The Menendez brothers scored a victory in court on Friday, as a judge denied the Los Angeles District Attorney’s move to withdraw a resentencing petition.
The decision means that a hearing will go forward next Thursday and Friday, at which time the D.A. and prosecutors will argue over whether the brothers are sufficiently rehabilitated to warrant a reduced sentence.
Lyle and Erik Menendez have served 35 years for the 1989 murders of their parents at their Beverly Hills home in 1989. The brothers witnessed the hearing on Friday remotely via WebEx from state prison in San Diego County.
District Attorney George Gascón moved last October to reduce the brothers’ sentence from life without parole to 50 years to life. That reduction, if granted, would make them immediately eligible for parole.
Nathan Hochman, who defeated Gascón in the November election, sought to withdraw his predecessor’s petition, arguing that the brothers had not taken full responsibility for their crimes and remained a threat to the community.
At a lengthy hearing on Friday, attorneys on both sides argued over whether Hochman had the right to rescind his predecessor’s request, and whether the brothers are truly rehabilitated. Habib Balian, speaking for the D.A.’s office, argued that the brothers have never admitted that their self-defense claim was fabricated, or taken responsibility for repeatedly lying about the murders and recruiting their friends to lie on their behalf in court.
Judge Michael Jesic held that the D.A.’s office had not done enough to show that the prior administration’s petition should be withdrawn. The judge said he was seeking to avoid a situation in which petitions could be offered and withdrawn merely based on a change in administration.
“There’s no new information,” the judge said. “None of this is really new. They’ve stuck with their story. It goes to whether they’ve been rehabilitated.”
A California appeals court precedent requires that a D.A. offers a “legitimate reason” to withdraw a resentencing petition. The judge found that the court precedent did not provide enough clarity to determine what qualifies as “legitimate.”
The Menendez brothers’ attorney, Mark Geragos, blasted the D.A.’s office for offering a lengthy presentation on the original crime, which even included a display of a photo of Jose Menendez’s dead body. Geragos called Balian’s presentation a “dog and pony show” and likened it to Sen. Cory Booker’s recent filibuster.