Dubai Telegraph - LA prosecutor asks to withdraw Menendez brothers' bid for resentencing

EUR -
AED 4.013929
AFN 77.010548
ALL 99.19297
AMD 427.967654
ANG 1.965873
AOA 998.331663
ARS 1167.189754
AUD 1.719087
AWG 1.967159
AZN 1.836429
BAM 1.9543
BBD 2.20239
BDT 132.528295
BGN 1.954619
BHD 0.411953
BIF 3232.448939
BMD 1.092866
BND 1.453298
BOB 7.537216
BRL 6.199609
BSD 1.090753
BTN 94.375711
BWP 14.810499
BYN 3.569728
BYR 21420.179777
BZD 2.190999
CAD 1.564105
CDF 3141.990948
CHF 0.958717
CLF 0.026121
CLP 1002.36559
CNY 7.89902
CNH 7.910128
COP 4501.789569
CRC 543.977564
CUC 1.092866
CUP 28.960957
CVE 110.180446
CZK 25.029958
DJF 194.23916
DKK 7.45936
DOP 68.586738
DZD 145.657526
EGP 55.149751
ERN 16.392995
ETB 143.363369
FJD 2.494085
FKP 0.841569
GBP 0.84172
GEL 3.054587
GGP 0.841569
GHS 16.937063
GIP 0.841569
GMD 78.773613
GNF 9449.603556
GTQ 8.421792
GYD 228.861666
HKD 8.491926
HNL 27.957988
HRK 7.530833
HTG 143.381867
HUF 397.738214
IDR 18079.18275
ILS 4.010246
IMP 0.841569
INR 94.564976
IQD 1430.015592
IRR 45932.380216
ISK 145.726682
JEP 0.841569
JMD 171.010267
JOD 0.774859
JPY 163.686789
KES 141.443895
KGS 95.827139
KHR 4383.609341
KMF 492.002727
KPW 983.505077
KRW 1586.271224
KWD 0.336582
KYD 0.908786
KZT 544.486377
LAK 23649.742466
LBP 97878.265938
LKR 323.68148
LRD 218.488158
LSL 19.79107
LTL 3.22695
LVL 0.661064
LYD 5.261899
MAD 10.527912
MDL 19.840171
MGA 5092.280503
MKD 61.556634
MMK 2293.969494
MNT 3799.99861
MOP 8.745669
MRU 43.414097
MUR 49.110246
MVR 16.878596
MWK 1894.260649
MXN 21.780333
MYR 4.856873
MZN 69.815806
NAD 19.79107
NGN 1684.224279
NIO 40.206127
NOK 11.550094
NPR 151.374886
NZD 1.880022
OMR 0.42071
PAB 1.092866
PEN 3.970385
PGK 4.492525
PHP 62.608837
PKR 306.137939
PLN 4.181567
PYG 8685.920422
QAR 3.977832
RON 4.977958
RSD 117.228218
RUB 90.391306
RWF 1553.26523
SAR 4.098215
SBD 9.304153
SCR 15.716351
SDG 656.705797
SEK 11.002606
SGD 1.455766
SHP 0.858821
SLE 24.950302
SLL 22916.861378
SOS 623.960746
SRD 39.797526
STD 22620.126235
SVC 9.562322
SYP 14209.314829
SZL 19.79107
THB 36.726124
TJS 11.911446
TMT 3.822571
TND 3.365523
TOP 2.631246
TRY 40.177339
TTD 7.420522
TWD 36.067779
TZS 2886.781963
UAH 45.424127
UGX 4006.503708
USD 1.092866
UYU 46.007851
UZS 14137.377729
VES 72.281398
VND 27921.98011
VUV 134.272294
WST 3.061198
XAF 656.003636
XAG 0.032096
XAU 0.000359
XCD 2.958714
XDR 0.818782
XOF 656.003636
XPF 119.331742
YER 269.47663
ZAR 19.842135
ZMK 9837.1058
ZMW 31.394819
ZWL 351.902508
  • RBGPF

    66.7000

    66.7

    +100%

  • CMSC

    -0.1100

    23.22

    -0.47%

  • GSK

    0.1400

    40.39

    +0.35%

  • SCS

    -0.0800

    10.93

    -0.73%

  • NGG

    -0.3300

    63.81

    -0.52%

  • CMSD

    -0.1500

    23.39

    -0.64%

  • RELX

    -0.6100

    48.99

    -1.25%

  • BTI

    -0.5800

    41.26

    -1.41%

  • RIO

    0.6700

    64.14

    +1.04%

  • BCC

    -0.6600

    99.34

    -0.66%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    12.98

    -0.15%

  • AZN

    -0.3000

    77.07

    -0.39%

  • RYCEF

    0.0400

    10.55

    +0.38%

  • BCE

    0.0800

    23.78

    +0.34%

  • BP

    0.4600

    34.22

    +1.34%

  • VOD

    -0.0200

    9.84

    -0.2%

LA prosecutor asks to withdraw Menendez brothers' bid for resentencing
LA prosecutor asks to withdraw Menendez brothers' bid for resentencing / Photo: VINCE BUCCI - AFP/File

LA prosecutor asks to withdraw Menendez brothers' bid for resentencing

The chief prosecutor in Los Angeles said Monday he was asking for the withdrawal of a resentencing motion for Erik and Lyle Menendez because the brothers continue to lie about the 1989 murder of their wealthy parents.

Text size:

The pair were jailed for life after a blockbuster legal drama three decades ago detailing the shotgun slayings of Jose and Kitty Menendez at the family's luxury Beverly Hills mansion, which the brothers staged to look like a mafia hit.

But a growing campaign to free them -- given new life by a hit Netflix series -- has pursued a three-pronged strategy: clemency, a new trial or resentencing.

Prosecutors in Los Angeles had previously been supportive, but newly installed District Attorney Nathan Hochman, who has already opposed a new trial, on Monday said there should be no resentencing either.

"In looking at whether or not the Menendezes have exhibited the full insight and complete responsibility for their crimes, they have not," Hochman told reporters during a press conference.

"They have told 20 different lies, they've actually admitted to four of them, but 16 realized lies remain unacknowledged."

Hochman said he was asking the court, which is expected to sit on March 20 and 21, to withdraw a supportive motion submitted by his predecessor in "the interests of justice."

Erik, now 54, and Lyle, 57, have spent more than three decades behind bars.

During two trials in the 1990s that gripped America, prosecutors painted their parents' shotgun murders as a cold-hearted bid by the then-young men -- Lyle was 21 and Erik was 18 -- to get their hands on their parents' $14 million fortune.

But their attorneys described the 1989 killings as an act of desperate self-defense by young men subjected to years of sexual abuse and psychological violence at the hands of a tyrannical father and a complicit mother.

The case saw a huge surge of renewed interest last year with the release of the Netflix hit "Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story."

Last month Hochman set out his opposition to the brothers' attempt to get a new trial.

In a forensic presentation on Monday, he used much of the same reasoning to lay out his position on resentencing, which he said hinged on the brothers' continued unwillingness to come clean about their crimes.

Hochman said the men had offered five disparate explanations for the deaths of their parents, ranging from an initial claim that it was a mafia hit to the self-defense that they ultimately relied on at trial.

In reality, he said, the murders were meticulously planned and cold-blooded.

He said the slayings were followed up with attempts to destroy a will they thought would cut them out of the parents' fortune, and months of deceit, including attempts to get people to lie in court for them.

But, he said, his office would be prepared to revisit the idea of resentencing in the future if the brothers "accept complete responsibility for all their criminal actions."

The third route to freedom for the brothers rests with California Governor Gavin Newsom, who has the power to grant clemency at any time.

C.Akbar--DT