Kim Goldman said Wednesday that when she saw O.J. Simpson a few years after his acquittal in the murders of her brother and Nicole Brown Simpson 25 years ago, she briefly thought about running him down.

“I was by myself in my car. I saw that gait … that I had been following for so many years,” she told “Good Morning America.” “I revved the engine and I gripped the steering wheel thinking I could take him out right here and nobody would know.”

But she quickly added that the dark thought was just “fleeting.”

Kim recounted the chance encounter in a 10-episode podcast she launched Wednesday called “Confronting: OJ Simpson,” in which she interviews key members of the case, including prosecutor Marcia Clark and Simpson houseguest Kato Kaelin.

She also talked to the jurors and said the 3-and-a-half-hour deliberation was allegedly a cover-up.

“They corroborated what my dad and I always thought — which was that they didn’t do their job,” she said.

“They pulled testimony just to cover up that they always knew what their answer was when they went into that jury room and they wasted our time for three and a half hours,” she added.

Kim told “GMA” that she “just wanted to go full force this year. Face some of my fears, face some of my anxiety.”

She added: “For all these years it’s been a little frustrating that there’s been so much about this case… television series, fictional approaches, that I thought it was important to go right to the source.”

Meanwhile, Kim’s father told “GMA” that “the pain is always there, the loss is always there.”

“It never goes away,” Fred Goldman said Wednesday. “Today is just that much more intense. It’s hard for me to imagine it’s 25 years. Ron would be 50 now. I have a hard time reckoning that whole idea.”

On June 12, 1994, his son, a restaurant waiter, was returning a pair of glasses to Brown Simpson’s home in the Brentwood area of LA.

He and OJ Simpson’s 35-year-old ex-wife were brutally attacked outside her Bundy Drive condo, where their bloodied bodies were found about two hours later.

In a double-murder trial that captured the nation’s attention, the former NFL star was acquitted of all criminal charges in 1995 and has continued to maintain his innocence.

Two years later, a civil jury found OJ liable for wrongful death and he was ordered to pay millions to the families. In 2008, he was convicted in a botched robbery and sent to a Nevada prison. He was released in 2017 and now lives in Las Vegas.

Fred Goldman said it’s important to remember the victims of violence who don’t get the kind of publicity that his son and Brown Simpson did.

“It happens every day, and those families have the same pain that we’ve gone through and will go through for years to come,” he told “GMA.” “We can’t ignore that. It’s way too important.”