• 15 hours ago
We don't know what's more shocking, this infamous crime or the fact that these details were omitted from the TV dramatization. Welcome to WatchMojo and today we’re breaking down the real-life details that didn’t make it into Ryan Murphy and Ian Brennan’s true-crime miniseries “Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story.”

Category

🗞
News
Transcript
00:00I'm telling you now, that whole defense was fabricated.
00:04And it was done artfully, but it was fabricated.
00:07And if I were an immoral person, I would have fabricated it much the same way.
00:12Welcome to WatchMojo, and today we're breaking down the real-life details
00:16that didn't make it into Ryan Murphy and Ian Brennan's true crime miniseries, Monsters,
00:20the Lyle and Eric Menendez story.
00:23I feel like I've known you forever, Eric, and that I'm going to know you for the rest of my life.
00:28All my love.
00:30Tammy.
00:30Lyle and Eric were almost caught immediately.
00:33You're not chickening out, are you?
00:36You brought the guns.
00:43No.
00:43We'll get into Lyle and Eric's quote-unquote alibi a little later.
00:47For now, just know that this alibi was masterfully constructed
00:51and prevented the brothers from immediately being pegged as suspects in their parents' 1989 deaths.
00:56Are you having trouble hearing me?
00:58The 950 screening of Batman.
01:00Yeah, but it's 1040 now.
01:02I know, but that's the one that we want to see.
01:04Can you help me out here?
01:05My girlfriend is in there.
01:06Tell her the last half is the best.
01:08Interviewed for the 2024 Netflix documentary The Menendez Brothers,
01:11the two retrospectively expressed disbelief that they weren't apprehended right at the crime scene.
01:17This might have actually occurred,
01:19had the responding police officers thought to test Lyle and Eric's hands for gunshot residue,
01:23which would have almost assuredly proven their guilt in that moment.
01:27The brothers wouldn't be marked as suspects until 1990,
01:30when their mob-slaying theory began to run dry.
01:33Should have been a police response, and we would have been arrested.
01:37We had no alibi.
01:39The gunpowder residue was all over our hands.
01:43Under normal circumstances, they give you a gunpowder residue test,
01:46and we would have been arrested immediately.
01:48The brothers were separated following their arrest.
01:50Wait, why isn't another van following us?
01:52Where?
01:54I thought we were going to Folsom.
01:55You're going to Folsom.
01:57The brothers are going someplace else.
01:58As the audience sees at the very end of Murphy's Monsters,
02:02Lyle and Eric Menendez were broken up and sent to separate prisons
02:05following their 1996 sentencing of life in prison without the possibility of parole.
02:10The two brothers would not see each other face-to-face again until 2018,
02:14when Lyle was transferred to the same prison as Eric.
02:17Jesus Christ.
02:19Can't live in that.
02:21Well, he's about to.
02:23Now get in.
02:25However, one thing Monsters takes creative liberties with
02:29is the fact that immediately after being arrested,
02:31the duo were imprisoned separately at the Los Angeles County Jail.
02:35This is as opposed to being confined within feet of each other,
02:38as Murphy's miniseries depicts.
02:40When did you get back to L.A.?
02:43A couple hours ago.
02:45Cops picked me up at LAX.
02:46The Menendez family was friendly with O.J. Simpson.
02:49Nobody does it better than her.
02:51Nobody does it better.
02:55Hertz leads the others by far.
02:58One of Monsters' most surprising scenes
03:00has nothing to do with the Menendez brothers' heinous crime
03:03or the sordid family secrets they claim pushed them to do it.
03:06The closing minutes of Seismic Shifts, the miniseries' eighth episode,
03:10hint at the fact that the infamous O.J. Simpson murder case
03:13was about to overshadow the media circus surrounding the brothers.
03:16Hey, O.J.?
03:21O.J.?
03:22Yeah, who is that?
03:23I'm... I'm Eric. Eric Menendez.
03:26Simpson was, in reality, friendly with the brothers in prison,
03:29but had encountered the Menendezes before.
03:32Jose Menendez, at one point a high-powered executive at Hertz Global Holdings,
03:36had invited Simpson to dinner at his home on several occasions.
03:40The disgraced football player and movie star
03:42had memorably starred in a popular advertising campaign
03:45for the car rental company.
03:46Hertz is a superstar!
03:49You know it!
03:50Pam Bozanich's controversial argument.
03:52I'm telling you now, that whole defense was fabricated.
03:56And it was done artfully, but it was fabricated.
03:59And if I were an immoral person, I would have fabricated it much the same way.
04:04Bozanich, the fiery litigator for the prosecution in the Menendez brothers' lengthy trial,
04:09has made no secret of her contempt for Lyle and Eric.
04:12The lawyer, who kept a relatively low public profile
04:15in the years since her involvement in the case,
04:17resurfaced for the aforementioned Menendez brothers' documentary.
04:20Bozanich was unapologetic in stating her belief of the brothers' guilt,
04:23as well as her criticism of Leslie Abramson, the lawyer for the defense.
04:27If I told you what I really thought of Leslie Abramson, I would be sued.
04:32Because she, I think, has lost all her money.
04:34And I'm not giving up my house.
04:36However, one surprising element left out of both Monsters and the Netflix doc,
04:41Bozanich's incendiary argument that,
04:43Men lacked the proper equipment to be assaulted and taken advantage of.
04:47Suffice it to say, her statement has aged extremely poorly,
04:51and led to renewed backlash against Bozanich in 2024.
04:55Your beliefs are not facts. They're just beliefs.
04:58And by the way, all you TikTok people, I'm armed.
05:01We got guns all over the house, so don't mess with me.
05:04Discussion of abuse was limited at the brothers' second trial.
05:07When there's a camera in the courtroom, it changes the dynamic of everything.
05:12Everyone thought that this should be just a matter for the jury,
05:15rather than for a national audience.
05:17Those familiar with the Menendez brothers' trial are likely all too aware
05:21of Leslie Abramson's much-discussed abuse excuse.
05:24That is to say, Abramson argued that Lyle and Eric Menendez
05:27did not deserve the death penalty or even a lifelong prison sentence,
05:31owing to their father Jose's alleged abuse.
05:33Judge Stanley Weisberg's position was abundantly clear.
05:37The presiding judge over the Menendez trial,
05:39Weisberg sought to avoid another hung jury in the brothers' second trial.
05:43The teachers and coaches and family and friends
05:46were never on the stand in the second trial.
05:49They hadn't heard any of my family testify,
05:52none of the relatives, none of the evidence had been admitted.
05:54How did he accomplish this?
05:56By barring cameras from the courtroom,
05:58ensuring that another media frenzy would not occur,
06:01and crucially, limiting testimony about Lyle and Eric's abuse claims.
06:05By restricting what the jury could deliberate on,
06:07Weisberg was able to secure a conviction.
06:10When the judge decided what evidence we could consider,
06:13we were given either first-degree murder as an option,
06:17or no crime whatsoever.
06:20We voted unanimously to convict.
06:22Disturbing photos of Lyle and Eric appeared in the first trial.
06:25Well, there is such a picture.
06:28But unfortunately, it only lives in Eric's mind now.
06:32And I doubt very much that Jose Menendez was very troubled by it during his lifetime.
06:37Leslie Abramson's abuse excuse dominated the headlines
06:40during the Menendez brothers' first trial,
06:42which took place from 1993 to 1994.
06:45The harrowing details of the brothers' abuse
06:47were enough to send the jury into what Judge Weisberg referred to
06:50as being, quote, hopelessly deadlocked.
06:52They are sneaky.
06:53After all, they are exploiting weak little children.
06:58And they hide it.
06:59Because they know the rest of us don't think much of that.
07:01Among those harrowing details were photos of Lyle and Eric as children,
07:05without clothes on.
07:07The two accused Jose of capturing the grotesque snaps,
07:10which was denied by the prosecution.
07:12It seems worth noting then that the photos had been held onto by Kitty,
07:16despite the fact that the defense could not prove that Jose had been behind the camera.
07:21Eric and Lyle didn't immediately leave the house.
07:24As depicted on the Netflix adaptation of the Menendez case,
07:27Lyle and Eric committed their infamous crime
07:29and head straight to the movies to start in on their alibi.
07:31This is pretty close to the events of August 20th, 1989,
07:35but is noticeably streamlined from what actually occurred in real life.
07:38In reality, the two brothers didn't head straight for the movies
07:41after taking their parents' lives.
07:43In fact, due to the noise caused by their actions,
07:45they actually stayed at home,
07:47expecting that a neighbor or bystander would call the police as a result.
07:51-"Slower, please."
07:54-"Thanks."
07:55-"Enjoy the show."
07:56Eric was a tennis champion.
07:58-"Eric, you watched a movie and you decided to kill your parents.
08:02Most...
08:04people don't do that."
08:05One of the most stomach-churning monster scenes
08:08has nothing to do with the grisly crimes or dark family secrets at all.
08:11That would be when Jose berates Eric in the middle of a tennis game.
08:15That is, not just verbally.
08:16The elder Menendez takes it upon himself to storm onto the court
08:19and publicly embarrass his son in truly cringeworthy fashion.
08:23-"What have we been working on?!
08:26Jesus!"
08:27This becomes even more of a head-scratcher once you realize
08:30that Eric was a nationally-ranked tennis player,
08:32ranking as high as 44th in the U.S.
08:35Just weeks prior to that fateful night,
08:37Eric had reached the second round of the Boys 18 singles
08:40in the 1989 Boys Junior National Championship.
08:43-"Was your father...
08:46physically abusive, Eric?"
08:52Eric wrote his cousin a letter about what Jose allegedly did.
08:56-"Why didn't you tell...
08:58anybody...
08:59about the abuse by your father?
09:02You're telling us everything else,
09:04but you're not telling us that."
09:06During the events of Kill or Be Killed,
09:08the series' fourth episode,
09:10Lyle Menendez opens up to Leslie Abramson, Eric's lawyer,
09:13about the abuse that he claimed to have suffered at his father's hands.
09:17At one point, Lyle shares that Eric wasn't the only one
09:20who was aware of Jose's reign of terror.
09:22When his cousin Diane Vandermolen came to live with the family for a time,
09:25he confessed to her as well.
09:27-"I told my cousin...
09:29she was, uh, living with us...
09:32and, uh...
09:35I wanted to sleep in the basement with her
09:37so that my dad couldn't come down there."
09:39A letter written by Eric eight months before August 20th
09:42and addressed to Andy Kano, another cousin,
09:44seemingly alludes to his father's ongoing abuse.
09:46Per the letter, Eric wrote,
09:48quote,
09:48"'I've been trying to avoid Dad.
09:50It's still happening, Andy, but it's worse for me now.'"
09:53-"This is done.
09:54This is done."
09:55-"You understand?
09:57No more between you two."
09:58-"And you are never, never to touch him.
10:01Not ever."
10:02Eric and Lyle didn't see each other for over 20 years.
10:06-"The first scene of Tears was just quite an emotional moment."
10:09Monster's final scene quite literally shows the brothers going their own ways,
10:13unaware that they would be sent to different correctional facilities
10:16following their July 2nd, 1996 sentencing.
10:18This was per California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation's
10:22real-life decision to separate the brothers,
10:24and things remained this way until February 2018.
10:27-"There's a good probability I will never see him again,
10:30and, uh,
10:34that would be, uh, that would be very, very difficult to live through."
10:37It was at this point that Lyle was moved from Mule Creek State Prison
10:40to the Richard J. Donovan Correctional Facility,
10:43where Eric was also held.
10:44The two were individually imprisoned until April,
10:47when the Menendez brothers were reunited.
10:49Eric and Lyle had not met face-to-face since their sentencing.
10:53-"Wait, why isn't another van following us? Where—
10:56I thought we were going to Folsom."
10:58-"You're going to Folsom. The brothers are going someplace else."
11:01The brothers bought luxury condos.
11:03-"Where transportation goes."
11:05-"Well, you have the limousine."
11:07-"Right, but for both of us."
11:10-"You're asking for a second limousine?"
11:13-"Yeah, that'd be great."
11:14One thing that Monster's makes clear, and gets factually right,
11:17is that the Menendez brothers went on a wild spending spree
11:20in the aftermath of their parents' deaths.
11:22Although it can be argued that their spending habits
11:24were in line with the lifestyle they were used to,
11:26those same habits did nothing to help their case.
11:29-"Did you just order a grilled cheese and tap water?"
11:32-"Yeah."
11:35-"How many shrimp do you have?"
11:37-"Like an actual number."
11:38Among their many investments, besides a full-time tennis coach for Eric
11:42and a steak in a Buffalo Wing restaurant for Lyle,
11:44were luxury condos in Marina Del Rey, California,
11:47not far removed from the family's now-empty Beverly Hills mansion.
11:51Eric and Lyle reportedly spent over $700,000 before their 1990 arrest.
11:56-"Look, another TCBY.
11:59It's a freaking goldmine.
12:01See, this is exactly what I want to do with Mr. Buffalo.
12:04Everywhere that there's a TCBY, there should be a Mr. Buffalo across the street."
12:07Eric and Lyle respectively got married in prison.
12:10-"Oh, and here's the best part.
12:13Eric's got a girlfriend."
12:15-"I'm not sure how it would work.
12:17I'm not sure how these feelings have taken me over in the way that they have."
12:22Despite viewer criticism that Murphy implied a fabricated romantic relationship
12:26between Eric and Lyle, they did not get married to each other.
12:29In fact, Lyle is now onto his second marriage,
12:32having divorced Anna Erickson, his wife of almost five years,
12:35after having an affair.
12:36Yes, while imprisoned.
12:38The elder Menendez brother has been married to Rebecca Sneed since 2003.
12:42-"Who are these women who want to date these psychopaths?
12:45What does she get out of it?"
12:46-"Well, this one's not getting conjugal visits, if that's what you mean."
12:50Meanwhile, Eric has been married to Tammy Ruth Sackaman since June 12, 1999,
12:55when the couple wed in a waiting room at Folsom State Prison.
12:58Recalling their wedding night, Sackaman has shared that, quote,
13:01"...our wedding cake was a Twinkie.
13:03We improvised.
13:04It was a wonderful ceremony until I had to leave.
13:06That was a very lonely night."
13:08-"I feel like I've known you forever, Eric,
13:10and that I'm going to know you for the rest of my life.
13:13All my love."
13:15-"Tammy."
13:16Dr. Oziel lost his medical license.
13:18-"I know that it's very last minute, but, um,
13:21is there any way that I could see you today?"
13:23-"It's locked."
13:25-"Uh, looks like I have a two o'clock, if that works for you."
13:30El Jerome Oziel, who is depicted as the Menendez family's therapist
13:34before focusing on just Eric,
13:36was embroiled in a number of scandals of his own.
13:38Some of these were unearthed by Leslie Abramson during the brothers' trial
13:42and included the fact that his license was on probation when the family had hired him.
13:46-"Hello, it's Jose Menendez.
13:49What my sons tell you, they are not to be trusted.
13:52They are liars, they are fabulists, they are sociopaths,
13:55and I need you to know that, okay?"
13:57This was due to a blatant conflict of interest
14:00in which Oziel had exchanged therapy for construction work on his house.
14:03In 1997, the year following the brothers' sentencing,
14:06Oziel surrendered his license voluntarily
14:09rather than admit culpability for a number of illicit deeds.
14:12These included, among other misdeeds,
14:14revealing confidential patient information to Judilon Smith
14:17as well as assault on her and two other women.
14:20-"He said my mom was a witch who was going to poison me.
14:24He used the word thorns to hypnotize me.
14:28So whenever he would say thorns, my mind would just go blank."
14:31Dr. Vickery tampered with evidence at Leslie Abramson's suggestion.
14:35-"I've hired Dr. William Vickery.
14:37He's a forensic psychiatrist and wants you to start meeting with him
14:40to talk about what happened and why."
14:42-"No. No. No. No. No. My strength. I can't."
14:44Early on in Monsters, Eric Menendez meets with Dr. William Vickery,
14:48a forensic psychiatrist and colleague of Abramson's.
14:51Vickery's reputation endured substantial damage as a result of the case.
14:55In November 1993, the mental health professional was set to testify
14:58on the brothers' behalf, but upon meeting with Abramson beforehand,
15:01the lawyer was distressed to find that Vickery's notes
15:04had the potential to hurt their defense.
15:06-"I've spent most of my life building my body up,
15:09trying to eat right, and low-fat,
15:12and carboloading, and all this stuff."
15:15-"Eric, you're just wasting your money here."
15:17Abramson asked Vickery to edit his notes to remove the most damning parts.
15:21Vickery complied, and this went unnoticed until April 1996,
15:26when Abramson accidentally submitted Vickery's original notes to the court.
15:29Eric and Lyle's subsequent request for a mistrial,
15:32filed after this had come to light, was unsuccessful.
15:35-"My job is to help you get to the bottom of all this,
15:38but trust me when I say I cannot do that
15:41unless you start being honest with me.
15:44Like, really honest."
15:46Eric and Lyle appeared in the background of a trading card.
15:49-"Someone recently discovered an old NBA trading card,
15:53and in the background of the card,
15:56you can see the Menendez brothers sitting courtside."
15:59Did you know that the Menendez brothers made their mark
16:02not only on pop culture, but on sports history, too?
16:05To be clear, this wasn't because of their athletic accomplishments.
16:08No, Eric and Lyle's contribution to sports comes in the form
16:11of a totally unplanned, totally left-field coincidence.
16:14-"You push into the background, those are the real Menendez brothers.
16:18Yes, this photo was taken a couple of days
16:21after the Menendez brothers murdered their parents."
16:24The brothers, in their months-long, nearly-million-dollar spending spree,
16:27were photographed at a New York Knicks game
16:30and ended up in the background of a trading card featuring
16:33the Knicks' then-point guard Mark Jackson.
16:35This wasn't unearthed until nearly 30 years later,
16:38when Stephen Zurance, a true crime fan and amateur investigator,
16:41was searching for proof that the brothers' post-crime escapades
16:44had happened as described.
16:46-"They took a picture at the basketball game,
16:48and that became the NBA card."
16:50Before we continue, be sure to subscribe to our channel
16:53and ring the bell to get notified about our latest videos.
16:56You have the option to be notified for occasional videos or all of them.
16:59If you're on your phone, make sure you go into your settings
17:02and switch on notifications.
17:06Misconduct allegations against Jose Menendez have surfaced.
17:14While there was little doubt that Lyle and Eric Menendez
17:17were responsible for taking their parents' lives,
17:19speculation and debate persist to this day as to the why of it all.
17:23The two sides are represented on Netflix's Monsters.
17:26Either you believe that the brothers did what they did
17:28because of abuse and trauma,
17:30or it was because they feared they would be denied
17:32a substantial inheritance.
17:34Regardless of individual beliefs,
17:36the former camp was validated by 2023 claims from Roy Rosello,
17:40formerly of Puerto Rican boy band Menudo,
17:42who claimed that Jose Menendez had assaulted him at the age of 14.
17:46Today, the allegations are being denounced by Kitty Menendez's brother,
17:50Milton Anderson.
17:51What was your reaction when you heard about this, sir?
17:54I think that's absurd.
17:56Which part of Monsters the Lyle and Eric Menendez story shocked you the most?
18:00Let us know in the comments.
18:01I don't believe a word you're saying if I am the jury.

Recommended