Close Menu
  • News & Politics
  • Entertainment
  • Culture Wars
  • Videos
  • Forums
What's Hot

Trump Axes “Woke” Education Dept in Stunning Power Move

June 23, 2026

Seattle Mayor Katie Wilson Hides the Homeless Ahead of FIFA World Cup

June 9, 2026

California Faces Federal Election Probe Amid Voter Fraud

June 9, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
CrankersCrankers
  • News & Politics
  • Entertainment
  • Culture Wars
  • Videos
  • Forums
Newsletter
CrankersCrankers
Home ยป Menendez brothers denied parole
News & Politics

Menendez brothers denied parole

By drastic215August 29, 2025Updated:November 8, 202500
Share Facebook Twitter Copy Link LinkedIn Email Telegram WhatsApp Threads
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email Copy Link Threads

(Crankers) The Menendez brothers, Lyle and Erik, were both denied parole one day apart from each other. Erik was blocked from freedom, then Lyle was blocked a day later. They’ve spent more than three decades in prison after being found guilty of killing their parents in 1989.

Both of the Menendez brothers had their own separate parole hearings. BBC reports they saw a few legal victories leading up to the parole hearing, but were ultimately denied their freedom. Lyle Menendez was denied parole one day after his brother Erik was similarly blocked from being freed from prison after they’ve both spent more than three decades behind bars.

Lyle Menendez, 57, can try for parole after three years. Good behavior by Lyle might help speed that up. The report on BBC says parole commissioner Julie Garland reportedly found Lyle to still be a risk to the public. She cited that despite remorse, he’s still struggling with several issues that could put others at risk, or even himself at risk. BBC quoted Garland saying: “But despite all those outward positives, we see … you still struggle with anti-social personality traits like deception, minimisation and rule breaking that lie beneath that positive surface,”

The elder Menendez brother, 57, who has long been portrayed as the dominant sibling, can try for parole again at a hearing in three years, though the panel said that could be reduced to 18 months with good behavior. Garland made it a point to say that “incarcerated people who break rules” are likely to break rules when the leave prison.

Photo: California Department of Corrections/BBC

Get CRANKERS by email:
Powered by follow.it

Read this news story next

Here are few more news stories you might like. Please like, comment, and share when you have time. Come back later to read more news.
  • Bus driver jumps double-decker bridge with 20 passengers
  • Illegal immigrant twins arrested for robbing unfinished homes
  • Trainee surgeon accused of secretly recording 460 female workers in hospital bathrooms
  • Bondi fires DOJ staffer over ‘inappropriate’ action towards National Guard
Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email Copy Link Threads
drastic215
  • Website
  • Facebook
  • X (Twitter)

Kutztown University alumni who enjoys gaming, sports, building websites and optimizing ads for successful businesses. Other than that, just your typical northeast Philly family guy! Go Birds!

Add A Comment

Comments are closed.

Top Posts

Musk’s DOGE TERMINATED massive $18 million per month empty facility scandal

November 11, 202511,629 Views

Trump announces $2k checks for SOME Americans – are you on the list?

November 11, 20259,362 Views

Food stamp fraud is freaking crazy, SNAP causes billions in losses

November 18, 20256,075 Views
RSS Crankers Videos
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Work with Us
  • About
  • Terms of Service
  • Diversity Policy
  • Ethics Policy
  • Corrections Policy
  • Ownership / Funding
  • Publishing principles
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram TikTok RSS
© 2026 Crankers News Network

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.