County Da Nathan Hochman
I will not reject myself from the case lead
Published
County prosecutor of Los Angeles Nathan Hochman said he won't reject himself Erik And Lyle Menendez Case … Despite their lawyer calling Hochman to withdraw.
In new legal documents, obtained by TMZ, Hochman says that there is no legal reason for him to challenge himself … and he explodes the defense for what he considers as a “drastic and desperate stage” … claiming that they are trying to bypass the central problem here … resentment, to which Hochman opposes.
The lawyer for Erik and Lyle, Mark GeragosPreviously, called Hochman to challenge himself.
Hochman grew up in Beverly Hills and went to the same high school as the Menendez Bros … and the Menendez and Geragos family say that Hochman restored the Menendez family … alleging that he was raping the rights of the law of Marsy for the victims and claimed his decision to show photos of the crime scene in a hospital in April.
Bryan FreedmanThe lawyer for the Menendez family, castigated Hochman in a new statement to TMZ, telling us … “Rather than doing his real work and taking measures to stop looting, crushing and grasping them, recording the number of burglary and other crawling criminal behaviors in Los Angeles, da Hochman prefers appearances on television and social media to show that the sexual abuse of the child impact on human behavior. “
Freedman adds … “verbally abuse the victims of family members is not an example of being difficult for crime. This man is disconnected from reality. His position according to which if Lyle and Erik admit to claim that lies have been 35 years old, that he was going to change his position is absurd.
Eirk and Lyle have a court hearing for next Friday, where the judge will probably examine the recusation request and discuss the admissibility of a risk assessment report.
As we told you, the governor Gavin Newsom ordered the State's conditional libertions commission in February to assess the brothers' risks before making a decision by Clémence.

Tmz.com
Newsom says that he plans to use the report as part of a hearing of June 13, in which Erik and Lyle are supposed to appear before the board of directors for individual journals. After the hearing, the governor then plans to make his decision on the advisability of granting them a leniency.
Erik and Lyle were found guilty of having murdered their parents with hunting rifles in their house in Beverly Hills in 1989 and were sentenced to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole.
Despite their sentence, Erik and Lyle hope that their rehabilitation in prison will make them free from prison. They made a renowned request, asked for the leniency and put pressure for a new trial according to what they say to be newly uncovered evidence.