Kim also describes her complicated and volatile feelings towards OJ. She refers to him only as "The Killer," explaining that using his name feels too respectful. She recalls attempting to visit him in prison, but being unable to because OJ wouldn't meet with her unless she signed a non-disclosure agreement. Remarkably, she also remembers seeing OJ in an LA parking lot and thinking very seriously about running him down. "I was revving the engine and white knuckling the steering wheel, thinking ‘Nobody would know if I took him out’," she says. The only thing that stopped her was thinking about her father. “My dad couldn’t afford to lose another kid.”

In Episode 2, the revelations become even more shocking, as Kim talks to Detective Tom Lang and prosecutor, Marcia Clark. Clark is quick to express disbelief over the circus the trial turned into. "We would get called into chambers at every break because celebrities wanted to meet the prosecution," she says. "At one point, they introduced me to Jimmy Dean. 'You know, I love your sausage, man, but this is a murder trial...'" Clark is outspoken, saying of the jurors: "We proved it 50 ways from Sunday. It is objectively bonkers. You’re talking to somebody who probably thinks we never landed on the moon... flat Earth. There is no reasoning with people like that."

Clark also reveals her faith in the justice system remains shaken: "People routinely [ask] 'Are you okay now? Can you put it behind you? Are you over it?...' I'm never going to say yes because it's never going to be true." Tellingly, Clark refers to Judge Lance Ito as "starstruck," recalling: "Ito would proudly brag about 'Look at the person who I met, look whose autograph I got, look who left a photograph with me, blah, blah, blah...' [The defense] could see what that was and it served them."

Detective Lang is an equally compelling interviewee, finally explaining the gentle, almost babying way he talked to OJ during the car chase, over the course of five separate phone calls. "There's a reason for everything, and everyone gets treated differently depending on their personality," he says. "You're not going to treat some gang banger with a third grade education who stabs somebody in a fight the same as you're going to take on... a sociopath who is known to every person in the world... Something had to be done. I'm not worried about him—he's got a gun. I was worried about the cops that were so close... the people that were running up to the car."

(Interestingly, Confronting... makes a point to remind us that 95 million people watched that car chase as it aired live, so glued to the screen that Domino's set a record for the number of pizzas ordered.)

Though Lang expresses much frustration over the misrepresentation of a number of pieces of evidence (including blood spatter and the murder weapon), one of the podcast's more jaw-dropping moments comes with Skip Junis, a key witness who never got the chance to testify. "A limousine pulled up [at LAX] and OJ Simpson got out of the limousine," Junis tells Kim. "He was carrying this little, cheap gym bag. He only unzipped it a few inches—just enough to get his hand in—and was pulling things out and dumping them in the trash can." Junis informed Marcia Clark of this at the time, but was never asked to appear at the trial. (Detective Lang scoffs that "she didn't use a half a dozen things.")