Thursday, November 14
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Prosecutor seeks new sentence for Menendez brothers over murder of parents, report


Erik Menendez (L) and his brother Lyle (R) listen during a pre-trial hearing, on December 29, 1992 in Los Angeles after the two pleaded innocent in the August 1989 shotgun deaths of their wealthy parents, Jose and Mary Louise Menendez of Beverly Hills, Calif. It took 40 months for the Superior Court arraignment after prosecutors and defense attorneys battled over the admissibility of taped confessions the brothers allegedly made to their psychotherapist. AFP PHOTO VINCE BUCCI (Photo by VINCE BUCCI / AFP)

Erik and Lyle Menendez have spent 34 years in prison.
Photo: AFP / VINCE BUCCI

A Los Angeles prosecutor said he is asking the court to resentence Erik and Lyle Menendez after they have spent 34 years in prison for the shotgun murder of their parents, the Associated Press reported, after new evidence emerged indicating they were sexually abused by their father for years.

Los Angeles county district attorney George Gascon was due to announced his decision at a press conference on Friday. The AP, citing an official with knowledge of the decision, said Gascon would recommend to a judge that the brothers be resentenced. They are both serving life in prison without parole for the 1989 murders.

The Menendez brothers, now 56 and 53, were convicted after the second of two highly publicised trials that captivated the United States at the time because of their wealth and privilege as the sons of a record company and entertainment industry executive.

Jose Menendez was shot in the back of the head and Kitty Menendez was shot 15 times at their Beverly Hills home. Lyle was 21 and Erik was 18 at the time.

A recent Netflix series dramatizing their story revived interest in the case, but for more than a year defence lawyers have been in talks with prosecutors about vacating the sentence or seeking a new trial, citing new evidence that came to light supporting the brothers’ claim they had been molested for years.

In their first trial, which was televised and ended in a hung jury in 1994, the brothers testified they were sexually mistreated by both parents for years and were acting in self defence, and that their father threatened to kill them if they revealed the abuse.

Prosecutors argued the pair were seeking their parents’ multimillion-dollar fortune.

A jury convicted them in a second trial in Los Angeles County Superior Court that was not televised, but that same jury also spared them the death penalty, opting for life in prison without parole.

Gascon has said there is no doubt the brothers killed their parents but cited new evidence including a letter Erik Menendez purportedly wrote to a cousin eight months before the murders in which he described the abuse. Had the evidence been presented at trial the jury may have reached a different outcome, he said.

Investigators also are examining allegations from a member of the 1980s pop band Menudo who said he was abused by Jose Menendez. Those allegations were publicised last year in Peacock documentary series called “Menendez + Menudo: Boys Betrayed.”

Gascon also said he was concerned by comments from a member of the prosecution team at the time that men could not be raped. “Our office has developed a more modern understanding of sexual violence since the Menendez brothers first faced prosecution,” Gascon said in an 16 October statement.

Gascon previously said he would wait until a 26 November court hearing to made a decision on the case, but he sped up the decision given the intense public interest.

He also faces a difficult re-election battle against challenger Nathan Hochman on 5 November.

The district attorney told CNN on Thursday that the case had split his office into two camps.

“I have a group of people, including some that were involved in the original trial, that are adamant that they should spend the rest of their life in prison and that they were not molested,” Gascon said. “I have other people in the office that believe actually that they probably were molested and that they deserve to have some relief.”

– Reuters



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