OJ Simpson died on April 10 at the age of 76 due to cancer. He was the prime suspect in the murders of his ex-wife, Nicole Brown, and her lover, a young waiter named Ron Goldman.

In 1997 he was sentenced to pay $33.5 million in damages to the victims' families. In 2006, after another lawsuit for not complying with that ruling, the penalty increased to 36 million. But the Goldman family lawyers assure that he never paid the amount, which should now cover his inheritance and that, in addition, it has escalated to $114 million. Now we have to see the will. Everything indicates that Brown's legacy - whatever it may be - will fall to the four Simpson children aged between 35 and 55, two from his first marriage to Marguerite Whitley and two others who live lives away. But regardless of what the last will says (or whether there is one), there is another and mandatory legal process. It is mandatory for those who have $75,000 or more in California; it starts at $166,000 in Nevada.