Explore L.A.’s dark past with the Gory Funeral Limo Tour, uncovering infamous 90’s tragedies and the city’s sinister allure.
Explore L.A.’s dark past with the Gory Funeral Limo Tour, uncovering infamous 90’s tragedies and the city’s sinister allure.
- Directors Guild of America - At the renowned Directors Guild of America theater on Sunset Boulevard, the Hollywood memorial service for José and Kitty Menendez attracted industry elites, friends, and family just days after their shocking 1989 murders, highlighting the case’s strong ties to the entertainment world. This sleek, modern complex…
- Directors Guild of America - At the renowned Directors Guild of America theater on Sunset Boulevard, the Hollywood memorial service for José and Kitty Menendez attracted industry elites, friends, and family just days after their shocking 1989 murders, highlighting the case’s strong ties to the entertainment world. This sleek, modern complex remains a must-visit for true crime and film history enthusiasts, offering a poignant glimpse into how Los Angeles mourned one of its most notorious crime stories in a venue designed for premieres and red-carpet events.
- Hertz - Uber West Hollywood - N La Cienega Boulevard - At this modest Hertz Rent a Car location, José Menendez made sports marketing history by signing NFL superstar O.J. Simpson to a groundbreaking national spokesperson and TV commercial deal that made him a household name. This stop connects two of Los Angeles’ most infamous crime stories, offering true crime fans a behind-the-scenes look at the corporate partnership that linked the Menendez family and Simpson long before their parallel murder trials captivated the world.
- Beverly Center - The Beverly Center, a vast multi-level shopping mall at the edge of Beverly Hills and West Hollywood, was a hotspot for luxury retail therapy in the 1980s and 1990s, attracting celebrities, tourists, and wealthy locals alike. After the murders, Erik and Lyle Menendez were seen here on extravagant shopping sprees, spending their sudden wealth on designer clothes, watches, and status symbols that would later be used in court to depict a picture of greed and excess.
- The Nice Guy - The former location of Tryst nightclub at 401 N. La Cienega Boulevard once hosted an intimate, upscale lounge scene in the early 1990s, attracting Hollywood insiders, nightlife regulars, and celebrity couples. Here, O.J. Simpson notoriously confronted and terrorized Nicole Brown Simpson and her date Keith Zlomsowitz during a night out, turning what was meant to be a romantic evening into a chilling preview of the stalking and control that would later become central to her tragic story.
- West Hollywood - West Hollywood emerged as a vibrant haven for the LGBTQIA+ community during the 1980s AIDS crisis, becoming both an epicenter of grief and a powerful headquarters for activism, healthcare advocacy, and AIDS awareness. While the Simpson and Menendez families navigated a highly visible, heteronormative Los Angeles shaped by celebrity, privilege, and traditional family image, West Hollywood, just minutes away, was fighting for queer survival, civil rights, and recognition amidst staggering loss.
- The Abbey - This longtime West Hollywood gay club has endured since the 1980s and 1990s, when it served as both a sanctuary and a battleground for LGBTQIA+ people living through the AIDS crisis and an era of intense homophobia. Inside its dark dance floor and neon-lit bar, queer Angelenos built chosen families, grieved loved ones lost to AIDS, and claimed joy and visibility at the very moment families like the Simpsons and Menendezes—shaped by mainstream fears of the disease—were navigating a very different, heteronormative Los Angeles.
- Beverly Gardens Park - Erik Menendez met Dr. Jerome Oziel at a small park off Santa Monica Boulevard in Beverly Hills, where the two sat on a bench after leaving Oziel’s nearby Bedford Drive office and talked about Erik’s nightmares and guilt over the killings. During this tense walk-and-talk session, Erik finally broke down and admitted, “We did it. We killed our parents,” turning this ordinary neighborhood green space into one of the most pivotal confession sites in Los Angeles true crime history.
- Golden Triangle - Rodeo Drive in Beverly Hills is the world’s most elite luxury shopping district, packed with designer flagships, jewelers, and couture boutiques that symbolize wealth, status, and Hollywood excess. During the late 1980s and early 1990s, Nicole and O.J. Simpson, along with José, Kitty, Lyle, and Erik Menendez, frequently strolled these palm-lined blocks, browsing high-end stores and immersing themselves in the opulent lifestyle later dissected in courtrooms, documentaries, and true crime tours.
- 435 N Bedford Dr - Dr. Jerome Oziel’s sleek Beverly Hills office at 435 North Bedford Drive sits in the heart of the city’s medical and professional district, just minutes from the Menendez family’s Elm Drive mansion, making it a discreet yet central setting in the case. Inside this building, Oziel held pivotal therapy sessions with Erik and Lyle Menendez, recorded their incriminating conversations, and ultimately became the prosecution’s key witness—turning this ordinary office suite into one of Los Angeles’ most consequential true crime addresses.
- Rodeo Drive - At the corner of Rodeo Drive and Brighton Way in Beverly Hills, Nicole Brown Simpson once spotted O.J. Simpson riding with two women, triggering a jealous confrontation in the heart of L.A.’s most luxurious shopping district. She circled the block in her car shouting expletives at them, turning this glamorous intersection of designer boutiques and palm-lined sidewalks into a flashpoint that revealed the volatility, control, and emotional chaos simmering inside their relationship.
- Saint Laurent - The former Daisy nightclub once stood at 326 North Rodeo Drive in Beverly Hills, a chic members-only restaurant and disco where Hollywood elites and pro athletes came to see and be seen. In 1977, 18-year-old Nicole Brown worked here as a waitress when she met O.J. Simpson on one of his frequent visits, a chance encounter that ignited their tumultuous relationship and forever tied this now-vanished hotspot to true crime and pop culture history.
- 722 Elm Dr - Visit the Beverly Hills mansion at 722 North Elm Drive, where brothers Lyle and Erik Menendez fatally shot their parents José and Kitty in the home’s intimate TV room on August 20, 1989, shocking America and the affluent 90210 neighborhood. Today, the Mediterranean-style 1927 villa still stands behind its gates, drawing curious true crime fans who come to glimpse the infamous façade that became a symbol of greed, family trauma, and one of Los Angeles’ most talked-about murder cases.
- UCLA Athletics Hall of Fame - Erik Menendez was accepted to UCLA, a dream that symbolized his chance to finally live independently and experience a normal college life away from the intense pressure of his family. Instead, José forced him to commute from home and forbade him from living in the dorms, turning this otherwise typical campus milestone into yet another reminder of control, isolation, and the privilege that would later be spotlighted in their notorious murder case.
- St. Martin of Tours Catholic Church - Nicole Brown Simpson’s funeral was held at St. Martin of Tours Catholic Church on Sunset Boulevard in Brentwood, where about 200 friends, family members, and celebrities gathered under intense media scrutiny to say goodbye. O.J. Simpson attended with their children, joining mourners inside the Spanish-style church that today remains a poignant stop for visitors tracing the emotional aftermath of the murders and the beginning of the “Trial of the Century.”
- 375 N Rockingham Ave - The former site of O.J. Simpson’s Rockingham estate in Brentwood once housed his sprawling 6,000-plus square foot mansion at 360 North Rockingham Avenue, complete with a pool, tennis court, and lush, gated grounds that featured prominently in the “Trial of the Century.” Although the original house was demolished and replaced with a new residence to distance the property from its dark history, the address remains a magnet for true crime enthusiasts who still seek out the infamous location where Simpson lived, hid from police, and ultimately surrendered.
- 325 S Gretna Green Way - Nicole Brown Simpson’s rented Brentwood home on Gretna Green Way became her refuge during separation, yet also the backdrop for a chilling 911 call in which she begged police for help as O.J. Simpson raged and pounded outside. Today, this otherwise quiet residential property stands as a haunting reminder of her repeated pleas for protection and the escalating domestic violence that preceded her murder.
- San Vicente Boulevard - San Vicente Boulevard in Brentwood functioned as O.J. and Nicole Simpson’s everyday corridor, home to his office, their go-to gyms, favorite Italian restaurant Mezzaluna where Nicole shared her last meal with family, and a string of upscale cafes, banks, and boutiques that defined their routine. Along this leafy, walkable stretch—now dotted with a Shade Store where Mezzaluna once stood, trendy eateries, a neighborhood Starbucks, and high-end clothiers where Ron Goldman sometimes modeled—the ordinary backdrop of errands, workouts, and date nights became inseparable from one of Los Angeles’ most notorious true crime narratives.
- Starbucks Coffee Company - Enjoy a coffee break and stretch your legs at this Brentwood Starbucks, a cozy neighborhood spot with outdoor seating that has become an unassuming landmark in the O.J. Simpson case. This is where Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman first met in line over casual conversation and shared smiles, a seemingly ordinary encounter that would later take on tragic significance in true crime history.
- 11663 Gorham Ave - Ronald Goldman lived in a modest 13-unit apartment building at 11663 Gorham Avenue in Brentwood, just behind a neighborhood shopping plaza and close to O.J. Simpson’s office. From this unassuming complex, he stopped home to shower and change before heading out to return Nicole’s mother’s forgotten glasses to Bundy Drive, an everyday detour that placed him on a collision course with one of Los Angeles’ most infamous murders.
- The Shade Store - The former site of Mezzaluna Trattoria on San Vicente Boulevard in Brentwood is where Nicole Brown Simpson shared her final dinner with family on the night of June 12, 1994, before returning home to Bundy Drive. Though the Italian restaurant has long since closed and the space is now occupied by a coffee chain and other retailers, this unassuming corner remains a powerful stop for true crime visitors tracing the last movements of Nicole and waiter Ron Goldman.
- Acai Nation - The former Ben & Jerry’s ice cream shop in Brentwood marks the heartbreaking spot where Sidney and Justin Simpson enjoyed ice cream with family on the evening their mother, Nicole Brown Simpson, and Ron Goldman were murdered. Today the original storefront has been replaced by new businesses, but the location remains a quietly devastating stop on any O.J. Simpson true crime tour, underscoring how an ordinary family outing collided with one of Los Angeles’ most infamous crimes.
- 875 S Bundy Dr - Nicole Brown Simpson’s Brentwood condominium at 875 South Bundy Drive is the quiet, tree-lined courtyard complex where she and Ron Goldman were brutally murdered on June 12, 1994, in a crime that shocked the world and ignited the “Trial of the Century.” Their bodies were found just inside the front gate and on the small front walkway, transforming this otherwise ordinary residential building into one of Los Angeles’ most infamous true crime locations and a lasting symbol of domestic violence and media frenzy.
- South Saltair Avenue & San Vicente Boulevard - A key West Los Angeles intersection where witnesses later reported seeing O.J. Simpson driving his white Ford Bronco recklessly shortly after the murders of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman, suggesting frantic movement in the narrow window of time surrounding the crime. As you pass by here amid the everyday traffic and city noise, you’re placed at a point along the alleged escape route, where an ordinary crossroads became part of the timeline scrutinized by investigators, attorneys, and millions of trial watchers around the world.
- Interstate 405 - The infamous low-speed O.J. Simpson chase unfolded along Los Angeles freeways as Simpson, riding in the white Ford Bronco, led a caravan of police cars and news helicopters down the 405 while millions watched live on television. The pursuit finally ended when the Bronco returned to Simpson’s Brentwood estate, where he surrendered in his driveway, turning an ordinary stretch of Southern California freeway into one of the most unforgettable crime scenes in modern pop-culture history.

- Access to visual background materials for passengers with smartphones.
- Tour of the Simpson and Menendez’ West Los Angeles
- Access to visual background materials for passengers with smartphones.
- Tour of the Simpson and Menendez’ West Los Angeles
- Snacks
- Gratuities
- Snacks
- Gratuities
Explore Los Angeles’ intriguing true crime past with this captivating sightseeing tour that delves into the notorious O.J. Simpson and Menendez Brothers murder cases. Travel through West L.A., from the luxurious streets of Brentwood to Beverly Hills, visiting the actual sites connected to these startling 1990s events. With Grave Line Tours, discover the…
Explore Los Angeles’ intriguing true crime past with this captivating sightseeing tour that delves into the notorious O.J. Simpson and Menendez Brothers murder cases. Travel through West L.A., from the luxurious streets of Brentwood to Beverly Hills, visiting the actual sites connected to these startling 1990s events. With Grave Line Tours, discover the grim connections between celebrity, family, and deadly obsession that have left a lasting impact on Hollywood’s history.
- Not recommended for travelers sensitive to extreme subject matter or emotionally upset by disturbing content.
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.