Menendez Brothers who are hated 50 years to live, qualify for parole
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Menendez Brothers who are hated 50 years to live, qualify for parole

by jessy
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Erik and Lyle Menendez were hated on Tuesday to 50 years of life imprisonment, which made them qualify for the last parole in the battle for years for brothers who tried to be released after 35 years behind bars.

The process of parole will be long and can take years.

Erik and Lyle Menendez were initially sentenced to live without the possibility of parole for the 1989 murder of their parents, Jose and Kitty Menendez. They have the support of more than 20 family members in their efforts to be released.

After hating, Erik Menendez released a statement on Tuesday night, saying, “I was touched and degraded by the outpouring of support.”

“This must be the first step in giving people who have no hope in prison some hope,” he said. “My goal is to ensure that no more people spend 35 years in prison without hope. The possibility of having hope that rehabilitation work is more important than anything that happened to me today.”

In this April 1991 file file, Lyle, left, and Erik Menendez appeared in court for a preliminary hearing held at Beverly Hills, California.

Kevork Djansian/AP, File

The brothers witnessed a highly anticipated Tuesday hate hearing through a video from prison and giving their own statement to judge Michael Jesic.

“I killed my mother,” Lyle Menendez told the judge. “I didn’t give a reason.”

He also claimed to take an oath by lying down in court in the 90s. He apologized to his family for many years of lies and surprises and sadness of crime.

“I did a terrible action,” Erik Menendez told the judge. “My actions are criminal, selfish and cowardly. … There is no reason. There is no justification for what I do.”

He claimed to lie for years and apologize.

“I’m far away on this road” from redemption, said Erik Menendez, added, “I will not stop trying to make a difference.”

“This is really a terrible crime,” the judge said. He noted that he was touched by a letter from a prison guard and was amazed by what brothers had achieved.

The lawyer of the brothers and sisters Mark Geragos said after the court, “I hope and are happy that we are a big step closer to bring home the children.”

“This encourages people who are imprisoned to make the right decisions, to take the right path,” Geragos said, adding, “That’s just Win-Win at many levels.”

Cousin Menendez Anamaria Balalt praised the rehabilitation of his cousin, telling reporters, “In the end, we are here today with this result because of Erik and Lyle. Because they chose to live their lives with clarity and service objectives impressed by the judge.”

Geragos called several relatives to the pulpit at Tuesday’s trial, including Balalt.

Through tears, Balalt begged Jesic to release his cousin, noted that time was almost gone for them to reunite with old family members.

“They are very different men” than when they committed murder, said Balalt, added that “their transformation is extraordinary.”

During a cross examination, Baralt told the prosecutor that the brothers had fully responsible for crime and Lyle Menendez had admitted asking witnesses to lie at the trial. But Balalt admitted that they had not yet recognized several aspects of this case, because the prosecutors argued that the brothers did not fully recognize their crime and closure.

A retired judge who works with dog therapy said in the pulpit that brothers were seen as leaders and that they changed their views on the rehabilitation of prisoners. He said he used to want to punish the defendant, but because of their brothers and their work to help parents and other prisoners, he now believes in rehabilitation.

The prosecution did not call witnesses.

The decision to hate Jesic followed the recommendations made in October by the Angeles District Attorney General at that time George Gascón.

Gascón recommends a life sentence of brothers and sisters without parole, and says they must be punished for murder, which is a sentence of 50 years for life. Because the two siblings were under 26 years at the time of crime, they qualified for parole under the law of California.

The Gascón office said that recommendations that hate calculated many factors, including rehabilitation in prison and harassment or trauma that contributed to the crime. Gascón praised the behavior of brothers and sisters in prison, saying they rehabilitate themselves and start a program to help other inmates.

The combination of two orders provided by the California Penitentiary shows Erik Menendez, Left, and Lyle Menendez.

California Correction Department through AP

In November, Gascón lost his selection offer to Nathan Hochman, who in March submitted a motion to attract a hating petition, mentioning the claim of self-defense from Litani “Litani” Lies. ” The judge refused Hochman’s request.

The trial hated Tuesday was dealing with Geragos and Hochman, who wanted to look after the brothers behind bars.

Geragos told reporters outside the court on Tuesday, “There are no two better candidates in the current state of California to hate than Erik and Lyle Menendez.”

“This is a unicorn-style situation where you have a terrible crime-that no one is walking away and but also extraordinary, extraordinary, rehabilitation and redemption that is almost unmatched,” he said.

At that time, Hochman told reporters, “The Menendez Brothers has failed to be clean with their fully criminal behavior, their closure, their lies and their fraud.”

After a sentence on Tuesday, he released a new statement that said, “The decision to hate Erik and Lyle Menendez is a monumental decision that has significant implications for families involved, the community, and the principles of justice.”

“Our office movement to attract a hating motion proposed by the previous government ensures that the court is presented with all the facts before making such decisions,” the statement continued, with Hochman calling this case “Windows for the public to better understand the judicial system.”

“This case, such as all cases – especially those that captivate the public – must be seen with critical eyes,” he continued. “Our opposition and analysis ensure that the court receives a complete and accurate facts.”

The trial was held on May 9 to determine whether the hateful case must include information from the new California Conditional Council Risk Assessment, which was carried out as part of a separate clemency. Risk assessment comes at the request of Governor Gavin Newsom as part of your clemency offer; Brothers are pursuing various paths to freedom, and the pathway is separate from the hated path. Newsom can provide clemency at any time.

Risk assessment says Erik and Lyle have led to a moderate risk for the community if they are released.

The assessment revealed that brothers had illegal cellphones in prison, among many other violations, although many were not new. However, Erik Menendez has a new phone in January this year, which Hochman emphasized during an attempt to hate when he was supposed to be in his best behavior.

The defender recorded Erik Menendez having one writing for violence 25 years ago and Lyle Menendez did not have it.

The next court’s performance for the clemency case was June 13.

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