Lyle Menendez was denied parole for his role in the 1989 killings of his parents on Friday, just a day after the California parole board denied the release of his brother Erik.
California governor Gavin Newsom will have the final say in whether or not the 57-year-old will be released.
Lyle and Erik Menendez have spent nearly 30 years behind bars for the murders of their parents. The brothers, who were 18 and 21 at the time of the killings, have said they fatally shot José and Kitty Menendez after years of molestation by their father. They were sentenced to life in prison in 1996, after prosecutors argued they committed the violence in order to receive a multimillion-dollar inheritance.
The case has long fascinated the public and drawn international attention. Their first trial was televised by Court TV.
But their story reached a new generation thanks to social media and numerous TV dramas and documentaries that focused on the abuse the brothers say they faced and criticism that they were treated unfairly by prosecutors and the media. Their family members publicly supported them and backed their allegations of abuse for years.
Last year the Menendez brothers had hope for the possibility of release for the first time in years, when the then Los Angeles district attorney announced he would recommend they be resentenced.
“They have been in prison for nearly 35 years. I believe that they have paid their debt to society,” George Gascón said, stating he believed they were subjected to “a tremendous amount of dysfunction in the home, and molestation”.
In their years behind bars, the brothers have earned college degrees and served as mentors and caregivers.
The brothers were resentenced by California judge in May, reducing their original full-life punishment to one of 50 years with the possibility of release.
But the new district attorney, Nathan Hochman, opposed their release, arguing they never fully accepted responsibility for the crimes.
On Thursday the parole board denied Erik’s bid for freedom, arguing his misbehavior while in prison, such as using a cellphone, demonstrated he still poses a risk to public safety. They denied him parole despite strong support from family members for his release.
“Two things can be true. They can love and forgive you, and you can still be found unsuitable for parole,” commissioner Robert Barton said.
Hochman praised the board’s “careful, evidence-based” assessment.
“The board correctly determined that Erik Menendez’s actions speak louder than words, and that his conduct in prison and current mentality demonstrates that he still poses an unreasonable risk of danger to the community,” he said in a statement.
Erik will be eligible for parole again in three years.
Friday’s hearing, which was closed to the public, lasted 11 hours. It was held separately to Thursday’s hearing.
Both brothers appeared by video link from the San Diego prison where they are being held.
The panel members, whose identities was not released by the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, quizzed the brothers on their behavior and attitude towards the murders.
It’s unclear whether the Democrats in the Texas Senate will try to delay the vote by breaking quorum themselves. When a similar redistricting bill passed the Senate during the first special session, all but two Democrats walked out of the chamber in protest. If all 11 Democrats are absent, Republicans would be one senator shy of a quorum.
Once approved by the Republican majority in the full Senate, the bill will head to Gov. Greg Abbott’s desk for his signature.
Democrats have vowed to challenge the legality of the new map in court, arguing it undermines fair representation and dilutes minority voting power.
California launches counter-redistricting plan
The Texas redistricting plan has sparked a nationwide fight over political boundaries.
Earlier this year, President Trump asked Abbott to call a special session so lawmakers could create additional Republican districts, the New York Times reported. The unusual mid-decade redistricting was meant to help the GOP retain its narrow majority in the House of Representatives after the 2026 midterm elections.
The president’s party almost always loses seats in Congress in the midterms, according to historical data. Democrats gained 41 House seats and the majority in 2018, Mr. Trump’s first term, and Republicans picked up 9 seats to claim the majority in 2022, during President Biden’s term.
Texas House Democrats fled the state for two weeks do deny a mandatory quorum in the House, killing the the first special session and visiting blue states to drum up support. They returned earlier this week, allowing the votes to proceed.
During that time, California Gov. Gavin Newsom joined the fight, introducing a new congressional map to flip five of California’s seats from Republican to Democratic. Voters will need to approve the plan in a special election called for the fall.
Newsom said the move was necessary to “fight fire with fire” and prevent what he called a Trump-backed attempt to rig the 2026 midterm elections.
Steven Rosenbaum is a digital producer for CBS Texas. A versatile journalist, Steven writes, edits and produces content for the CBS Texas digital platforms.
In the national struggle over U.S. House control, perhaps no politician has more at stake than the California governor, who has emerged as the leading Democratic adversary to President Donald Trump in what many see as a lightly masked trial run for his own future White House bid.
The liberal former San Francisco mayor, who is nearing the end of a spotty tenure in Sacramento, is being cheered by Democrats and party activists who see his scrappy, Trump-mocking, profanity-tinged speeches and snarky social media posts as signs of new life in a party left dispirited and rudderless after 2024 election losses.
Newsom “has been doing what I’ve wanted a Democrat to do for a long time,” radio host Charlamagne Tha God said on his syndicated “Breakfast Club” program. In directly confronting the president Newsom is “matching energy, and I like it.”
Democratic pollster Ben Tulchin said Newsom is benefitting from a torrent of national media exposure that “makes him look like a leader, portraying strength.”
In a party that even many of its own members describe as ineffective and weak, Newsom is challenging Trump and “punching the bully in the nose,” added Tulchin, who worked for Sen. Bernie Sanders’ presidential campaigns. With 16 months left in his final term — a time in his tenure when many governors would be seen as fading away — he’s “driving the conversation.”
But Newsom’s strategy is not without risk as he plans to ask voters in a November special election to approve new House districts. The new maps have been jiggered to add five Democratic U.S. House seats in California to offset Trump’s moves in Texas to gain five Republican districts before the 2026 midterm elections.
The faceoff between California and Texas is spreading nationally, and other states could soon begin redrawing House maps, which are crafted state by state. That could lead to an even more deeply partisan Washington, which already is strangled by gridlock.
Newsom ‘Should be ashamed’ with political maneuvers
While Newsom’s maneuvers may be winning plaudits from the Democratic base, “This is a train wreck,” said Boyd Brown, a former Democratic National Committee member and legislator from South Carolina.
If states follow Texas and California and keep rigging House maps for partisan advantage “that’s a good way to ruin a democratic process,” Brown said, adding the Democrats could end up disadvantaged nationally since Republicans control more than half of the state legislatures.
Newsom and Republican Texas Gov. Greg Abbott “should be ashamed of what they are doing” Brown added. “We are going to have a polarized Congress for decades to come,” he said. “Who does that benefit?”
“It is government malpractice at its highest level,” he added. “It should concern every American.”
Risk for Newsom in what could lead to 2028 campaign
For Newsom, an election win in November would be a springboard for his national ambitions, with the fundraising he’s doing ahead of the November election building out his list of national supporters. But a loss in his heavily Democratic home state would inevitably dim his luster on the national stage, even if Democrats give him credit for trying.
And if new House maps are approved by voters, there’s no guarantee Democrats will prevail in the reshaped districts in 2026, when Republicans will be trying to defend their party’s fragile House majority. A loss of the House would dramatically alter the prospects for Trump’s agenda in the latter half of his term.
But first, Newsom needs California voters to approve the new maps, which some see as no sure thing.
“Republicans vote in higher propensity in elections that are off cycle,” noted Democratic consultant Bill Burton, referring to this fall’s special election.
That means Newsom “is going to face that kind of natural pressure in this one,” said Burton, who was national press secretary for Barack Obama’s 2008 presidential campaign. “I don’t think it will be easy.”
A snarky social media style gets national attention
Newsom’s salesmanship for his plan for new House districts has come when he has been elevating his profile on social media — his press office account has gotten national attention parroting Trump’s all-capital-letter posts peppered with off-color jokes and dismissive comments about the president.
“WOW!!! MY MAPS (THE BEST MAPS EVER MADE) WILL SOON PASS IN THE GREATEST LEGISLATURE ANYWHERE IN THE WORLD (NOT JUST AMERICA). AMERICA CAN THANK ME,” his press office riffed in a recent tweet.
It’s part of a longer political evolution that has seen the governor edge toward the political center while welcoming conservatives — including Steve Bannon, an architect of Trump’s 2016 campaign — to his podcast.
Newsom “is sort of mixing the funny posts and the hysterical digs at the Trump administration with actual action. And I think that’s the part that people are really appreciating and getting behind,” said Lindsay Meyer-Harley, an online clothing retailer behind Still We Rise, an Instagram page promoting progressive agenda.
At a recent rally in Los Angeles, Newsom veered away from discussing the technical grist of reshaping districts and instead depicted the looming battle as a conflict with all things Trump, tying it explicitly to the fate of American democracy and echoing the 2024 presidential campaign.
“We can’t stand back and watch this democracy disappear district by district all across the country,” Newsom warned.
It’s official. California voters this fall will be asked to approve Democratic-drawn congressional maps, after the Legislature approved a bill Thursday calling for a special election in the fall. Earlier Thursday, California’s Democratic leaders moved forward with an effort to change the congressional district maps so that they heavily favor Democrats, regardless of what Texas or other Republican states do. (Video below: Gov. Newsom, Democratic lawmakers answer questions about the redistricting special election.)The effort that was promoted by California Democrats as a way to counteract efforts in Texas to send more Republicans to Congress will no longer rely on the action in the Lone Star state or others that allegedly spurred redistricting efforts, according to legislative documents KCRA 3 obtained Thursday. Democratic state lawmakers in the California Assembly made changes to the legislation known as ACA 8 on Thursday morning, minutes before they began debating and voting on the proposed ballot measure that would present the new maps to voters in a special statewide election this fall.(Video below: Gov. Newsom speaks with legislative leaders at a bill signing.)The changes clarifying that the maps do not rely on Texas or other states were put in a separate bill that lawmakers are prepared to approve on Monday. Gov. Gavin Newsom and other Democratic leaders have repeatedly insisted that California would have no need to enact new Congressional maps if Texas and other GOP states cease redistricting efforts. It has been part of a bitter fight between states over which party controls the U.S. House of Representatives halfway through President Donald Trump’s term.But now the legislation, known as the Election Rigging Response Act in California, has all references to any red state’s redistricting efforts stricken out of the language. That special election would ask voters to allow the new, politically drawn maps heavily favoring Democrats to take effect 2026, 2028 and 2030 elections. It could be a legal gamble in the state, where voters in 2008 and 2010 took the power away from politicians to draw Congressional districts and gave it to an independent, citizens-led redistricting commission. (VIDEO BELOW: How did we get here?)The change comes a day after the Texas House approved new Congressional maps that attempt to remove five Democrats from its representation and replace them with Republicans. The maps are now halfway through that state’s process. The Republican-controlled state Senate was scheduled to vote on a map Thursday night. “Yesterday, Texas moved forward with their Trump power grab so this notion of “conditioning” is no longer applicable — it is self-evident that California will need to move forward in response to what Texas has done,” Gov. Gavin Newsom’s office said in a statement.The governor’s office noted California’s change is also meant to simplify the question that is presented to voters this fall. Republican states will no longer be mentioned in the ballot measure, which will ask voters to simultaneously approve the new politically drawn congressional maps and support independent redistricting nationwide. The act of redrawing district lines to specifically favor a political party is known as gerrymandering, a once taboo practice to openly admit to that is now being boasted by both Democrats and Republicans.California Democrats began publicly advocating for redistricting after President Donald Trump called on Texas to send five additional Republicans to the U.S. House of Representatives. Trump made the request because midterm elections could typically lead to shifts in power.California lawmakers approved legislation Thursday that will establish the Nov. 4 special election. The Assembly approved ACA 8 with 57 ayes and 20 nos, with Democrat Alex Lee abstaining from the vote. Democrat Dawn Addis was absent on Thursday.The state Senate then voted to approve ACA 8 on a 30-8 vote. The ballot measure is expected to be known as Proposition 50. The cost of a special election is not yet public, but it is expected to cost at least $200 million, which is around what it cost for the 2021 election that attempted to recall Newsom from office. Newsom signed two pieces of legislation later Thursday that outline the logistics for the special election and provide resources and money for it. See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel
SACRAMENTO, Calif. —
It’s official.
California voters this fall will be asked to approve Democratic-drawn congressional maps, after the Legislature approved a bill Thursday calling for a special election in the fall.
Earlier Thursday, California’s Democratic leaders moved forward with an effort to change the congressional district maps so that they heavily favor Democrats, regardless of what Texas or other Republican states do.
(Video below: Gov. Newsom, Democratic lawmakers answer questions about the redistricting special election.)
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The California Legislature placed the measure on the ballot by passing ACA 8.
The Governor will sign two pieces of legislation momentarily that fund it, outline logistics for it.
The effort that was promoted by California Democrats as a way to counteract efforts in Texas to send more Republicans to Congress will no longer rely on the action in the Lone Star state or others that allegedly spurred redistricting efforts, according to legislative documents KCRA 3 obtained Thursday.
Democratic state lawmakers in the California Assembly made changes to the legislation known as ACA 8 on Thursday morning, minutes before they began debating and voting on the proposed ballot measure that would present the new maps to voters in a special statewide election this fall.
(Video below: Gov. Newsom speaks with legislative leaders at a bill signing.)
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The changes clarifying that the maps do not rely on Texas or other states were put in a separate bill that lawmakers are prepared to approve on Monday.
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NEW: California Democrats in Assembly this AM changed the state’s Redistricting ballot measure legislation, which basically now allows new Congressional maps to go into effect NO MATTER what other states do.
Gov. Gavin Newsom and other Democratic leaders have repeatedly insisted that California would have no need to enact new Congressional maps if Texas and other GOP states cease redistricting efforts. It has been part of a bitter fight between states over which party controls the U.S. House of Representatives halfway through President Donald Trump’s term.
But now the legislation, known as the Election Rigging Response Act in California, has all references to any red state’s redistricting efforts stricken out of the language.
That special election would ask voters to allow the new, politically drawn maps heavily favoring Democrats to take effect 2026, 2028 and 2030 elections. It could be a legal gamble in the state, where voters in 2008 and 2010 took the power away from politicians to draw Congressional districts and gave it to an independent, citizens-led redistricting commission.
“Yesterday, Texas moved forward with their Trump power grab so this notion of “conditioning” is no longer applicable — it is self-evident that California will need to move forward in response to what Texas has done,” Gov. Gavin Newsom’s office said in a statement.
The governor’s office noted California’s change is also meant to simplify the question that is presented to voters this fall. Republican states will no longer be mentioned in the ballot measure, which will ask voters to simultaneously approve the new politically drawn congressional maps and support independent redistricting nationwide.
The act of redrawing district lines to specifically favor a political party is known as gerrymandering, a once taboo practice to openly admit to that is now being boasted by both Democrats and Republicans.
California Democrats began publicly advocating for redistricting after President Donald Trump called on Texas to send five additional Republicans to the U.S. House of Representatives. Trump made the request because midterm elections could typically lead to shifts in power.
California lawmakers approved legislation Thursday that will establish the Nov. 4 special election.
The Assembly approved ACA 8 with 57 ayes and 20 nos, with Democrat Alex Lee abstaining from the vote. Democrat Dawn Addis was absent on Thursday.
The state Senate then voted to approve ACA 8 on a 30-8 vote.
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🧵 California Assembly passes ballot measure that will ask CA voters to approve Democratic drawn Congressional maps on Nov 4.
The ballot measure is expected to be known as Proposition 50.
The cost of a special election is not yet public, but it is expected to cost at least $200 million, which is around what it cost for the 2021 election that attempted to recall Newsom from office.
Newsom signed two pieces of legislation later Thursday that outline the logistics for the special election and provide resources and money for it.
Erik Menendez was denied parole Thursday after serving decades in prison for murdering his parents with his older brother in 1989.A panel of California commissioners denied Menendez parole for three years, after which he will be eligible again, in a case that continues to fascinate the public. A parole hearing for his brother Lyle Menendez, who is being held at the same prison in San Diego, is scheduled for Friday morning.The two commissioners determined that Menendez should not be freed after an all-day hearing during which they questioned him about why he committed the crime and violated prison rules.The brothers became eligible for parole after a judge reduced their sentences in May from life without parole to 50 years to life.The parole hearings marked the closest they’ve been to winning freedom from prison since their convictions almost 30 years ago for murdering their parents.The brothers were sentenced to life in prison in 1996 for fatally shooting their father, Jose Menendez, and mother, Kitty Menendez, in their Beverly Hills mansion in 1989. While defense attorneys argued that the brothers acted out of self-defense after years of sexual abuse by their father, prosecutors said the brothers sought a multimillion-dollar inheritance.A judge reduced their sentences in May, and they became immediately eligible for parole.Erik Menendez made his case to two parole commissioners, offering his most detailed account in years of how he was raised, why he made the choices he did, and how he transformed in prison. He noted the hearing fell almost exactly 36 years after he killed his parents — on Aug. 20, 1989.”Today is August 21st. Today is the day that all of my victims learned my parents were dead. So today is the anniversary of their trauma journey,” he said, referring to his family members.The state corrections department chose a single reporter to watch the videoconference and share details with the rest of the press.Erik Menendez’s prison recordMenendez, gray-haired and spectacled, sat in front of a computer screen wearing a blue T-shirt over a white long-sleeve shirt in a photo shared by officials.The panel of commissioners scrutinized every rules violation and fight on his lengthy prison record, including allegations that he worked with a prison gang, bought drugs, used cellphones and helped with a tax scam.He told commissioners that since he had no hope of ever getting out then, he prioritized protecting himself over following the rules. Then last fall, LA prosecutors asked a judge to resentence him and his brother — opening the door to parole.”In November of 2024, now the consequences mattered,” Menendez said. “Now the consequences meant I was destroying my life.”A particular sticking point for the commissioners was his use of cellphones.”What I got in terms of the phone and my connection with the outside world was far greater than the consequences of me getting caught with the phone,” Menendez said.The board also brought up his earliest encounters with the law, when he committed two burglaries in high school.”I was not raised with a moral foundation,” he said. “I was raised to lie, to cheat, to steal in the sense, an abstract way.”The panel asked about details like why he used a fake ID to purchase the guns he and Lyle Menendez used to kill their parents, who acted first and why they killed their mother if their father was the main abuser.Commissioner Robert Barton asked: “You do see that there were other choices at that point?””When I look back at the person I was then and what I believed about the world and my parents, running away was inconceivable,” Menendez said. “Running away meant death.”His transformation behind barsErik Menendez’s parole attorney, Heidi Rummel, emphasized 2013 as the turning point for her client.”He found his faith. He became accountable to his higher power. He found sobriety and made a promise to his mother on her birthday,” Rummel said. “Has he been perfect since 2013? No. But he has been remarkable.”Commissioner Rachel Stern also applauded him for starting a group to take care of older and disabled inmates.Since the brothers reunited, they have been “serious accountability partners” for each other. At the same time, he said he’s become better at setting boundaries with Lyle Menendez, and they tend to do different programming.More than a dozen of their relatives, who have advocated for the brothers’ release for months, delivered emotional statements at Thursday’s hearing via videoconference.”Seeing my crimes through my family’s eyes has been a huge part of my evolution and my growth,” Menendez said. “Just seeing the pain and the suffering. Understanding the magnitude of what I’ve done, the generational impact.”His aunt Teresita Menendez-Baralt, who is Jose Menendez’s sister, said she has fully forgiven him. She noted that she is dying from Stage 4 cancer and wishes to welcome him into her home.”Erik carries himself with kindness, integrity and strength that comes from patience and grace,” she said.One relative promised to the parole board that she would house him in Colorado, where he can spend time with his family and enjoying nature.The board brushed off prosecutor’s questionsLA County District Attorney Nathan Hochman said ahead of the parole hearings that he opposes parole for the brothers because of their lack of insight, comparing them to Sirhan Sirhan, who assassinated presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy in 1968. Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom denied him parole in January 2022 because of his “deficient insight.”During the hearing, LA prosecutor Habib Balian asked Menendez about his and his brothers’ attempts to ask witnesses to lie in court on their behalf, and if the brothers staged the killings as a mafia hit. Commissioners largely dismissed the questions, saying they were not retrying the case.In closing statements, Balian questioned whether Menendez was “truly reformed” or saying what commissioners wanted to hear.”When one continues to diminish their responsibility for a crime and continues to make the same false excuses that they’ve made for 30-plus years, one is still that same dangerous person that they were when they shotgunned their parents,” Balian said.What happens nextLyle Menendez is set to appear over videoconference Friday for his parole hearing from the same prison in San Diego.The case has captured the attention of true crime enthusiasts for decades and spawned documentaries, television specials and dramatizations. The Netflix drama ” Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story ” and a documentary released in 2024 have been credited for bringing new attention to the brothers.Greater recognition of the brothers as victims of sexual abuse has also helped mobilize support for their release. Some supporters have flown to Los Angeles to hold rallies and attend court hearings.
LOS ANGELES —
Erik Menendez was denied parole Thursday after serving decades in prison for murdering his parents with his older brother in 1989.
A panel of California commissioners denied Menendez parole for three years, after which he will be eligible again, in a case that continues to fascinate the public. A parole hearing for his brother Lyle Menendez, who is being held at the same prison in San Diego, is scheduled for Friday morning.
The two commissioners determined that Menendez should not be freed after an all-day hearing during which they questioned him about why he committed the crime and violated prison rules.
The brothers became eligible for parole after a judge reduced their sentences in May from life without parole to 50 years to life.
The parole hearings marked the closest they’ve been to winning freedom from prison since their convictions almost 30 years ago for murdering their parents.
The brothers were sentenced to life in prison in 1996 for fatally shooting their father, Jose Menendez, and mother, Kitty Menendez, in their Beverly Hills mansion in 1989. While defense attorneys argued that the brothers acted out of self-defense after years of sexual abuse by their father, prosecutors said the brothers sought a multimillion-dollar inheritance.
A judge reduced their sentences in May, and they became immediately eligible for parole.
Erik Menendez made his case to two parole commissioners, offering his most detailed account in years of how he was raised, why he made the choices he did, and how he transformed in prison. He noted the hearing fell almost exactly 36 years after he killed his parents — on Aug. 20, 1989.
“Today is August 21st. Today is the day that all of my victims learned my parents were dead. So today is the anniversary of their trauma journey,” he said, referring to his family members.
The state corrections department chose a single reporter to watch the videoconference and share details with the rest of the press.
Erik Menendez’s prison record
Menendez, gray-haired and spectacled, sat in front of a computer screen wearing a blue T-shirt over a white long-sleeve shirt in a photo shared by officials.
The panel of commissioners scrutinized every rules violation and fight on his lengthy prison record, including allegations that he worked with a prison gang, bought drugs, used cellphones and helped with a tax scam.
He told commissioners that since he had no hope of ever getting out then, he prioritized protecting himself over following the rules. Then last fall, LA prosecutors asked a judge to resentence him and his brother — opening the door to parole.
“In November of 2024, now the consequences mattered,” Menendez said. “Now the consequences meant I was destroying my life.”
A particular sticking point for the commissioners was his use of cellphones.
“What I got in terms of the phone and my connection with the outside world was far greater than the consequences of me getting caught with the phone,” Menendez said.
The board also brought up his earliest encounters with the law, when he committed two burglaries in high school.
“I was not raised with a moral foundation,” he said. “I was raised to lie, to cheat, to steal in the sense, an abstract way.”
The panel asked about details like why he used a fake ID to purchase the guns he and Lyle Menendez used to kill their parents, who acted first and why they killed their mother if their father was the main abuser.
Commissioner Robert Barton asked: “You do see that there were other choices at that point?”
“When I look back at the person I was then and what I believed about the world and my parents, running away was inconceivable,” Menendez said. “Running away meant death.”
His transformation behind bars
Erik Menendez’s parole attorney, Heidi Rummel, emphasized 2013 as the turning point for her client.
“He found his faith. He became accountable to his higher power. He found sobriety and made a promise to his mother on her birthday,” Rummel said. “Has he been perfect since 2013? No. But he has been remarkable.”
Commissioner Rachel Stern also applauded him for starting a group to take care of older and disabled inmates.
Since the brothers reunited, they have been “serious accountability partners” for each other. At the same time, he said he’s become better at setting boundaries with Lyle Menendez, and they tend to do different programming.
More than a dozen of their relatives, who have advocated for the brothers’ release for months, delivered emotional statements at Thursday’s hearing via videoconference.
“Seeing my crimes through my family’s eyes has been a huge part of my evolution and my growth,” Menendez said. “Just seeing the pain and the suffering. Understanding the magnitude of what I’ve done, the generational impact.”
His aunt Teresita Menendez-Baralt, who is Jose Menendez’s sister, said she has fully forgiven him. She noted that she is dying from Stage 4 cancer and wishes to welcome him into her home.
“Erik carries himself with kindness, integrity and strength that comes from patience and grace,” she said.
One relative promised to the parole board that she would house him in Colorado, where he can spend time with his family and enjoying nature.
The board brushed off prosecutor’s questions
LA County District Attorney Nathan Hochman said ahead of the parole hearings that he opposes parole for the brothers because of their lack of insight, comparing them to Sirhan Sirhan, who assassinated presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy in 1968. Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom denied him parole in January 2022 because of his “deficient insight.”
During the hearing, LA prosecutor Habib Balian asked Menendez about his and his brothers’ attempts to ask witnesses to lie in court on their behalf, and if the brothers staged the killings as a mafia hit. Commissioners largely dismissed the questions, saying they were not retrying the case.
In closing statements, Balian questioned whether Menendez was “truly reformed” or saying what commissioners wanted to hear.
“When one continues to diminish their responsibility for a crime and continues to make the same false excuses that they’ve made for 30-plus years, one is still that same dangerous person that they were when they shotgunned their parents,” Balian said.
What happens next
Lyle Menendez is set to appear over videoconference Friday for his parole hearing from the same prison in San Diego.
The case has captured the attention of true crime enthusiasts for decades and spawned documentaries, television specials and dramatizations. The Netflix drama ” Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story ” and a documentary released in 2024 have been credited for bringing new attention to the brothers.
Greater recognition of the brothers as victims of sexual abuse has also helped mobilize support for their release. Some supporters have flown to Los Angeles to hold rallies and attend court hearings.
California Democrat Gov. Gavin Newsom seeks to counter Texas Republicans’ congressional redistricting efforts by temporarily abandoning the Golden State’s nonpartisan congressional district-drawing process in favor of maps that would increase Democratic representation.
On Aug. 20, the Texas House passed a new congressional map that would give Republicans five more seats; it was expected to pass the Senate and go to Gov. Greg Abbott’s desk within days. Californians will vote Nov. 4 whether to sign off on Newsom’s plan, a proposal that could add five new Democratic congressional seats in time for the 2026 midterm elections.
Although Newsom’s actions have drawn both pushback and support, the governor told left-leaning political podcaster Brian Tyler Cohen that Democrats stand by nonpartisan redistricting processes.
“We’re also announcing as a consequence of this effort, a commitment to national independent redistricting,” Newsom said during Cohen’s Aug. 17 podcast episode. “That’s on the ballot as well. We believe it’s the right thing to do. In fact, the Democratic Party believes it’s the right thing to do. Democrats have voted for national independent redistricting. Republicans have not.”
States dictate their own processes for drawing electoral districts, which often falls to state legislatures. In some states, independent commissions perform the job — an effort to make the political map drawing process less partisan.
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But we wondered about Newsom’s statement that Republicans categorically “have not” supported independent redistricting. Newsom spokesperson Brandon Richards told us Newsom referred to H.R. 1, a 2021 congressional measure also known as the “For the People Act” that sought to require that all states establish independent redistricting commissions.
It passed the House with all Democrats but one supporting it, and all Republicans voting against it, with two absences. It did not advance in the Senate.
But that single bill does not tell the full story of Republicans’ voting history on independent redistricting.
Republicans opposed other parts of H.R. 1
The 884-page For the People Act would have required that each state have a nonpartisan state agency to appoint two Republicans, two Democrats and two from neither party to a commission that would decide how congressional district lines are drawn. It would have banned drawing a map with “the intent or the effect of unduly favoring or disfavoring any political party,” a practice commonly known as gerrymandering.
The bill included many other proposals addressing voter access, election integrity and security, campaign finance and ethics. It also would have required:
Additional disclosures of campaign-related fundraising and spending.
Adopting voting by paper ballots, early and no-excuse mail voting.
Expanding voter registration options, such as online, same-day and automatic voter registration.
In some cases, state Republicans supported independent redistricting commissions
Newsom specified a congressional vote on national redistricting, but we found at least four states where Republicans joined Democratic state lawmakers in efforts to establish nonpartisan redistricting commissions.
Independent commissions control redistricting in California and seven other states — Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Michigan, Montana, New York and Washington, according to the website All About Redistricting, managed by University of Colorado law professor Doug Spencer.
Three states — Hawaii, New Jersey and Virginia — assign redistricting to commissions that include elected officials or their appointees. Redistricting in the majority of the rest of the states is controlled by state legislatures. Some states have commissions that serve in advisory or backup roles.
Eight of the states with congressional redistricting commissions established them through ballot measures initiated by state legislature votes, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures and Ballotpedia. Colorado (2018), Hawaii (1992), Idaho (1994), Montana (1984), New York (2015), New Jersey (1966), Virginia (2020), Washington (1983) did so through legislative referral. The three others created them through citizens’ initiatives.
“At the state level, Democrats have been vocal proponents of independent commissions while Republicans have generally opposed them,” David Niven, University of Cincinnati American politics professor, said.
In Arizona, for example, Republicans opposed Proposition 106 in 2000, which established the state’s independent redistricting commission. They said the power to draw districts will be given to “unelected, unaccountable lawyers.”
But we found exceptions. Independent commissions in Idaho and New York were created with bipartisan support.
In 2018, Niven said, Democratic and Republican legislators in Colorado sponsored the measure to get the question on the ballot.
And PolitiFact previously fact-checked Illinois’ Democratic Gov. J.B. Pritzker when he said Illinois Republicans “didn’t do anything” to establish an independent commission. We rated that Mostly False after finding that Republican lawmakers in the General Assembly filed two proposals in 2021 for creating an independent redistricting commission.
Our ruling
Newsom said, “Democrats have voted for national independent redistricting. Republicans have not.”
In 2021, all but two absent Republican lawmakers voted against H.R. 1, which would have required all states to establish independent redistricting commissions. But the redistricting provisions were one part of the 884-page bill, and Republicans said they opposed it for various reasons, not just because of the redistricting provision.
State Republicans have at times supported measures to give independent commissions the duty to draw state-level congressional districts. We found examples in Colorado, Idaho, Illinois and New York.
Newsom’s statement was about national redistricting, and it needs more clarification and context. We rate it Mostly True.
CORRECTION, Aug. 22, 2025: This story has been updated to note that two Republicans were absent from the 2021 vote on H.R. 1 and that the measure called for a two non-Republican or non-Democrat representatives to serve on nonpartisan state redistricting agencies in each state. The Senate held a procedural vote on the bill, but it didn’t advance.
California’s contentious new congressional maps, championed by Gov. Gavin Newsom, easily advanced in the state Assembly on Thursday, setting up for final passage in the Senate before landing on Newsom’s desk.
The new map would shift five of California’s Republican U.S. House seats to be more favorable to Democrats in the 2026 midterm elections.
The measure passed the Assembly on Thursday with 57 legislators voting in favor and 20 against, and now heads to the state Senate. If the measure is successful, Californians would then vote on a constitutional amendment for the new boundaries during a special election on Nov. 4.
That election is likely to be expensive and unpredictable given how quickly the effort has come together and how little time there is between the legislature’s actions and voters starting to have their say.
California’s legislative votes are happening just one day after Texas state representatives passed a GOP-backed congressional map on Wednesday at the request of President Trump, following a weekslong standoff in which Democratic lawmakers left Texas to delay a vote. These new Texas maps could help secure five additional GOP-leaning seats during the upcoming midterm elections. Republicans in the state have been adamant the Texas changes are fair, while Texas Democrats have already signaled the maps will be challenged in court.
Shortly after the Texas House passed the maps, Democratic California Gov. Gavin Newsom posted “It’s on” on social media. When Texas first launched its redistricting effort, Newsom had vowed to redraw the Golden State’s congressional districts to counter the Lone Star State’s plan and neutralize any potential GOP gains.
Newsom — who is widely seen as a possible 2028 presidential contender — sarcastically congratulated Texas GOP Gov. Greg Abbott on X, saying, “you will now go down in history as one of Donald Trump’s most loyal lapdogs. Shredding our nation’s founding principles. What a legacy.”
Although California Republicans have denounced the redistricting plan as a “tit-for-tat strategy,” the state’s Democrats on Thursday touted that the effort is different from Texas since it will be ultimately approved by the state’s voters.
“In California, we will do whatever it takes to ensure that voters, not Donald Trump, will decide the direction of this country,” said Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas. “This is a proud moment in the history of this assembly. Californians, we believe in freedom. We will not let our political system be hijacked by authoritarianism, and today, we give every Californian the power to say no. To say no to Donald Trump’s power grab and yes to our people, to our state and to our democracy.”
Although Newsom and California Democrats had previously insisted redistricting would only move forward if GOP-led states such as Texas, Florida, Indiana or others continued with their maps, that language was struck from Thursday’s measure shortly before the Assembly voted on it.
President Trump late Wednesday congratulated Texas Republicans for advancing the new maps, writing on social media that “Everything Passed, on our way to FIVE more Congressional seats and saving your Rights, your Freedoms, and your Country, itself.” He also encouraged GOP-led Indiana and Florida to take on redistricting.
The relatively rare mid-decade redistricting gambit comes as both parties prepare to face off in 2026 and has major implications nationwide. Republicans have a narrow majority at the moment, and Democrats winning back three seats in the 2026 midterms could be enough to flip control of the chamber if the lines used in the 2024 election were still in place. Redistricting in red states could change that dynamic significantly however, and with it the impact of the final two years on Mr. Trump’s second term in office.
Texas and California are the two biggest redistricting battlegrounds, but Mr. Trump has pushed similar efforts in GOP-led Indiana and Florida, and New York Democrats have floated redrawing their House map. The Republican-led state of Missouri could also try and redraw a Democratic district in the coming weeks, and new maps are also expected in Ohio, where a redraw brought about by state law could impact some of the red state’s Democratic members of Congress.
Earlier this week, former President Barack Obama acknowledged that he was not a fan of partisan gerrymandering but he backed Newsom’s redistricting plan anyway at a fundraiser in Martha’s Vineyard and on social media, calling it a “smart, measured approach.”
Less than 24 hours before California’s scheduled vote, Newsom joined a press call with Democratic party leaders, urging support for his state’s redistricting effort.
“This is about taking back our country,” Newsom told reporters. “This is about the Democratic Party now punching back forcefully and very intentionally.
A draft congressional map unveiled by California Democrats late last week would heavily impact five of the state’s nine Republican U.S. House members. It would redraw Reps. Doug LaMalfa and Kevin Kiley’s Northern California districts, tweak Rep. David Valadao’s district in the Central Valley and rearrange parts of densely populated Southern California, impacting Reps. Ken Calvert and Darrell Issa. And some more competitive Democrat-held districts could be tilted further from the GOP.
There’s no guarantee that Democrats will win in all five newly recast districts.
Democrats hold large majorities in both chambers of California’s state legislature. But some legal hurdles still lie ahead, and Republicans in the state have pushed back against the redistricting plans.
Unlike Texas, California has an independent redistricting commission that was created by voters earlier this century. To overhaul the current congressional map, a constitutional amendment would need to be passed by a two-thirds vote in California’s Assembly and Senate and be approved by voters in the fast-moving fall election.
On Wednesday, the California Supreme Court denied a GOP attempt to stop the mid-cycle redistricting. California Republicans had legally challenged Democrats’ efforts, claiming the state’s constitution gives Californians the right to review new legislation for 30 days. But Chief Justice Patricia Guerrero said they “failed to meet their burden of establishing a basis for relief at this time.”
The GOP legislators who filed the legal challenge told CBS News the ruling is “not the end of this fight,” vowing to keep fighting the redistricting plan in the courts.
In a phone interview with CBS News on Wednesday, California Senate Minority Leader Brian Jones, a Republican, condemned Newsom’s redistricting efforts.
“This whole process is illegal from the beginning and violates the current California Constitution,” Jones said. “The voters spoke with a loud voice in 2008 and 2010 that they were taking this process out of the politicians’ hands and putting the responsibility into an independent commission.”
Democrats faced a flurry of questions from Republican lawmakers during hearings this week on the alleged lack of transparency in the drafting of these maps and the financial implications of the Nov. 4 special election.
“If we’re talking about the cost of a special election versus the cost of our democracy or the cost that Californians are already paying to subsidize this corrupt administration, those costs seem well worth paying at this moment,” said Democratic state Assemblyman Isaac G. Bryan.
Democratic lawmakers and Newsom have repeatedly emphasized that these redistricting efforts would not get rid of the independent commission and that the new maps he’s hoping to put in place will be the lines used through the 2030 election. The commission would go back to drawing the state’s congressional maps after the 2030 census, according to Newsom, who says this is only being done as a response to Mr. Trump and Texas’ redistricting.
That notion was rejected by Jones, who said: “Growing up, I was taught two wrongs don’t make a right, so no, it is not justified.”
California’s contentious new congressional maps, championed by Gov. Gavin Newsom, easily advanced in the state Assembly on Thursday, setting up for final passage in the Senate before landing on Newsom’s desk.
The new map would shift five of California’s Republican U.S. House seats to be more favorable to Democrats in the 2026 midterm elections.
The measure passed the Assembly on Thursday with 57 legislators voting in favor and 20 against, and now heads to the state Senate. If the measure is successful, Californians would then vote on a constitutional amendment for the new boundaries during a special election on Nov. 4.
That election is likely to be expensive and unpredictable given how quickly the effort has come together and how little time there is between the legislature’s actions and voters starting to have their say.
California’s legislative votes are happening just one day after Texas state representatives passed a GOP-backed congressional map on Wednesday at the request of President Trump, following a weekslong standoff in which Democratic lawmakers left Texas to delay a vote. These new Texas maps could help secure five additional GOP-leaning seats during the upcoming midterm elections. Republicans in the state have been adamant the Texas changes are fair, while Texas Democrats have already signaled the maps will be challenged in court.
Shortly after the Texas House passed the maps, Democratic California Gov. Gavin Newsom posted “It’s on” on social media. When Texas first launched its redistricting effort, Newsom had vowed to redraw the Golden State’s congressional districts to counter the Lone Star State’s plan and neutralize any potential GOP gains.
Newsom — who is widely seen as a possible 2028 presidential contender — sarcastically congratulated Texas GOP Gov. Greg Abbott on X, saying, “you will now go down in history as one of Donald Trump’s most loyal lapdogs. Shredding our nation’s founding principles. What a legacy.”
Although California Republicans have denounced the redistricting plan as a “tit-for-tat strategy,” the state’s Democrats on Thursday touted that the effort is different from Texas since it will be ultimately approved by the state’s voters.
“In California, we will do whatever it takes to ensure that voters, not Donald Trump, will decide the direction of this country,” said Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas. “This is a proud moment in the history of this assembly. Californians, we believe in freedom. We will not let our political system be hijacked by authoritarianism, and today, we give every Californian the power to say no. To say no to Donald Trump’s power grab and yes to our people, to our state and to our democracy.”
Although Newsom and California Democrats had previously insisted redistricting would only move forward if GOP-led states such as Texas, Florida, Indiana or others continued with their maps, that language was struck from Thursday’s measure shortly before the Assembly voted on it.
President Trump late Wednesday congratulated Texas Republicans for advancing the new maps, writing on social media that “Everything Passed, on our way to FIVE more Congressional seats and saving your Rights, your Freedoms, and your Country, itself.” He also encouraged GOP-led Indiana and Florida to take on redistricting.
The relatively rare mid-decade redistricting gambit comes as both parties prepare to face off in 2026 and has major implications nationwide. Republicans have a narrow majority at the moment, and Democrats winning back three seats in the 2026 midterms could be enough to flip control of the chamber if the lines used in the 2024 election were still in place. Redistricting in red states could change that dynamic significantly however, and with it the impact of the final two years on Mr. Trump’s second term in office.
Texas and California are the two biggest redistricting battlegrounds, but Mr. Trump has pushed similar efforts in GOP-led Indiana and Florida, and New York Democrats have floated redrawing their House map. The Republican-led state of Missouri could also try and redraw a Democratic district in the coming weeks, and new maps are also expected in Ohio, where a redraw brought about by state law could impact some of the red state’s Democratic members of Congress.
Earlier this week, former President Barack Obama acknowledged that he was not a fan of partisan gerrymandering but he backed Newsom’s redistricting plan anyway at a fundraiser in Martha’s Vineyard and on social media, calling it a “smart, measured approach.”
Less than 24 hours before California’s scheduled vote, Newsom joined a press call with Democratic party leaders, urging support for his state’s redistricting effort.
“This is about taking back our country,” Newsom told reporters. “This is about the Democratic Party now punching back forcefully and very intentionally.
A draft congressional map unveiled by California Democrats late last week would heavily impact five of the state’s nine Republican U.S. House members. It would redraw Reps. Doug LaMalfa and Kevin Kiley’s Northern California districts, tweak Rep. David Valadao’s district in the Central Valley and rearrange parts of densely populated Southern California, impacting Reps. Ken Calvert and Darrell Issa. And some more competitive Democrat-held districts could be tilted further from the GOP.
There’s no guarantee that Democrats will win in all five newly recast districts.
Democrats hold large majorities in both chambers of California’s state legislature. But some legal hurdles still lie ahead, and Republicans in the state have pushed back against the redistricting plans.
Unlike Texas, California has an independent redistricting commission that was created by voters earlier this century. To overhaul the current congressional map, a constitutional amendment would need to be passed by a two-thirds vote in California’s Assembly and Senate and be approved by voters in the fast-moving fall election.
On Wednesday, the California Supreme Court denied a GOP attempt to stop the mid-cycle redistricting. California Republicans had legally challenged Democrats’ efforts, claiming the state’s constitution gives Californians the right to review new legislation for 30 days. But Chief Justice Patricia Guerrero said they “failed to meet their burden of establishing a basis for relief at this time.”
The GOP legislators who filed the legal challenge told CBS News the ruling is “not the end of this fight,” vowing to keep fighting the redistricting plan in the courts.
In a phone interview with CBS News on Wednesday, California Senate Minority Leader Brian Jones, a Republican, condemned Newsom’s redistricting efforts.
“This whole process is illegal from the beginning and violates the current California Constitution,” Jones said. “The voters spoke with a loud voice in 2008 and 2010 that they were taking this process out of the politicians’ hands and putting the responsibility into an independent commission.”
Democrats faced a flurry of questions from Republican lawmakers during hearings this week on the alleged lack of transparency in the drafting of these maps and the financial implications of the Nov. 4 special election.
“If we’re talking about the cost of a special election versus the cost of our democracy or the cost that Californians are already paying to subsidize this corrupt administration, those costs seem well worth paying at this moment,” said Democratic state Assemblyman Isaac G. Bryan.
Democratic lawmakers and Newsom have repeatedly emphasized that these redistricting efforts would not get rid of the independent commission and that the new maps he’s hoping to put in place will be the lines used through the 2030 election. The commission would go back to drawing the state’s congressional maps after the 2030 census, according to Newsom, who says this is only being done as a response to Mr. Trump and Texas’ redistricting.
That notion was rejected by Jones, who said: “Growing up, I was taught two wrongs don’t make a right, so no, it is not justified.”
We are often told to take the high road. But sometimes, stooping to their level is for the best and that is what is happening with Gavin Newsom. And it is pretty great to see.
Newsom, who is the Governor of California, has taken to social media to troll Donald Trump and use Trump’s antics against him. You know how Trump writes in capslock for some reason? Newsom and his official press office X account started to do the same. Any time someone tries to mock him? He comes back with some kind of witty one-liner.
And look, after the last year of dealing with Donald Trump’s nonsense, I think it is absolutely okay to have a good laugh at whatever Newsom and his people are up to.
TODAY WE WILL MAKE THE MAPS GREAT AGAIN!
— Governor Newsom Press Office (@GovPressOffice) August 21, 2025
It all really started with Trump’s continued attacks on Newsom. He hates the Democratic governor and has made that hatred known. Instead of ignoring Trump, as many others do, Newsom clearly has gotten to the point where he just doesn’t care about the President and frankly? Good. Sorry but taking the high road clearly isn’t working!
So Newsom’s social media trolling is truly and weirdly kind of cathartic to see.
All Donald Trump does is log onto his Truth Social account and mock people. He is just a bully and we’ve been told for years to be the bigger people and just ignore him. But what has that gotten us? Two terms of him destroying democracy. So yes, if that means that Gavin Newsom has to revert back to school yard tactics to take on the President, so be it.
WOW! FOX NEWS CAN’T STOP TALKING ABOUT ME (GAVIN C. NEWSOM), AMERICA’S FAVORITE GOVERNOR!!! TONIGHT THEIR ENTIRE PRIMETIME LINEUP WAS ABOUT ME! JESSE WATTERS KEPT CALLING ME “DADDY” (VERY WEIRD, NOT INTERESTED, BUT THANK YOU!). SEAN HANNITY (VERY NICE GUY) NEARLY CRIED BECAUSE I…
— Governor Newsom Press Office (@GovPressOffice) August 21, 2025
I don’t know why his team decided that now was the time to lean heavily into making fun of Trump but it is genuinely the best thing to happen in recent months. So if we all get to just laugh a little over Gavin Newsom mocking the President of the United States, so be it. We deserve it.
Rachel Leishman (She/Her) is an Assistant Editor at the Mary Sue. She’s been a writer professionally since 2016 but was always obsessed with movies and television and writing about them growing up. A lover of Spider-Man and Wanda Maximoff’s biggest defender, she has interests in all things nerdy and a cat named Benjamin Wyatt the cat. If you want to talk classic rock music or all things Harrison Ford, she’s your girl but her interests span far and wide. Yes, she knows she looks like Florence Pugh. She has multiple podcasts, normally has opinions on any bit of pop culture, and can tell you can actors entire filmography off the top of her head. Her current obsession is Glen Powell’s dog, Brisket.
Her work at the Mary Sue often includes Star Wars, Marvel, DC, movie reviews, and interviews.
President Donald Trump is calling Texas lawmakers’ approval of a sweeping redistricting plan to add up to five new GOP-leaning congressional seats a “Big WIN” for Republicans.
Trump fired off a post via Truth Social hailing the state for “never letting us down,” saying the victory was more than a state win but a national turning point. He went on to urge other Republican-led states to follow the Lone Star State’s lead.
“Big WIN for the Great State of Texas!!! Everything Passed, on our way to FIVE more Congressional seats and saving your Rights, your Freedoms, and your Country, itself. Texas never lets us down. Florida, Indiana, and others are looking to do the same thing. More seats equals less Crime, a great Economy, and a STRONG SECOND AMENDMENT. It means Happiness and Peace,” he said.
Following Texas Democratic lawmakers’ return on Monday, President Donald Trump urged the state legislature to move quickly to pass a highly controversial redistricting bill, saying, “Please pass this Map, ASAP.”(Sergio Flores/Getty; Mark Schiefelbein/AP)
Trump also suggested that a move in that direction could secure as many as 100 additional seats for the GOP nationwide if they followed suit.
“But Republicans, there is one thing even better – STOP MAIL-IN VOTING, a total fraud that has no bounds. Also, go to PAPER BALLOTS before it is too late – At one tenth the cost, faster, and more reliable. If we do these TWO things, we will pick up 100 more seats, and the CROOKED game of politics is over. God Bless America!!!,” the post went on.
Texas Republicans pushed the new congressional map through the state House Wednesday in an 88–52 party-line vote, brushing aside Democratic objections in a bid to strengthen the GOP’s hold on Congress heading into 2026.
A major battle over congressional redistricting took place at the Texas State Capitol. (Jordan Vonderhaar/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
While Trump celebrated the redistricting as a major Republican win, Democrats framed it as only the beginning of a much larger legal battle.
“This part of the fight is over, but it is merely the first chapter… Our best shot is in the courts. This is not over. We will continue fighting,” said Rep. Gene Wu of Houston.
Texas House Democrats also accused the GOP of trying to dilute minority voting power, saying the map was illegal and racially discriminatory.
Democrats have signaled retaliation in response to Republican redistricting efforts across the country, particularly in Texas.(Getty Images)
“Members, it breaks my heart to see how this illegal and rigged, mid-decade redistricting scheme is dividing our state and our country,” Rep. Chris Turner, a Democrat, said. “This is Texas, it’s not Washington D.C. The impulses of outside politicians and their billionaire backers shouldn’t dictate what we do in this chamber, in this House.”
“This process was a total sham from the very beginning… This is a racist power grab that especially goes after our African American and Latino representatives,” said Rep. Jon Rosenthal
Republicans defended the map as necessary to reflect population growth and safeguard voter representation.
“Different from everyone else, I’m telling you, I’m not beating around the bush,” Rep. Todd Hunter, said about the map’s goal. “We have five new districts, and these five new districts are based on political performance.”
California Gov. Gavin Newsom and the California Democrats unveiled their new map last week in an effort to nullify the map Texas Republicans were creating. If that bill is passed, it would create five new Democratic-leaning congressional districts that would counteract Texas.
The dueling maps highlight the high-stakes fight for control of the House, with both parties using redistricting to try to lock in their advantage before 2026.
Martha McHardy is a U.S. News reporter based in London, U.K. Her focus is on polling and California politics. She has covered U.S. news extensively, including the 2024 election and pro-Palestine protests at U.S. colleges. Martha joined Newsweek in 2024 from The Independent and had previously freelanced at The Sun, The Mirror and MyLondon. She is a graduate of Durham University and did her NCTJ at News Associates. You can get in touch with Martha by emailing m.mchardy@newsweek.com. Languages: English.
🎙️ Voice is AI-generated. Inconsistencies may occur.
The California Supreme Court on Wednesday dismissed a challenge from Republican lawmakers aimed at blocking Governor Gavin Newsom‘s proposal to redistrict the state’s congressional map.
Republican lawmakers in California urged the state’s highest court to intervene to pause Newsom’s redistricting plan, arguing that Democrats bypassed a rule mandating a 30-day waiting period before voting on newly introduced legislation.
But in a ruling on Wednesday, the court declined to act. “Petitioners have failed to meet their burden of establishing a basis for relief at this time under California Constitution article IV, section 8,” the court said in an order.
Newsom has positioned the move as a counter to the Republican-led redistricting in Texas, and has called for a November special election to let voters decide on a map designed to flip up to five Republican-held seats ahead of the 2026 midterms.
California Governor Gavin Newsom speaking in Los Angeles last week. California Governor Gavin Newsom speaking in Los Angeles last week. Mario Tama/Getty Images
Democratic Governors Gavin Newsom and Kathy Hochul of California and New York, respectively, issued brief warnings to Texas after the Republican-led state legislature voted Wednesday evening to advance a controversial congressional redistricting plan.
Newsweek reached out to GOP Texas Governor Greg Abbott‘s office via email for comment.
Why It Matters
The vote occurred after weeks of partisan standoffs in Austin, including a Democratic walkout, as it heightened concerns that states could spark a mid‑decade redistricting “arms race” ahead of the 2026 midterms.
Texas Republicans said the map could produce as many as five additional GOP‑leaning seats; Democrats said they would mount legal challenges and urged broader pushback from governors and allies.
The Lone Star State’s GOP also felt partisan pressure and backing from President Donald Trump to press the plan further along and approve it.
What To Know
Posting to X after the vote passed, Newsom said, “It’s on, Texas.”
The Texas House approved the proposed congressional map by an 88-52 party‑line vote, advancing the legislation to the state Senate, where passage is expected.
What People Are Saying
Trump on Truth Social Tuesday: “CONGRATULATIONS TEXAS! The July Border Statistics are in and, once again, they are the LOWEST RECORDED NUMBERS IN UNITED STATES HISTORY. The U.S. Border Patrol reported ZERO releases of Illegal Aliens into the Country. Texas’ Border is Safe and Secure, and the entire World knows it. All we need to do is keep it this way, which is exactly why Texas Republicans need to help us WIN the 2026 Midterm Elections, and pass their new Bill, AS IS, for the ONE BIG, BEAUTIFUL CONGRESSIONAL MAP!
“With the Texas House now in Quorum, thanks to GREAT Speaker Dustin Burrows, I call on all of my Republican friends in the Legislature to work as fast as they can to get THIS MAP to Governor Greg Abbott’s desk, ASAP. Thank you for your attention to this matter!”
This is a developing story that will be updated with additional information.
Republican Governor Greg Abbott speaks at a news conference on July 8 in Hunt, Texas. (Photo by Brandon Bell/Getty Images) Republican Governor Greg Abbott speaks at a news conference on July 8 in Hunt, Texas. (Photo by Brandon Bell/Getty Images)
They argued, in their petition to the court, that the proposed redistricting legislation must be published for 30 days before the legislature can hear or act on it. The filing alleged that rule was “circumvented” by the legislature by replacing two unrelated bills with the redistricting proposal, a move called “gut and amend” by those in Sacramento.
They asked the court to halt any work on the legislative package until mid-September.
But the court said, in its order on Wednesday, Aug. 20, that the petitioners “failed to meet their burden of establishing a basis for relief at this time” under the state’s constitution.
The full legislature is set to vote Thursday on the redistricting package, which includes newly redrawn congressional maps and a call for a special election on Nov. 4, when voters would decide whether to implement those partisan maps for the 2026, 2028 and 2030 elections.
The effort has been touted by Gov. Gavin Newsom and Democrats as a way to counter plans in other, Republican-led states to enact mid-cycle gerrymandering ahead of the 2026 midterm elections.
California would only have a special election to change its congressional districts if other states also went through with partisan, mid-cycle redistricting.
The Texas House earlier Wednesday approved new congressional maps meant to give Republicans a boost in 2026, at the behest of President Donald Trump.
The California Republicans’ lawsuit was led by Sens. Tony Strickland, R-Huntington Beach, and Suzette Martinez Valladares, R-Santa Clarita, as well as Assemblymembers Kate Sanchez, R-Rancho Santa Margarita, and Tri Ta, R-Westminster.
“Today’s Supreme Court decision is not the end of this fight,” the Republican legislators said in a statement. “Although the Court denied our petition, it did not explain the reason for its ruling. This means Gov. Newsom and the Democrats’ plan to gut the voter-created Citizens Redistricting Commission, silence public input, and stick taxpayers with a $200+ million bill will proceed. Polls show most Democrats, Republicans, and independents want to keep the commission, not give politicians the power to rig maps. We will continue to challenge this unconstitutional power grab in the courts and at the ballot box.”
Chief Justice Patricia Guerrero signed Wednesday’s order.
Former President Barack Obama has waded into states’ efforts at rare mid-decade redistricting efforts, saying he agrees with California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s response to alter his state’s congressional maps, in the wake of Texas redistricting efforts promoted by President Donald Trump aimed at shoring up Republicans’ position in next year’s elections. “I believe that Gov. Newsom’s approach is a responsible approach. He said this is going to be responsible. We’re not going to try to completely maximize it,” Obama said at a Tuesday fundraiser on Martha’s Vineyard in Massachusetts, according to excerpts obtained by The Associated Press. “We’re only going to do it if and when Texas and/or other Republican states begin to pull these maneuvers. Otherwise, this doesn’t go into effect.”While noting that “political gerrymandering” is not his “preference,” Obama said that, if Democrats “don’t respond effectively, then this White House and Republican-controlled state governments all across the country, they will not stop, because they do not appear to believe in this idea of an inclusive, expansive democracy.”According to organizers, the event raised $2 million for the National Democratic Redistricting Committee and its affiliates, one of which has filed and supported litigation in several states over GOP-drawn districts. Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Eric Holder, who served as Obama’s attorney general and heads up the group, also appeared.The former president’s comments come as Texas lawmakers return to Austin this week, renewing a heated debate over a new congressional map creating five new potential GOP seats. The plan is the result of prodding by President Donald Trump, eager to stave off a midterm defeat that would deprive his party of control of the House of Representatives. Texas Democratic lawmakers delayed a vote for 15 days by leaving the state in protest, depriving the House of enough members to do business.Spurred on by the Texas situation, Democratic governors, including Newsom, have pondered ways to possibly strengthen their party’s position by way of redrawing U.S. House district lines, five years out from the Census count that typically leads into such procedures.In California — where voters in 2010 gave the power to draw congressional maps to an independent commission, with the goal of making the process less partisan — Democrats have unveiled a proposal that could give that state’s dominant political party an additional five U.S. House seats in a bid to win the fight for control of Congress next year. If approved by voters in November, the blueprint could nearly erase Republican House members in the nation’s most populous state, with Democrats intending to win the party 48 of its 52 U.S. House seats, up from 43.A hearing over that measure devolved into a shouting match Tuesday as a Republican lawmaker clashed with Democrats, and a committee voted along party lines to advance the new congressional map. California Democrats do not need any Republican votes to move ahead, and legislators are expected to approve a proposed congressional map and declare a Nov. 4 special election by Thursday to get required voter approval.Newsom and Democratic leaders say they’ll ask voters to approve their new maps only for the next few elections, returning map-drawing power to the commission following the 2030 census — and only if a Republican state moves forward with new maps. Obama applauded that temporary timeline.”And we’re going to do it in a temporary basis because we’re keeping our eye on where we want to be long term,” Obama said, referencing Newsom’s take on the California plan. “I think that approach is a smart, measured approach, designed to address a very particular problem in a very particular moment in time.”___Kinnard can be reached at http://x.com/MegKinnardAPSee more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel
SACRAMENTO, Calif. —
Former President Barack Obama has waded into states’ efforts at rare mid-decade redistricting efforts, saying he agrees with California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s response to alter his state’s congressional maps, in the wake of Texas redistricting efforts promoted by President Donald Trump aimed at shoring up Republicans’ position in next year’s elections.
“I believe that Gov. Newsom’s approach is a responsible approach. He said this is going to be responsible. We’re not going to try to completely maximize it,” Obama said at a Tuesday fundraiser on Martha’s Vineyard in Massachusetts, according to excerpts obtained by The Associated Press. “We’re only going to do it if and when Texas and/or other Republican states begin to pull these maneuvers. Otherwise, this doesn’t go into effect.”
While noting that “political gerrymandering” is not his “preference,” Obama said that, if Democrats “don’t respond effectively, then this White House and Republican-controlled state governments all across the country, they will not stop, because they do not appear to believe in this idea of an inclusive, expansive democracy.”
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NEW: President @BarackObama agrees. We have to stop Donald Trump’s attempts to rig our elections.
California will redraw our maps and neutralize any attempts Donald Trump makes to steal Congressional seats.
According to organizers, the event raised $2 million for the National Democratic Redistricting Committee and its affiliates, one of which has filed and supported litigation in several states over GOP-drawn districts. Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Eric Holder, who served as Obama’s attorney general and heads up the group, also appeared.
The former president’s comments come as Texas lawmakers return to Austin this week, renewing a heated debate over a new congressional map creating five new potential GOP seats. The plan is the result of prodding by President Donald Trump, eager to stave off a midterm defeat that would deprive his party of control of the House of Representatives. Texas Democratic lawmakers delayed a vote for 15 days by leaving the state in protest, depriving the House of enough members to do business.
Spurred on by the Texas situation, Democratic governors, including Newsom, have pondered ways to possibly strengthen their party’s position by way of redrawing U.S. House district lines, five years out from the Census count that typically leads into such procedures.
In California — where voters in 2010 gave the power to draw congressional maps to an independent commission, with the goal of making the process less partisan — Democrats have unveiled a proposal that could give that state’s dominant political party an additional five U.S. House seats in a bid to win the fight for control of Congress next year. If approved by voters in November, the blueprint could nearly erase Republican House members in the nation’s most populous state, with Democrats intending to win the party 48 of its 52 U.S. House seats, up from 43.
A hearing over that measure devolved into a shouting match Tuesday as a Republican lawmaker clashed with Democrats, and a committee voted along party lines to advance the new congressional map. California Democrats do not need any Republican votes to move ahead, and legislators are expected to approve a proposed congressional map and declare a Nov. 4 special election by Thursday to get required voter approval.
Newsom and Democratic leaders say they’ll ask voters to approve their new maps only for the next few elections, returning map-drawing power to the commission following the 2030 census — and only if a Republican state moves forward with new maps. Obama applauded that temporary timeline.
“And we’re going to do it in a temporary basis because we’re keeping our eye on where we want to be long term,” Obama said, referencing Newsom’s take on the California plan. “I think that approach is a smart, measured approach, designed to address a very particular problem in a very particular moment in time.”
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Kinnard can be reached at http://x.com/MegKinnardAP
Former President Barack Obama is supporting California’s mid-cycle redistricting effort as a “responsible approach” to Republicans drawing new maps in Texas.
Obama praised California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s ballot measure proposal to redraw congressional districts and tilt at least five congressional districts in the state towards Democrats at a fundraiser on Tuesday for the National Democratic Redistricting Committee.
“I believe that Governor Newsom’s approach is a responsible approach,” he said, according to excerpts obtained by POLITICO. “I think that approach is a smart, measured approach, designed to address a very particular problem in a very particular moment in time.”
California Democrats are expected this week to allow voters to bypass an independent commission established by voters and decide whether to approve the new partisan maps for the next three election cycles in response to the Republican’s move in Texas.
Obama’s remarks comes as both parties in California gear up for what is expected to be a hard-fought campaign over the ballot initiative to redraw political boundaries in the state in response to President Donald Trump’s efforts to keep the House in Republican hands in the 2026 midterms.
The former president said redrawing the lines is “not my preference,” but that the Democratic-led effort in California is “responsible” in this context.
“We cannot unilaterally allow one of the two major parties to rig the game,” he said. “And California is one of the states that has the capacity to offset a large state like Texas.”
The Associated Press first reported Obama’s remarks.
Obama said he hopes that the NDRC and national Democrats will work to eliminate partisan gerrymandering as a “long-term goal,” but applauded Newsom’s response to the new Texas maps and Trump’s broader campaign to push other red states to draw new, more favorable maps.
“Given that Texas is taking direction from a partisan White House that is effectively saying: gerrymander for partisan purposes so we can maintain the House despite our unpopular policies, redistrict right in the middle of a decade between censuses — which is not how the system was designed; I have tremendous respect for how Governor Newsom has approached this,” he said.
Newsom thanked Obama for his support in a social media post and promised that California’s redistricting proposal will “neutralize any attempts Donald Trump makes to steal Congressional seats.”
Major votes are on tap this week in the Texas and California legislatures in the high-stakes battle between Republicans and Democrats over congressional redistricting ahead of next year’s midterm elections.
In Austin, Texas, the GOP-dominated state House of Representatives on Wednesday resumes meeting amid a second straight special session called by conservative Republican Gov. Greg Abbott.
At the top of their to-do list as they return to work is passing a GOP-crafted redistricting map that would create up to five Republican-leaning congressional districts at the expense of currently Democrat-controlled seats. Republicans currently control 25 of the state’s 38 U.S. House seats.
“Please pass this Map, ASAP. THANK YOU TEXAS,” President Donald Trump wrote in a social media post on Monday.
Texas Speaker of the House Dustin Burrows strikes the gavel as the House calls a Special Session with a quorum, Monday, Aug. 18, 2025, in Austin, Texas.(AP Photo – Eric Gay)
The Republican push in Texas, which comes at Trump’s urging, is part of a broader effort by the GOP across the country to pad their razor-thin House majority to keep control of the chamber in the 2026 midterms, when the party in power traditionally faces political headwinds and loses seats.
Trump and his political team are aiming to prevent what happened during his first term in the White House, when Democrats stormed back to grab the House majority in the 2018 midterm elections.
Republicans in red state Texas enjoy a supermajority in the legislature and the state Senate passed the new congressional maps last week, during the first special legislative session.
But dozens of Texas Democratic state representatives fled the state to prevent a quorum in the Texas House, effectively preventing Abbott and Republicans from moving forward with new maps.
Many of the Democrats who had fled the state returned on Monday, and made it to the state capitol building as the House reconvened. They were cheered by supporters as they arrived.
Supporters for the returning Texas democrats chant as members enter the house at the Texas Capitol in Austin, Texas, Monday, Aug. 18, 2025.(AP Photo/Stephen Spillman))
But with Republicans outnumbering Democrats 88-62 in the state House, the new maps are expected to pass when lawmakers return on Wednesday.
“Let me also be clear about where we go from here. We are done waiting, and we have quorum. Now is the time for action,” Republican Texas House Speaker Dustin Burrows said on Monday.
During the walkout, Abbott and Republican state attorney general Ken Paxton sued to try and remove some of the absent Democratic lawmakers from office. Meanwhile, GOP Sen. John Cornyn worked to get the FBI’s help in tracking down the AWOL lawmakers. And Burrows issued civil arrest warrants and also pledged to fine the lawmakers $500 per day.
The fleeing Democrats, who set up camp in the blue states of Illinois, New York and Massachusetts, late last week signaled that they would return to Texas after the adjournment of the first special session, and after Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom and other top California Democrats unveiled their playbook to counter the push by Trump and Republicans to enact rare – but not unheard of – mid-decade congressional redistricting.
The end of the walkout by the Democrats will lead to the passage of the new maps, but Texas Democrats vow they’ll fight the new state maps in court and say the moves by California are allowing them to pass “the baton.”
While the Republican push in Texas to upend the current congressional maps doesn’t face constitutional constraints, Newsom’s path in California is much more complicated.
The governor is moving to hold a special election this year, to obtain voter approval to undo the constitutional amendments that created the non-partisan redistricting commission. A two-thirds majority vote in the Democrat-dominated California legislature would be needed to hold the referendum.
Democrats in Sacramento on Monday unveiled a bill to move forward with the referendum.
California Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas announces a legislative package to advance a partisan effort to redraw California congressional map at a press conference on Monday, Aug. 18, 2025, in Sacramento, Calif(AP Photo/Tran Nguyen)
“California and Californians have been uniquely targeted by the Trump Administration, and we are not going to sit idle while they command Texas and other states to rig the next election to keep power — pursuing more extreme and unpopular policies,” Newsom said Monday in a statement.
The Democrat-dominated legislature is expected to approve the referendum on Thursday. The maps the Democrats unveiled late last week, would create up to five more left-leaning congressional districts at the expense of the Republican minority in heavily blue California.
“Here we are in open and plain sight before one vote is cast in the 2026 midterm election and here [Trump] is once again trying to rig the system,” Newsom charged on Thursday.
Last week’s appearance by Newsom, who is considered a likely contender for the 2028 Democratic presidential nomination, also served as a fundraising kickoff to raise massive amounts of campaign cash needed to sell the redistricting push statewide in California.
Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom of California speaks during a congressional redistricting event on Aug. 14, 2025, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli )
The non-partisan redistricting commission, created over 15 years ago, remains popular with most Californians, according to public opinion polling.
That’s why Newsom and California Democratic lawmakers are promising not to scrap the commission entirely, but rather replace it temporarily by the legislature for the next three election cycles.
But Republican former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, who represented a congressional district in California’s Central Valley for 17 years, argued in an appearance on Fox News’ “Sunday Morning Futures” that “when you think about how they drew these lines, there wasn’t one hearing. There is no debate. There’s no input. Even the legislature in California doesn’t have input. The DCCC is just ending it. That is why we need to stop Newsom’s power grab.”
McCarthy, who is helping to lead the GOP fundraising effort to counter Newsom and California Democrats leading up to the likely referendum this fall, said that “November 4th will be the election that people could actually have a say,” as he pointed to polls showing strong support for the current non-partisan redistricting commission.
A handful of California Republican state lawmakers on Tuesday filed a lawsuit in the state Supreme Court to stop the proposed redistricting reform.
And the push to temporarily replace the commission is also being opposed by other high-profile Republicans. Among the most visible is former Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, the last Republican elected governor in Democrat-dominated California.
Hollywood movie star and former Republican Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger of California opposes the push to temporarily replace the Golden State’s non-partisan redistricting commission.(Tristar Media/WireImage)
The longtime Hollywood action star says he’s mobilizing to oppose the push by Newsom to temporarily scrap the state’s nonpartisan redistricting commission.
“I’m getting ready for the gerrymandering battle,” Schwarzenegger wrote in a social media post Friday, which included a photo of the former professional bodybuilding champion lifting weights.
Schwarzenegger, who rose to worldwide fame as the star of the film “The Terminator” four decades ago, wore a T-shirt in the photo that said “terminate gerrymandering.”
Schwarzenegger spokesperson Daniel Ketchell told Politico earlier this month that “he calls gerrymandering evil, and he means that. He thinks it’s truly evil for politicians to take power from people.”
“He’s opposed to what Texas is doing, and he’s opposed to the idea that California would race to the bottom to do the same thing,” Ketchell added.
Schwarzenegger, during his tenure as governor, had a starring role in the passage of constitutional amendments in California in 2008 and 2010 that took the power to draw state legislative and congressional districts away from politicians and placed it in the hands of an independent commission.
Paul Steinhauser is a politics reporter based in the swing state of New Hampshire. He covers the campaign trail from coast to coast.”
Shiela Fitzgerald/Shutterstock; Andrew Harnik/Getty Images
California Governor Gavin Newsom and President Donald Trump.
California Governor Gavin Newsom is setting the internet on fire with his new social media strategy that is not only hilarious but has the added benefit of making MAGA angry.
Two birds, one stone.
Newsom has been roasting the Right using memes and dunking President Donald Trump and Republican politicians by imitating Trump’s own all-caps, deranged style of posting on Truth Social.
Over the course of the last month, the governor and his social media team have become masters at trolling. Camille Zapata is the head of Newsom’s press office and runs his @CAGovernor account, while director of communications Izzy Gardon and other members of the team run @GovPressOffice and @GavinNewsom, and all of them are well-versed in Internet memes and students of the way Trump likes to post.
The social media posts have been so successful that they’ve managed to anger Republican politicians and even caused a Fox News host to crash out on air. After Newsom’s office posted memes making fun of Vice President JD Vance and Trump supporter Kid Rock, and labeled Kristi Noem “Commander Cosplay” and Tomi Lahren “woke,” The Five host Dana Perino melted down and called on Newsom’s wife to stop him.
Democrats, on the other hand, have been cheering Newsom on by reposting his greatest hits, creating Trump-like AI memes of Newsom, while the media is busy creating best-of lists.
The LGBTQ+ community is rightfully sick of Newsom after he called trans athletes competing in women’s sports “deeply unfair” in the debut episode of his podcast, but it’s hard to deny that his tweet storm is having an impact on Republicans and MAGA voters.
Newsom may be one of the only Democrats willing to fight fire with fire, and the internet is loving him for it!
Newsom’s press office making fun of Trump by mimicking the bizarre all-caps way he posts on Truth Social is a hilarious and clever way to dunk on the president. Calling his hands “tiny” and roasting him for needing “little baby stairs” to get into Air Force One is the icing on the cake.
Newsom’s press office is getting eerily good at posting like Trump. Speaker of the House Mike Johnson was another target for Newsom’s ire, calling him “little man” while roasting Trump for his obsession with maps and calling him Donald “TACO” J. Trump.
After Texas House Democrats broke quorum and fled the state for Illinois and California, Texas Senator Ted Cruz poked the bear by writing on X that they were probably off having dinner with Newsom “at the French Laundry.” Cruz meant it as a powerful burn, but Newsom shot back by reminding everyone of the time Cruz fled Texas for Cancun while Texans were being devastated by a harsh winter storm.
Newsom has been leading the charge, fighting against the Trump administration’s use of ICE to enact their cruel immigration policies, including dunking on Donald Trump Jr. for being his dad’s mouthpiece and starting a ridiculous wireless phone company.
Newsom’s press office posted a video montage of his back and forth with conservative political commentator Tomi Lahren, which included Newsom making fun of her by posting, “Tomi’s account is basically Yelp for toilets now,” with the caption “thoughts and prayers.” Hilarious.
Calling White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller “Voldemort’s hand” and using Cards Against Humanity to say Newsom is hurting him? Chef’s kiss.
This Republican made the mistake of filming his anti-Newsom “rap” — we’re being generous calling it that — with a cutout of the governor behind him so that it looks like Newsom is taking him from behind. Oops.
Lyle and Erik Menendez, in the 1990s and the 2020s. Photo-Illustration: Intelligencer; Photos: AP Photos, Mega
On Thursday, Erik Menendez will be escorted from his cell inside the Richard J. Donovan Correctional Facility outside San Diego to meet with a commissioner and deputy commissioner from the California parole board. The next day, his olderbrother, Lyle, will do the same. During what the board euphemistically refers to as a “conversation,” the Menendezes will be questioned under oath in the most deeply personal way possible about why, exactly, they shot their parents to death 36 years ago nearly to the day. “No court has ever heard the full story in this case, the depth and depravity of the abuse suffered by Lyle and Erik, and their remarkable journal of personal transformation,” their lawyers wrote in a recent court filing. The parole board will.
Originally condemned to life without parole, the brothers took a major step toward freedom in the spring when, over the furious objection of prosecutors, a Los Angeles judge resentenced them, clearing the way for this week’s hearings. Advocates for the brothers view them as the sort of trial that they never had, happening in an era when credible claims of sexual assault are taken more seriously than in the 1990s, when popular culture mocked the pair as a couple of spoiled narcissists who concocted fake abuse claims to get away with murder.
More recently, the brothers have gotten a second, more favorable look from the public after their lives were dramatized in an Emmy-nominated scripted series from Ryan Murphy and a documentary, both on Netflix. Today, Lyle and Erik’s story of victimization has created an outpouring of compassion. They have legions of TikTok fans as well as the support of nearly 30 extended family members and high-profile advocates, such as Kim Kardashian, arguing passionately for their release.
Getting parole isn’t a simple matter of demonstrating good behavior behind bars. While Lyle, 57, and Erik, 54, have both amassed impressive records of achievements during their incarceration, it won’t be enough; if the parole board does not believe they are radically honest in their account of the murders, they will almost certainly lose. The outcome of the proceedings may hinge on their ability to demonstrate sufficient “insight” into their crimes. This slippery, subjective test requires them to give an exhaustive account of what they did and what the parole board will accept as truthful and reliable evidence that they pose no risk to the public.
Their story that they acted because they believed that their parents were going to kill them after Lyle supposedly threatened to expose their father’s yearslong sexual abuse of Erik will be pitted against the Los Angeles district attorney’s argument that they killed their parents in cold blood to inherit a multimillion-dollar fortune, which proved successful with the jury that convicted them of first-degree murder in 1996.
Over a series of interviews this summer, lawyers for the Menendezes previewed for me how the brothers will testify before the parole board. They will admit that they told extensive lies to cover up acts that the lawyers have characterized in court filings as “heinous, cruel, and criminal” but will continue to insist that they believed they were in a life-or-death situation with no way out. In assessing the key question of their present risk, what matters is how much they have grown and changed, says attorney Cliff Gardner, a member of their defense team. “Thirty-five years of really extraordinary conduct speaks louder than the lies they told to avoid culpability at the ages of 18 and 21,” he says. “That is what maturity is.”
Exhaustive and invasive, a parole hearing is akin to an MRI of the soul. In addition to the hourslong interrogations of Lyle and Erik, the board will review tens of thousands of pages of transcripts, medical and psychological records, risk-assessment reports, expert declarations, commendations, letters of support, and the arguments of the brothers’ lawyers and the district attorney’s office, which is determined to keep them behind bars until they die. Critically, the parole board will have evidence that the jury did not. This includes dramatic new revelations that tend to corroborate Erik’s sexual-abuse allegations against his father and point to another alleged victim.
A group takes a selfie outside the mansion where Jose and Kitty Menendez were murdered on August 20, 1989, in Beverly Hills, California. Photo: David Swanson/AFP/Getty Images
“As much as the crime repels, it attracts enormous interest,” says Kathleen Heide, a distinguished professor at the University of South Florida and one of the country’s foremost experts in parricide. Children who kill their parents generally fall into one of four categories, according to Heide: those who are in fear of their lives and desperate to end the abuse; those who are enraged with their parents, sometimes due to past abuse; those who are severely mentally ill and have lost contact with reality; and those who are dangerously antisocial, possibly psychopathic, and kill to get something they want, such as money or freedom. Where the Menendez brothers fall on that spectrum is a perennial subject of fascination and fierce debate. “What is going on that these boys who from the outside had everything — money, looks, opportunities — would do such an abhorrent thing?” as she puts it.
How the parole board answers that question and whether it believes that Lyle and Erik have taken complete accountability and have shown genuine remorse will play an important role in the decision. If the board finds them suitable for release, they could walk free as soon as October.
Such a previously unthinkable scenario has been made possible by major changes in the legal system over the past two decades. Beginning with the tough-on-crime era in the late 1970s, California prisoners serving life sentences had next to no chance of getting released. Even in the rare cases in which the board would issue a favorable decision, the governor was likely to reverse it.
The first change came in 2008, when the California Supreme Court held in a case called In re Lawrence that the heinousness of the offense, standing alone, was not a sufficient basis to deny parole. Following that decision, parole grants increased significantly. In 1979, only a single person was granted parole, but by 2019, the number had risen to 1,184. The period from 2013 through 2021 saw the release of 10,000 people sentenced to serve life terms, with a recidivism rate of less than 3 percent.
The brothers also benefit from a series of U.S. Supreme Court decisions requiring special consideration for juvenile offenders. In 2012, the Court issued a landmark ruling that outlawed mandatory life-without-parole sentences for juveniles and required that states provide them with “a meaningful opportunity to obtain release based on demonstrated maturity and rehabilitation.” Several years later, California fashioned a more lenient standard for “youthful offenders,” defined as anyone under the age of 26 at the time of the crime. In these cases, the parole board must assign “great weight” to the “hallmark features of youth” and take into account their diminished culpability. Ironically, given their current ages, they are also entitled to special consideration as elderly prisoners, requiring the parole board to assess how their ages, the amount of time served, and any physical health problems may reduce their risk of future violence.
But hurdles remain. On the same day that the California Supreme Court decided Lawrence, it held in a different case that a lack of insight was a sufficient basis to justify continued incarceration, citing a “rational nexus” between a failure to tell the full truth, atone, and accept responsibility with a risk of future dangerousness. Subsequently, demonstrating insight has taken on a central role in hearings and the board uses this reason to regularly reject otherwise compelling applicants. Even when the board grants parole, it’s up to the governor to allow it to happen. In the year following the decision, the governor invoked lack of insight a whopping 78 percent of times denying parole.
Gavin Newsom, the current governor, consistently invokes an offender’s lack of insight to explain his decisions reversing the board. The Menendez brothers may have reason to fear they are vulnerable on this front. The lies that they told after the murders were jaw-dropping. While the brothers plan to admit to many of those, prosecutors will argue that they continue to lie about why they killed their parents, a fabrication the state maintains is so fundamental it goes to the core of who they really are: dangerous, unrepentant killers.
The 911 call came at 11:47 p.m. on Sunday, August 20, 1989. Breaking down as Erik sobbed in the background, Lyle told the operator, “Someone killed my parents.” Police arrived at their Beverly Hills mansion to find Jose and Kitty dead in the family room, their bodies torn apart by more than a dozen shotgun blasts fired at close range. Lyle and Erik claimed that they discovered their parents after returning home from a night out and theorized it was a hit job related to their father’s work as a Hollywood entertainment executive. They were setting up an alibi. As an appellate court later wrote, “The gory scene of slaughter of Jose and Kitty Menendez is consistent with the notion that the killings were carried out with the false Mafia story already in mind.”
For months, they played the role of grieving, terror-stricken survivors. Lyle eulogized his father at the funeral, and he and Erik even hired a bodyguard for protection from the hit men they claimed were responsible for the murders. Meanwhile they used the $650,000 payouts from their parents’ life-insurance policies to buy Rolexes, luxury cars, and real estate. The brothers’ involvement might never have been uncovered — they collected all the shell casings, threw away their bloody clothes and shoes, and tossed their shotguns over a cliff — but for Erik’s guilt-ridden confession to his psychotherapist.In one of a series of morally and ethically questionable decisions, Dr. Jerome Oziel brought in Lyle and recorded the brothers admitting to the murders. Lyle said that their father’s relentless domineering ways made him “impossible to live with,” and Erik said that their mother could not survive without him. Neither mentioned abuse.
It was while they were in jail awaiting trial that the brothers began describing their father’s predations, first to defense experts and then to their lawyers. Their claims were stomach-turning. Lyle stated that beginning when he was 6-years-old, Jose groomed him with massages and then began to fondle him, force objects inside of him, and eventually to rape him. The abuse stopped when Lyle was 8, and, he said, his father turned to his younger brother who recounted similar sadistic behavior over a longer span of time. They said the abuse continued for a decade, with the last assault approximately ten days before the murders. Both brothers described their mother, Kitty, as unstable, violent, and complicit in their father’s crimes.
Though the double murder of two Beverly Hills parents made headlines, the story became an international sensation after their children were charged. Before it was eclipsed by O.J. Simpson’s legal odyssey a few years later, the case was called “the trial of the century.” These were the early days of Court TV, and it was one of the first major trials to be televised. The wealthy, handsome brothers and their story of hidden, horrific abuse riveted the more than 1 million people who tuned in each day. Much of the coverage in 1993 was unsympathetic. Reporters, TV anchors, talk-show hosts, and comedians treated Lyle and Erik’s claims of abuse as rich fodder for ridicule. In a now-infamous Saturday Night Livesketch, John Malkovich, playing a tearful Lyle, and Rob Schneider, playing a puppyish and equally sniffly Erik, say that the murder was committed by fictitious identical twin siblings Danny and Jose Jr., who were never allowed to have their existence officially recognized because Jose decided that “they were weak and not good tennis players.” As the brothers break down in crocodile tears, the chyron reads “They stood to inherit the sum of $14 million.”
Saturday Night Live, 1993. Photo: Al Levine/NBCUniversal/Getty Images
Presiding over the trial was Judge Stanley Weisberg, who had overseen the embarrassing across-the-board acquittals of the four LAPD officers who beat Rodney King nearly to death several years earlier. The Menendez jury heard extensively from the brothers as well as from their cousin Diane VanderMolen, who testified that Lyle told her when he was 8 that Jose was sexually abusing him. Another cousin, Andy Cano, testified that Erik told him that his dad was touching his penis and about the ominous “hallway rule,” which Kitty strictly enforced to bar anyone from being on the same floor with Jose when he was alone with one of his sons. Multiple experts testified that the sex abuse had a deleterious effect on the boys’ psyches, turning them into fearful, disempowered, battered children.
The brothers’ team never claimed innocence, only lesser culpability, arguing that their clients’ trauma-scarred psyches made them sincerely believe their lives were in grave danger. During a case in which the prosecutors sought the death penalty, the defense urged the jurors to embrace a jury instruction on “imperfect self-defense.” Leslie Abramson, Erik’s attorney, distilled the outcome to two stark choices in her closing argument: Either “everything we have told you is not true,” or the murders were “done in a state of fear. And if that is true, there is no malice, and it can only be manslaughter.” After a month of deliberation, Judge Weisberg was forced to declare a mistrial. The brothers had separate juries and both had deadlocked, essentially split down the middle on their options.
The second trial beginning in 1995 was markedly different. Jury selection began eight days after Simpson’s jaw-dropping not-guilty verdict, and the pressure to lock up the perpetrators in at least one L.A. “trial of the century” had ratcheted up. This time, Judge Weisberg kept out much of the evidence of sexual abuse and physical violence and refused to allow the jury to consider imperfect self-defense. He also excluded VanderMolen’s testimony about Lyle’s confiding his abuse to her and barred most of the experts’ evidence. Cano testified again, but without supporting testimony, the prosecution easily dismissed him as a liar. A decade later, a federal judge assigned to one of the brothers’ failed appeals called the second trial “distasteful,” filled with rulings reverse-engineered to “jimmy things and see if we can get a conviction some other way.” Gardner, who was appointed to represent Lyle for his appeal in 1996, says, “They basically had no defense in the second trial.”
Los Angeles district attorney Nathan Hochman is convinced the second trial was fair and the brothers’ confessions to Dr. Oziel, which did not claim self-defense or sexual abuse, should be believed. Recent court filings by the prosecution emphasize that the allegations of abuse and imminent peril arose only after they had been charged, jailed, and were grasping for a lifeline. “The true mind-set of the Menendez brothers would have gotten them the death penalty, and if they wanted to get off, they had to come up with something a lot better,” Hochman tells me.
But when I ask him if he believes that the Menendezes were lying about having been sexually abused, Hochman responds immediately: “I never said that.” His position is that the abuse and the murders are unconnected. The brothers’ insistence that they acted in self-defense of imminent harm is “a total lie,” he says, because their actions beforehand — buying guns, learning to fire them, and creating an alibi — pointed clearly to calculated, deliberative planning.
“Nonsense on stilts. You cannot decouple the sexual-abuse claims from the imperfect self-defense claims,” Gardner says, adding that Hochman’s attempt to pull them apart “betrays a lack of insight” into the case. He takes issue with the prosecution’s extensive efforts to challenge the veracity of the Menendezes’ story of abuse, pointing out that victims often tell their stories with imperfect recall and in piecemeal fashion after years of silence or denial. “That is something that the DA’s office absolutely knows from their years of handling these cases. Victims don’t spill their secrets immediately; it takes time for them to open up and be that vulnerable.”
The battle over the brothers’ culpability boils down to a willingness to understand their conduct through the prism of severe and chronic childhood sexual abuse and what experts say is its distorting effects on brain development and the ability to think and behave rationally, particularly when the victims are still relatively young and dependent on their abusers. More than the specificity of the allegations, it is this fundamental contradiction that has made the Menendez case so compelling for the past four decades: How could two brothers annihilate their family and then argue convincingly that they are victims, too?
After Andy Cano died in 2018, a photocopy of an undated letter handwritten by Erik was found among his possessions, which his lawyers claim was clearly written months before the murders. Addressing his father’s sexual abuse, Erik wrote to his cousin, “It’s still happening, Andy, but it’s worse for me now than before.” Tortured by sleeplessness and anxiety, Erik confided, “I never know when it is going to happen and it’s driving me crazy. Every night I stay up thinking he might come in.” He added that he was too afraid of his father to tell anyone: “He’s crazy! He’s warned me a hundred times about telling anyone especially Lyle.”
The evidence could be crucial at their parole hearings, because it corroborates the brothers’ story of abuse and fear for their lives. Already, their lawyers have fashioned the letter into a separate pleading, called a habeas corpus petition, to void the murder convictions entirely.
That’s not all. In 2023, Roy Rosselló came forward to say that Jose had drugged and raped him in 1984, when he was a member of the popular boy band Menudo and Jose was an executive at RCA Records. In a sworn declaration that the Menendezes’ attorneys submitted to the court in the habeas petition, Rosselló recounted an evening when he met Jose in his limousine in New York City, was taken back to a house in New Jersey, plied with alcohol, and raped. Rosselló said he lost consciousness and woke up bleeding from his rectum.
Had the jury heard this evidence, the defense says, it would have severely undercut the prosecution’s dismissal of Cano as a liar. More fundamentally, Erik’s letter and Rosselló’s declaration cast into grave doubt the state’s argument that the brothers provided “no corroboration of sexual abuse” and no reason to fear their father because Jose was “not a violent or brutal man.”
Last month, the brothers won an incremental victory when the judge hearing the habeas petition ordered the prosecution to file a formal response to justify leaving their convictions intact. On August 7, the district attorney’s office filed a 132-page response, arguing that the newly proffered evidence is of suspect origin, untimely, and “in full alignment with Petitioners’ documented history of deceit, lies, fabricating evidence, and suborning perjury in this case.” A ruling from the court as to whether the brothers receive an evidentiary hearing — with the possibility that their convictions could be wiped away if their claims hold up — could come any day.
But first, they will face the parole board and the force of the DA’s argument that their continued insistence that they acted in imperfect self-defense is the very definition of a lack of insight given the extensive evidence pointing to premeditation. This includes the confessions to Dr. Oziel, in which, according to the prosecution, Lyle and Erik were “unspeakably callous in describing their decision-making and their state of mind.” By maintaining that they were driven to kill by a sincere if misguided belief that they were in imminent danger from Jose and Kitty, the brothers were proving their unsuitability for release, Hochman says. The heart of Lyle and Erik’s stories is more than a lie, he tells me, it is proof of “a ticking time bomb in their personalities that has not been diffused or eliminated.”
Demonstrating insight and acceptance of responsibility for parole do not require parroting the state’s version of the crime though. Under California law, only an “implausible” account of one’s crimes can be used as a basis to deny parole, and Gardner says that “there is nothing implausible about a theory that half of both juries accepted at the first trial.”
Hochman also disputes that Lyle and Erik’s conduct in prison has been extraordinary. While conceding that they have made “great strides,” he also points to the recent comprehensive risk assessment prepared by prison psychologists, which found that both brothers pose a “moderate” risk of violence rather than the coveted low-risk categorization. He lists their history of rule violations, which include Erik’s unlawful possession of a cell phone and what Hochman says were his attempts to induce other prisoners to take the fall for it as well as Lyle repeatedly failing to report for a work assignment.
“They broke the rules, and they know that they broke the rules,” says Michael Romano, who directs Stanford Law School’s Three Strikes Project and is a member of the Menendezes’ defense team “That was a mistake. But Lyle not showing up for work or Erik having a cell phone? That doesn’t mean that they are dangerous.”
A double parricide involving two biological siblings is so abnormal that it happens only very rarely in the U.S. The singularity of the crime makes it hard to compare Lyle and Erik meaningfully with other offenders because so few children who experience sexual abuse go to the extreme of killing their parents. When I spoke with Carlos Cuevas, a psychologist and professor of criminology at Northeastern University who has written about the Menendez brothers, he acknowledged as much. But he added that “just because they did this really horrible thing does not mean that they weren’t victims. Many perpetrators are abuse victims — these two things often coexist within a single person, and that is the next level of awareness that we as a society need to reach. We have to accept that victims and perpetrators are a highly overlapping group.”
A parole hearing is like a trial in certain fundamental ways. Both the defense and the prosecution will get to ask pointed questions of the Menendez brothers when the commissioners are finished with theirs. There will also be closing arguments. The state’s argument is likely to employ much of the rhetoric that succeeded in the second trial, arguing that the brothers are, in Hochman’s words, “lying murderers” still unwilling to admit that they shot their parents to death for money and for no other reason. The defense will stress that the brothers worked hard to better themselves during the bleak, decades-long period when they had no chance of ever getting out of prison. “Somehow, they were able to find some dignity, hope, positivity, and purpose to better themselves,” Romano tells me. “I find that completely remarkable and admirable.”
If TikTok had a vote, the brothers would have been released months ago as victims who have served more than enough time. But the legal system is more rigid and sclerotic, historically hostile to such a characterization of offenders who commit crimes as shocking and brutal as theirs. Cuevas tells me that the case creates “cognitive dissonance” in a system that reflexively sorts people into categories: good/bad, law-abiding/criminal. Their lawyers believe that the parole board will reject the state’s black-and-white narrative and offer these middle-aged men a second chance by accepting that the truth exists in shades of gray. It is by telling a no-holds-barred story of what they say really happened inside their home and of their lives since — painful, ugly, tragic, and, in the end, redemptive — that the defense believes Lyle and Erik Menendez can finally win their freedom. Their success may depend on whether the legal system has transformed as radically as the brothers insist that they have.
California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s redistricting effort took a big step forward with Democratic lawmakers back in session this week to try and get the bill on the November ballot.
Monday, California Democrats and Republicans held dueling press conferences at the California State Capitol.
Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas laid out the new Democratic legislation, now named Proposition 50, to formally send the California redrawn congressional district maps to voters.
“These redrawn districts that we are putting before voters are a temporary response,” Rivas said.
California Republicans fired back, bringing a large poster into the legislative chamber that accuses the governor and Democrats of creating a “rigged map” in the next round of congressional elections.
“Let’s not replace it with this joke,” Assembly Minority Leader James Gallagher said.
The move by California Democrats follows efforts by Texas Republicans to redraw congressional lines to try and gain five more GOP seats in the House of Representatives.
California’s redrawn map, released Friday, outlined the plan to make five of the state’s nine current GOP districts more favorable for Democrats.
“So I think it is pretty damn simple,” Senate Pro Tem Mike McGuire said. “California will move if Texas moves.”
Newsom and California Democrats have stated they would pull back their mid-decade redistricting plan if Texas also backed down.
GOP lawmakers are arguing that California’s independent redistricting should not be altered.
“You can run but you cannot hide,” Assemblymember Alexandra Macedo (R-Tulare) said. “And we are not backing down from this fight. You are disenfranchising Californians and we are tired of democracy dying here.”
Democratic redistricting expert Paul Mitchell worked on the team redrawing the maps. He says they included data on which Californians voted for Kamala Harris in the last presidential race.
“There are more districts that aren’t touched in this process that are changed,” Mitchell said. “I think we were definitely looking at Kamala Harris numbers and other metrics, like registration and multiple past elections, in their totality.”
California law stipulates that an independent commission handles redistricting based on census data every ten years. Newsom has stated that Prop. 50 would only suspend the commission, allowing the independent effort to resume come the 2030 census.
The bill is scheduled to hit the California legislature’s election committee on Tuesday, then the appropriations committee Wednesday. If it passes those committees, a full vote by both houses will need to happen by Thursday to meet California’s secretary of state deadline to get the initiative on a Nov. 4 special election ballot.
The Texas House of Representatives gaveled in at noon Monday with Democratic members present, marking an official end to the quorum break that froze the Legislature for two weeks.
Most of the House Democratic Caucus left the state earlier this month, denying the Republican majority the required attendance to conduct business. House rules require 100 members to be present; Republicans hold 88 seats.
The Democratic quorum break was triggered by a Republican push to redraw the state’s U.S. House district maps that would net the GOP up to five more seats in the 2026 midterm elections. Last week, the absent lawmakers had signaled they were ready to return to Austin after Republican Gov. Greg Abbott ended a first special session and Democrats in California moved forward with a plan to respond.
“Our return allows us to build the legal record necessary to defeat this racist map in court, take our message to communities across the state and country, and inspire legislators across the country how to fight these undemocratic redistricting schemes in their own statehouses,” state Rep. Gene Wu, the Democratic leader, said in a statement issued Monday morning.
As the House returned to business, the redistricting proposal and dozens of other bills were referred to their respective committees. The redistricting committee is expected to meet on Tuesday. The Senate’s redistricting committee passed the proposed maps along party lines on Sunday evening.
Redistricting fight spreads
Abbott put redistricting on the agenda at the urging of President Donald Trump, who wants to shore up Republicans’ narrow U.S. House majority to avoid losing control of the chamber, and with it, prospects for Trump’s conservative agenda in the later part of his term.
It is unusual for redistricting to take place in the middle of the decade and typically occurs once at the beginning of each decade to coincide with the census.
In response to the efforts in Texas, California Democrats are also moving ahead with their own reshaping of congressional districts to counteract Texas, putting in motion a potentially widening and unusually timed redistricting battle nationwide.
Many states, including Texas, give legislators the power to draw maps. California is among those that empower independent commissions with the task.
The nation’s two most populous states have been at the forefront of the resulting battle, which has reached into multiple courtrooms and statehouses controlled by both parties.
Impact on midterm elections
On a national level, the partisan makeup of existing district lines puts Democrats within three seats of a majority. Of the 435 total House seats, only several dozen districts are competitive. So even slight changes in a few states could affect which party wins control.
Texas’ maps would aim to give the GOP five more winnable seats.
California Democrats, who hold supermajorities in both chambers — enough to act without any Republican votes — on Friday unveiled a proposal that could give Democrats there an additional five U.S. House seats. But any changes would first need the approval of state lawmakers and voters. Democratic California Gov. Gavin Newsom has said that his state will hold a Nov. 4 special referendum on the redrawn districts.
Steven Rosenbaum is a digital producer for CBS Texas. A versatile journalist, Steven writes, edits and produces content for the CBS Texas digital platforms.