LA County district attorney sends letters requesting clemency for Menendez brothers
Los Angeles District Attorney George GascĂłn âstrongly supportsâ Erik and Lyle Menendezâs bid for clemency and has written letters on behalf of each brother to California Gov. Gavin Newsom, he announced Wednesday.
The , by GascĂłnâs office, describe the 1989 murders by the Menendez brothers of their parents, Kitty and Jose Menendez, as well as âcredible allegationsâ that Erik and Lyle were each âthe victim of sexual and physical abuse at the hands of (their) father.â
The brothersâ 34 years spent in custody and âdedication to rehabilitationâ make them âexemplaryâ candidates for clemency, GascĂłn wrote. The district attorney adds that his office has communicated with several family members of Kitty and Jose Menendez and all family members except one, Kitty Menendezâs brother, support commutation.
CNN has reached out to the brothersâ attorney, Mark Geragos, to confirm a formal clemency request has been sent to the governorâs office. Newsomâs office declined to comment on the case, saying âpending clemency applications are confidential and weâre not able to discuss individual cases.â
If approved by the governor, the Menendez brothers could see their sentence â life in prison without the possibility of parole â reduced, or they could be released immediately.
âI strongly support clemency for Erik and Lyle Menendez,â GascĂłn said in a Wednesday. âThey have respectively served 34 years and have continued their educations and worked to create new programs to support the rehabilitation of fellow inmates.â
Gasconâs announcement comes days after the district attorney filed a motion recommending a judge resentence the siblings ââ from life in prison without parole to life in prison with parole.
Under California law, the brothers would be immediately eligible for parole because they were 26 or younger when they committed their crimes.
A hearing for the resentencing request has been set for Dec. 11, according to a court official and Holly Baird, a spokesperson for the brothersâ lawyer Mark Geragos.
âThey were appropriately sentenced at the time when they were tried,â GascĂłn said in an earlier interview with CNN. âI just think that given the current state of the law and given our assessment of their behavior in prison, they deserve the opportunity to be reevaluated and perhaps reintegrated into the community.â