News Releases

March 10, 2025: Los Angeles County District Attorney Nathan Hochman Files Decision on Menendez Resentencing Motion

Contact: 
Media Relations Division
(213) 257-2000

LOS ANGELES — District Attorney Nathan J. Hochman announced today that his office has filed a response on the resentencing matter for Lyle and Erik Menendez.

The resentencing hearing for the Menendez brothers is scheduled for March 20 and 21 in Van Nuys, with Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Michael Jesic presiding. 

“After a thorough and exhaustive review of the over 10,000s of pages of trial transcripts from two months-long trials, of the 1,000s of pages of prison records, of the 100s of hours of videotaped trial testimony, of all relevant pleadings, exhibits and statements, as well as interviewing victim family members, defense counsel, prior prosecutors, and law enforcement and the applicable law, the District Attorney’s Office is prepared to proceed forward with the hearing on the Court’s initiation of resentencing proceedings for the Menendez brothers but we are requesting that the prior District Attorney’s motion for resentencing be withdrawn,” District Attorney Hochman said. “The basis for that request is that the prior motion did not examine or consider whether the Menendez brothers have exhibited full insight and taken complete responsibility for their crimes by continuing for the past over 30 years to lie about their claims of self-defense, that is, their fear that their mother and father were going to kill them the night of Aug. 20, 1989, justifying the brutal murders of their parents with shotgun blasts through the back of their father’s head, a point-blank blast through their mother’s face, and shots to their kneecaps to stage it as a Mafia killing. As a full examination of the record reveals, the Menendez brothers have never come clean and admitted that they lied about their self-defense as well as suborned perjury and attempted to suborn perjury by their friends for the lies, among others, of their father violently raping Lyle’s girlfriend, their mother poisoning the family, and their attempt to get a handgun the day before the murders.

“The Court must consider such lack of full insight and lack of acceptance of responsibility for their murderous actions in deciding whether the Menendez brothers pose an unreasonable risk of danger to the community.

“The Court may look for guidance to the recent case of Governor Newsom’s denial of parole to Sirhan Sirhan, the murderer of Robert F. Kennedy. In that case, the parole board had recommended parole focusing on the facts that Sirhan Sirhan had spent over 50 years for the 1968 murder, was in his late 70s, was 24 at the time of the murder, came from a troubled and violent upbringing, engaged in extensive rehabilitation efforts in prison including getting educational degrees and being involved in numerous prison and community programs, received supportive letters from prison officials and victim family members, was in diminishing health, and had the lowest prison risk score.  Notwithstanding these factors, Governor Newsom determined that Sirhan Sirhan posed an unreasonable risk of danger to the community because he had failed to exhibit insight and completely accept responsibility for his murder of Kennedy and reversed the grant of parole.

“Here, the Court must similarly analyze whether the Menendez brothers’ lack of full insight and lack of complete responsibility for their murders overcomes, like it did in Sirhan Sirhan’s case, the other factors justifying a resentencing like the Menendez’ length of time in prison, their age at the time of the murders, their upbringing and any sexual abuse they experienced, their extensive rehabilitation efforts in prison including getting educational degrees and involvement in community and prison programs, any supportive letters from prison officials and victim family members, their health, and the low prison risk score. The decision to resentence is profound since the Court is asked to change a sentence of life without the possibility of parole, received almost 30 years ago following first degree murder convictions with special circumstances for the brutal slaying of their parents — a sentence that has been repeatedly upheld by five different appellate courts that have reviewed it — to a sentence of life with the possibility of parole.

“The People want to make clear that its request to withdraw its resentencing motion is based on the current state of the record and the Menendez brothers’ current and continual failure to show full insight and accept full responsibility for their murders. If they were to finally come forward and unequivocally and sincerely admit and completely accept responsibility for their lies of self-defense and the attempted suborning of perjury they engaged in, then the Court should weigh such new insight into the analysis of rehabilitation and resentencing — as will the People.

“I want to thank the attorneys in my office — particularly Assistant Head Deputy Habib Balian; and Deputy District Attorneys Seth Carmack and Ethan Milius — who dedicated countless hours to reviewing this matter with the diligence and professionalism that the people of this county expect and deserve. Their commitment to upholding the law and seeking justice has been exemplary.”

People's Response to Court's Initiation of Resentencing & Request to Withdraw Motion for Resentencing-Filed

Exhibit 18

Exhibit 19 A

Exhibi 19 B

Exhibit 19 C

Links to Exhibits:

Exhibit 01 - Baker Letter

Exhibit 02 - Eslaminia Letter

Exhibit 03 - People v. Menendez

Exhibit 04 - Menendez v. Terhune

Exhibit 05 - Incident Report Ofc. Angel

Exhibit 06 - Erik and Lyle Menendez Interviews

Exhibit 07 - Transcript of Erik Menendez Interviews

Exhibit 08 - Craig Cignarelli

Exhibit 09 - Transcript of December 11, 1989 Oziel Tape

Exhibit 10 - Cano Letter

Exhibit 11 - 68 CA v. Menendez Witness Testimony

Exhibit 12 - Novelli Tape 11A

Exhibit 13 - Novelli Tape 25

Exhibit 14 - Novelli Tape 3

Exhibit 15 - Excerpts from Eriks C File

Exhibit 16 - Excerpts from Lyles C File