California officials said on Monday that a hearing could lead to freedom for the Mindez Brotherhood, who are convicted of parental murders in 1989, was returned from June 13 to August.
A spokesman for the California Reforms and Rehabilitation Ministry said that the brothers’ sessions on the appropriateness of the conditional release will instead will instead on August 21 and 22.
Eric Menendes, 54, and Laila Mindez, 57, achieved a victory in the court on May 13 when their judge resented, a step that made them eligible immediately to the conditional release. They were sentenced to life imprisonment without the possibility of conditional release in the killing of their parents, Jose and Kitie Mindez.
Listening sessions were identified in a separate effort to search for a compassion from the governor of California State Gavin New Roosom on June 13, then hearings were added to the suitable release of the conditional release to that date.
Scott Wikov, CEO of the Conditional Release Sessions Council, explained the situation in A message obtained by the Los Angeles Times:
“Given that the ruling makes them eligible to consider the conditional release as criminals on young people, the intention of the council is to convert listening sessions on June 13, 2025 to the listening sessions, the first conditional release.”
The Conditional Release Sessions Council transferred listening sessions on June 13 to listening sessions for the conditional release after the main parties, including members of the victims’ families, informed this possibility. A spokesman for the Ministry of Corrections said that the parties have sparked objections to the transfer, which led to the postponement of the conditional release session until August.
The applications of the brothers with the ruler are still active.
In August, the Conditional Release Commissioner will be assigned to determine whether the Brotherhood poses an unreasonable danger if they are released on the conditional release. Prosecutors, relatives of the victims and others can weigh during listening sessions.
The brothers spend their time at the Richard J. Dunovan reformist in San Diego County. They were convicted of the 1989 murders of their parents, which the prosecution representatives said that the motive behind their desire to assume the family’s money.
The Los Angeles County Supreme Court Michael Jessek has found this month that they were not an “unreasonable danger” if they were released and worse for 50 years in life, which opens the possibility of conditional release.
Mark Geragos, a husband’s lawyer, and Other supporters She claimed that the murders were the result of self -defense, amid their father’s reaction to Lille’s allegations that he was sexually abused Eric.
Nathan Hoshman, Los Angeles County lawyer Nathan Hoachman, opposed resentment, in part because the brothers did not bear full responsibility for their crimes. In their conversation after their dissatisfaction, the brothers said that they took full responsibility and did not provide any justification for killing their parents.