New Los Angeles DA issues stern Menendez Brothers case update on possible freedom ahead of bombshell hearing
By Alyssa Guzman
Daily Mail
Nov 16, 2024
Nathan
Hochman, 60 - who will replace his predecessor George Gascón , who
called for the hearing - said the Menendez brothers' fans might not
truly understand the men's case and their resentencing shouldn't be
rushed
The incoming Los Angeles district attorney has issued a stern warning to Erik and Lyle Menendez's fans as a bombshell resentencing hearing approaches.
Nathan
Hochman, 60, said the Menendez brothers' fans might not truly
understand their case and their resentencing shouldn't be rushed, he
told the The Daily Beast.
He fears the resurgence in popularity of the case comes from the explosive Netflix series and documentary that covered their crimes - both of which he's been avoiding ahead of making the big decision.
'I purposely just didn’t want to see [the
shows] because what’s the point? It’s not like I’m going to watch the
movie. I’d rather read the book,' he told The Daily Beast.
'I
have some vague recollections of the case 30 years ago and that’s all
the more reason why I feel compelled to…really get deep into the
facts.'
Hochman,- who will replace his predecessor George Gascón, who called for the hearing - went on to say that 'newspaper accounts are wildly inaccurate often on what the true facts of a case looks like.'
Hochman also won't be blinded by celebrity endorsements from the likes of Kim Kardashian and Cooper Koch, who played Erik in the Netflix series.
One of Gascón's last acts in office - and one speculated to help boost his reelection campaign - was to ask a judge to resentence the case to manslaughter charges.
'Any
time a particular case gets this level of attention, it’s even that
more important to get it right,' he said. The judge is set to make a
decision on the Menendez case on December 11, but Hochman has signaled
he will ask for an extension as he only takes office on December 2
The judge is set to make a decision on the
case on December 11, but Hochman has signaled he will ask for an
extension as he only takes office on December 2.
However, the Menendez case is still a 'high priority,' he told The Daily Beast.
'Any time a particular case gets this level of attention, it’s even that more important to get it right,' he said.
Super
fans were hoping the men would be released from prison by Thanksgiving,
but Hochman said that wouldn't be possible as the case is quite
complicated.
The brothers, now 53 and 56, will more likely not get out before the end of the year.
Their path to freedom can take one three ways - two of which will have to go before Governor Gavin Newsom.
The
brother's lawyers have filed a habeas corpus petition in May 2023 with a
1988 letter Erik wrote to his cousin where he referred to the abuse
from his father.
A hearing on this petition is set for November 26. Another hearing may be called to weigh the evidence afterward.
The
Menendez brothers are currently both locked up at the Richard J.
Donovan Correctional Facility in San Diego, California, where both are
serving life without parole for the shotgun slayings of their parents
Hochman
said the newspapers and Netflix shows on the brothers aren't 100
percent accurate and super fans do not have all the facts about the
case
A second path includes the brothers being
resentenced, as Gascón requested in October. Their resentencing hearing
takes place December 11.
The Menendez family has pleaded for the men's immediate release and asked for the parole process to be skipped.
But
even if the resentencing is agreed to by a judge, the parole process
could take as long as a year – and any decision in favor of release
could still be vetoed by California Governor Gavin Newsom.
A third pathway to freedom includes Newsom granting the brothers clemency.
'What
matters are the facts. What matters is justice and fairness,' Newsom
previously said about the case. 'Not treating them any worse because
they’re celebrities, not treating them certainly any better because
they’re celebrities.'
The Menendez
brothers are currently both locked up at the Richard J. Donovan
Correctional Facility in San Diego, California, where both are serving life without parole for the shotgun slayings of their parents.
Both
admitted to the gruesome killings, but said they snapped after enduring
years of sexual abuse at José's hands and did it in self-defense.
That
argument fell flat at their 1993 trial, with prosecutors successfully
arguing that the murders were carried out for financial gain after the
brothers went on a $700,000 spending spree in the weeks after their
parents’ murder.
As a result, they were
both handed life without parole and sent to separate prisons - although
they eventually reunited at the San Diego lock-up in 2018.
EDITOR'S NOTE: If it was their father who was abusing them, why did the brothers also murder their mother?
1 comment:
But they were VICTIMS too. They said so. They wouldn't lie, would they?
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