While incarcerated, the brothers focused on “creating groups to deal with how to address untreated trauma, creating groups to deal with other inmates that have physical disabilities and may be treated differently. Even in one case, Lyle negotiating for other inmates as to the conditions that they live under,” the district attorney said Thursday.
“All this was done by two young people. Now they’re not as young. They had no hopes of ever getting out of prison,” Gascón said.
Gascón said his message to the brothers is, “We appreciate what they did while they were in prison. While I disapprove of the way they handled their abuse, we hope that they not only have learned — which appears that they have — but that if they get reintegrated into our community, that they continue to do public good.”
“There is no excuse for murder,” the district attorney said, adding, “I do believe that the brothers was subjected to a tremendous amount of dysfunction in the home and molestation.”
“I don’t believe that manslaughter would have been the appropriate charge [to request in the resentencing filing] given the premeditation that was involved,” he added.
Following the district attorney’s announcement, Geragos was joined by several family members of the Menendez brothers who he said have “waited patiently for this day.”
“This is the family that knows them,” Geragos said at a press briefing. “This is the family that believes 35 years is enough.”
Geragos said he is “hopeful” the brothers will have a fair hearing.
“I believe before Thanksgiving they will be home,” he said.
Geragos said they have put together a “robust” reentry plan regarding the brothers’ potential release that they will provide to the court.
The decades-old case began on Aug. 20, 1989, when Lyle and Erik Menendez fatally shot their parents, Jose and Kitty Menendez, in the family’s Beverly Hills home. Lyle Menendez, then 21, and Erik Menendez, then 18, used shotguns they bought days earlier.
Prosecutors alleged the brothers killed their wealthy parents for financial gain.
The defense argued the brothers acted in self-defense after enduring years of sexual abuse by their father.
Their first trials — which captured the nation’s attention with cameras in the courtroom — ended in mistrials.
In 1996, at the end of a second trial — in which the judge barred much of the sex abuse evidence — the brothers were convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to two consecutive life prison terms without the possibility of parole.
The sensational case gained new attention this fall with the release of the Netflix drama “Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story” and the Netflix documentary “The Menendez Brothers.”
Gascón said this month that his office was evaluating new evidence: allegations from a member of the boy band Menudo who said he was molested by Jose Menendez, and a letter Erik Menendez wrote to a cousin eight months before the murders detailing his alleged abuse.
Erik Menendez’s cousin testified about the alleged abuse at trial, but Erik Menendez’s letter — which would have corroborated the cousin’s testimony — wasn’t unearthed until several years ago, according to Geragos.