home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=93TT0345>
- <title>
- Oct. 04, 1993: Sons And Murderers
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Oct. 04, 1993 On The Trail Of Terror
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CRIME, Page 68
- Sons And Murderers
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Decades of alleged parental sexual abuse ended with 15 shotgun
- blasts, but can the Menendez brothers convince jurors they did
- it in self-defense?
- </p>
- <p>By GEORGE J. CHURCH
- </p>
- <p> When you put the shotgun up against her left cheek and pulled
- the trigger, did you love your mother?
- </p>
- <p> Yes.
- </p>
- <p> That question-and-answer sequence is remarkable, partly because
- it is not especially bizarre or lurid. At least not by the standards
- of the Southern California trial it comes from. Other testimony
- last week moved some jurors to tears, as Lyle Menendez described
- how, when he was seven years old, he had been forced to perform
- oral sex on his father and later had been sodomized with a toothbrush.
- Lyle, now 24, and his brother Erik, 21, are seeking to explain
- why they burst into the television room of the family's $5 million
- Beverly Hills mansion on the night of Aug. 20, 1989, and killed
- their parents, Jose and Kitty Menendez, with 15 shotgun blasts,
- including two "contact" shots--from guns pressed against the
- back of Jose's head and Kitty's cheek.
- </p>
- <p> The trial is testing the limits of the so-called battered-child-syndrome
- defense. (A variant, the battered-wife defense, is sometimes
- used by women who kill abusive husbands.) The Menendez brothers
- contend that they killed their parents not to avenge years of
- sexual and emotional torture--that would be no legal justification--but in self-defense. Even though Jose and Kitty were sitting
- placidly watching television? Yes. The law sometimes recognizes
- self-defense pleas from people who are not under attack but
- who reasonably fear imminent death unless they get their potential
- assailants first. The battered-child-syndrome defense holds
- that a child can be so terrorized by years of sexual, physical
- and emotional abuse that he or she genuinely reads menace--accurately or not--into a look, a gesture, an ambiguous word
- that an outsider might not consider a dire threat.
- </p>
- <p> The Menendez case originally looked much simpler. When Jose,
- 45, a Cuban refugee who had become the wealthy chief of a music-
- and video-distribution business, and Kitty, 44, a onetime beauty
- queen, were gunned down, the first suspicion was of a Mafia
- hit. But the mangled condition of the bodies argued for a motive
- of hatred rather than business. Though they pretended to discover
- the bodies, Lyle, then 21, and Erik, 18, did not put on a very
- convincing show of grief; they went on a $700,000 spending spree
- with the insurance money. In March 1990, Judalon Smyth told
- police that after being asked to sit outside the office of her
- then lover, psychologist Jerome Oziel, she had overheard the
- brothers admit the killings to Oziel. Police seized Oziel's
- tapes and arrested Lyle and Erik on suspicion of having murdered
- their parents to hasten their enjoyment of a $14 million inheritance.
- </p>
- <p> The brothers languished in Los Angeles County jail for three
- years, while the California courts argued over the admissibility
- of the tapes as evidence. In July a final ruling enabled the
- prosecution to use the tapes and cleared the way for a trial.
- Only then did the Menendezes admit to the killings and begin
- spinning their story of abuse and terror: Lyle first, for nine
- days ending last Friday; Erik testifies this week. At the request
- of defense lawyer Leslie Abramson, who did not want to parade
- the same witnesses to tell the same stories in two successive
- trials, the brothers are being tried simultaneously before two
- separate juries. The juries listen to the same evidence, except
- when testimony concerns only one brother. Then, the jury that
- will decide the fate of the other leaves the courtroom.
- </p>
- <p> Lyle has been painting a picture of Jose and Kitty as monsters
- who ran their sons' lives in the tiniest detail, crushing any
- aspirations to independence by handing out cruel punishments
- for trivial offenses. Much worse, he testified, when he was
- seven, Jose "would be in the bathroom, and he'd put me on my
- knees. He'd guide me in all my movements, and I'd have oral
- sex with him." Also, "he used objects, a toothbrush, some sort
- of utensil brush...he'd take my pants off, lay me on the
- bed. He'd have a tube of Vaseline, and he'd just play with me."
- Worse yet, "he raped me." Lyle testified that he took out some
- of his rage by violating Erik with a toothbrush. On the stand,
- he sobbingly apologized to Erik--a display the prosecution
- tried to paint as a bathetic phony.
- </p>
- <p> By Lyle's own testimony, his father's sexual abuse stopped when
- he was eight--13 years before the killings. Kitty, though,
- or so Lyle said, continued to bathe him "everywhere" and invite
- him into her bed and instruct him to touch her "everywhere"
- until he was 13. From then on, he said, he avoided her bed,
- but "we had arguments over that for a long time--my whole
- life, really." On Tuesday, Aug. 15, during one loud argument,
- Kitty ripped off Lyle's toupee in front of Erik, who allegedly
- had not known his older brother was bald.
- </p>
- <p> And that, if Lyle is to be believed, started the fatal sequence.
- Moved by his brother's pain and embarrassment over the toupee
- incident, Erik impulsively confessed to Lyle that Jose was continuing
- his sexual abuse of the younger brother. Two days later, said
- Lyle, he confronted Jose and told his father to leave Erik alone,
- which started three days of escalating arguments. Jose, according
- to Lyle, told him, "What I do with my son is my own business.
- Don't throw your life away. Stay out of it." Lyle interpreted
- that and some later remarks by his father, he said, as threats
- to kill his sons to prevent an exposure that would ruin his
- hoped-for political career (Jose nursed an ambition to become
- the first Cuban-born U.S. Senator).
- </p>
- <p> By Sunday morning, after another alleged attempt by Jose to
- enter Erik's room, the brothers concluded that Erik had to get
- out of the house. Lyle, making conversation, asked his father
- for the phone number of a tennis camp he planned to attend.
- Jose replied, "What does it matter anymore?" Lyle said he took
- that "to be my dad's sarcastic way of saying, `You're dead!'"
- The boys told Kitty they were going out to meet some friends;
- she ordered them to stay in the house. Jose told Erik to go
- upstairs and wait for him. Lyle screamed, "No, you're not going
- to touch Erik!" Jose summoned Kitty to the TV room and closed
- the doors. Said Lyle: "I thought this was the end. I thought
- they were going inside the TV room to plan to kill us." He ran
- upstairs to get Erik. Both brothers got their guns, and blam!
- And blam! again and 13 more times.
- </p>
- <p> Is this story believable? Prosecutor Pamela Bozanich accuses
- Lyle of tear-jerking hamminess. "The level of [Lyle's] acting,"
- she once remarked, "has fallen from Laurence Olivier to Sylvester
- Stallone." But she has been unable to shake his story much despite
- a pounding cross-examination. At one point, she asked why the
- brothers had not told the police of their fears that they would
- be killed. Lyle said, "We discussed: Would the police side with
- us, believe us?" Their conclusion: no, but "filing charges would
- definitely have put us in a position to be killed" by a still
- more outraged father.
- </p>
- <p> There are problematic points in Lyle's story, though. He testified
- that the brothers were convinced Jose and Kitty would kill them
- on a shark-fishing trip the day before the final explosion.
- They went anyway, and nothing happened, but, said Lyle, the
- two boys came back convinced more than ever that they were in
- mortal danger. More important, while Lyle painted a menacing
- portrait of his father, he was less successful explaining why
- the brothers thought Kitty would have joined her husband in
- killing her sons. Some outside legal experts think the prosecution
- may successfully contend that the brothers killed Kitty primarily
- to eliminate any possibility of her identifying them as Jose's
- slayers--allowing them to collect the $14 million inheritance.
- </p>
- <p> Much may depend on Erik's story this week and succeeding testimony
- by defense experts who will testify on the psychological effect
- of long-continued sexual and emotional abuse. But the atmosphere
- of the trial has changed sharply. At first, the common belief
- was that Lyle and Erik would be convicted of first-degree murder
- and sentenced either to death or to life without parole. But
- hardly anyone seems to expect that now; Lyle has been too effective
- in painting them as victims. Even prosecutor Bozanich has told
- reporters, "I think the disturbed family is part of the motivation.
- I don't think this was a crime solely for financial gain."
- </p>
- <p> On the other hand, Lyle has not exactly shown the brothers to
- be lovable enough to deserve outright acquittal. Witness part
- of his testimony about killing Kitty: "I could see somebody
- moving where my mother should be. So I reloaded. I ran around
- and shot my mom. I shot her close." The betting now is that
- the two will be convicted of a lesser charge of voluntary manslaughter
- or second-degree murder, with acquittal an outside chance. But
- nobody ever knows what a jury, let alone two juries, will do
- when the door closes.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-