Highlighted Crime
Story of the Week -
On August 20, 1989, Lyle and Erik Menendez shot their
parents, Jose and Kitty, to death in the den of the family’s Beverly Hills,
California, home. They then drove up to Mulholland Drive, where they dumped
their shotguns before continuing to a local movie theater to buy tickets as an
alibi. When the pair returned home, Lyle called 911. The Menendez murders
became a national sensation when the new television network, Court TV,
broadcast the trial in 1993.
Although the Menendez brothers were not immediately
suspected, Erik couldn’t take the guilt and confessed his involvement to his psychotherapist,
Dr. L. Jerome Oziel. Ignoring his own ethical responsibilities, Dr. Oziel taped
the sessions with his new patient in an apparent attempt to impress his
mistress but the woman ended up going to the police with her information and,
in March 1990, Lyle, 22, and Erik, 19, were arrested.
For the next three years, a legal battle was fought over
the admissibility of Dr. Oziel’s tapes. Finally, the California Supreme Court
ruled that the tapes could be played. When the trial began in the summer of
1993, the Menendez brothers put on a spirited defense. In compelling testimony
lasting over a month, they emotionally described years of sexual abuse by Jose
and Kitty Menendez. They insisted that they had shot their parents in
self-defense because they believed that Jose would kill them rather than have
the abuse be exposed.
The first two juries (one for each brother) deadlocked,
and a mistrial was declared. At the retrial, which began in October 1995, the
judge was much more restrictive in allowing the defense attorneys to focus on
the alleged sexual abuse. In March 1996, both Lyle and Erik were convicted and
sentenced to life in prison.
Check back every
Monday for a new installment of “This Week in Crime History.”
Michael Thomas Barry is a columnist for www.crimemagazine.com and is the author
of six nonfiction books that includes the award winning Murder and Mayhem 52 Crimes that Shocked Early California 1849-1949.
Visit Michael’s website www.michaelthomasbarry.com
for more information. His book can be purchased from Amazon through the following
link:
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