Top name hotels have denied accepting O.J. Simpson to reserve a room. Harrah and MGM Mirage have a total of 60,000 rooms. They both claim that the media and press that will follow him is what's keeping him out—well, it's that it's negative media/news. O.J. Allegedly bursted into a room of an establishment with a group of armed friends who were there to claim O.J.'s memorabilia. Palace Station didn't flat out deny him—or accept him. However, they did house Michael Jackson during his 2003 arrest on sex-abuse charges. O.J. Had spent his first night in Vegas at the Palms hotel/casino and his last night in its county jail. Talk about a drastic change of rooming. I don't blame them for not rooming him since it is of a negative thing. However, I don't believe it's legal to just refuse to room a person. Wouldn't that be considered being discrimantory? Criminals have rights too under the 4th, 5th, 6th, and 8th Amendments of the U.S. Bill of Rights.
“Newsweek”
Monday, November 12, 2007
page 16
topic: public opinion















This sign is not as common as it once was, but which right would be violated by refusing to deal with him?
Don't business people have some rights also?