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- NATION, Page 24Were Millions The Motive?
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- The sons of a video mogul are accused of slaying their parents
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- Even in Hollywood the script seemed bizarre: an
- entertainment mogul and his wife are cut down by multiple
- shotgun blasts as they sit watching television and snacking on
- berries and cream in their Beverly Hills mansion. Their two
- handsome sons return home from an evening at the movies to
- discover the horribly mangled bodies. The police probe the
- possibility of a Mafia hit but find nothing. The boys inherit
- their parents' fortune, estimated at at least $14 million, and
- a $400,000 insurance policy. Seven months later, the scenario
- takes a shocking twist when police arrest the orphaned sons and
- charge them with committing the killings.
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- Jose Menendez was only 45 when he was killed in August; his
- wife Mary Louise was 44. He had been a hustling Cuban kid sent
- to the U.S. by his well-to-do parents when he was 16 to avoid
- indoctrination by the then new Castro regime. He rose rapidly
- in the rental-car business but made his real mark as a shrewd
- operator in the record-and-video distribution business. He
- founded his own video- and music-software distribution company,
- Live Entertainment Inc., and joined the board of directors of
- Carolco Pictures Inc., producer of the Rambo films. The couple
- and their two athletically gifted sons, Joseph Lyle, 22, and
- Erik Galen, 19, were described as a handsome, happy family,
- often seen playing tennis and other sports together.
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- After the slayings, the sons dealt with their grief in
- different fashions. The elder bought a Porsche and a restaurant
- in Princeton, near the university from which he had been
- expelled in 1988 because of honor-code violations. His brother
- abandoned plans to enter UCLA and joined the junior
- professional tennis circuit.
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- But early on, says Lieut. Russell Olson, the Beverly Hills
- chief of detectives, "we had suspicions of the boys'
- involvement." Police had ruled out a gangland murder because
- of the sheer savagery of the attack. "Mob killings are `clean';
- this one wasn't," says an officer. Suspicions were further
- heightened when family members told police that a copy of what
- might have been a new will had been erased from Jose Menendez's
- home computer. "The focus became very clear over the past few
- months," said Chief of Police Marvin Iannone. There was some
- physical evidence, but "we were waiting for the glue binding it
- together."
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- That came when investigators learned that all of the
- Menendez family had been consulting a psychologist, Jerome
- Oziel. After several people approached the police with new
- information in late February, officers armed with a search
- warrant confiscated records and tapes from the psychologist's
- office. Lawyers for the Menendez brothers argued that seizure
- of the tapes violated the laws governing doctor-patient
- confidentiality. But the district attorney, Ira Reiner, said
- the confidentiality rule can be broken when a patient presents
- a continuing danger or threat. The district attorney filed
- murder charges against the Menendez brothers, asking for the
- death penalty. Said Reiner: "It's been our experience in the
- district attorney's office that $14 million provides ample
- motive for someone to kill somebody."
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