and popularized its narrative significance.” He is now seeking royalties from any future use of the glove in documentaries, true-crime podcasts, or even the forthcoming Netflix O.J. Simpson series.

“This is the endgame,” Fuhrman told a small gathering of far-right legal theorists. “I was the one who made that glove famous. I planted the seed of reasonable doubt in the jury’s mind. Now, I demand my cut.”

Legal analysts are split. Some say the filing has zero validity; others whisper that Fuhrman’s real goal is to force the LAPD’s evidence unit into a deposition, where he can reveal “the truth about the chain of custody” – a truth that, as one anonymous source put it, “would make everything we think we know about the trial collapse.”

“Ask yourself: Who benefits from the glove still being a mystery?” the source added. “Who wanted to keep that story alive for thirty years? Fuhrman didn’t just find the glove. He owns the glove.”

The glove, currently held in a locked evidence room, cannot be physically claimed. But in the murky world of