Nov 15, 2017 · In 1993, Weisberg was assigned to determine the fate of the Menendez brothers, presiding over both trials. The first ended in a hung jury. The first ended in a hung jury. The brothers’ case was a highly controversial topic, which caused a running debate on Weisberg’s conduct as the trial judge.
Stanley Martin Weisberg (born October 12, 1943, in Los Angeles County, California) is a former prosecutor and Los Angeles County Superior Court judge known for presiding over the trials of the police officers charged with the beating of Rodney King, and of brothers Lyle and Erik Menendez, in the trial for the murder of their parents.In a number of cases, he made controversial rulings …
Jul 02, 2015 · Earlier today, at the federal courthouse in Brooklyn, New York, Martin Weisberg, a former corporate partner in the New York office of the international law firm Baker & McKenzie LLP, was sentenced to 24 months’ imprisonment on his conviction for money laundering and for his conviction on conspiracy to commit securities fraud, to run concurrently. As a further part …
Jan 25, 2010 · The office first moved against Weisberg in early 2007 about the same time Shinders began closing some of its 13 Twin Cities locations; employees of the 90-year-old newsstand were told at the time ...
The Menendez brothers were convicted in the second trial, and on July 2, 1996, Weisberg sentenced the two to life in prison without the possibility of parole. Weisberg retired from the judgeship in 2008.
He later represented Erik during their first arraignment, until the defense was handed over to Leslie Abramson, who represented Erik until the brothers' conviction in 1996. Shapiro played a crucial role in the O. J. Simpson murder case.
Leslie is now retired from law, though she is a published author and still does speaking engagements from time to time, inspiring young lawyers. Law & Order show-runner René Balcer told EW that Leslie did not participate in the show in any way, but that “she's having a nice life, a nice retirement.”Jun 13, 2018
Leslie Abramson, the spitfire Los Angeles defense attorney who represented one of Erik Menendez in two sensational murder trials, says she will not watch Edie Falco portray her on NBC's “Law & Order True Crime: The Menendez Murders.” “Oh boy,” Abramson told TheWrap when asked about true-crime TV movie.Sep 25, 2017
June 16, 1994Nicole Brown Simpson / Date of burial
The glove was covered in blood. According to the prosecution, that blood seeped into the fibers of the leather and shrunk it, thus explaining why Simpson's hand did not fit inside.Sep 30, 2020
"We are not disputing where it happened, how it happened, who did it," Jill Lansing, Lyle's lawyer, said in her opening statement. "What we will prove to you is that it was done out of fear." Lansing and Leslie Abramson, Erik's attorney, called over 30 relatives, neighbors, teachers and sports coaches to the stand.
The brothers were housed in different prisons for many years, but are both are currently incarcerated at the Richard J. Donovan Correctional Facility in San Diego.Jun 28, 2021
78 years (October 6, 1943)Leslie Abramson / Age
Rebecca Sneedm. 2003Anna Erikssonm. 1996–2001Lyle Menendez/Wife
Lyle MenendezErik Menendez / Brother
Jose Menendez, a 45-year-old Cuban immigrant and self-made millionaire, had dealings throughout the film and music distribution industry, including a production interest in Sylvester Stallone 's "Rambo" movies.
Unexpectedly, their sons Lyle and Eric allegedly burst through the door with 12-gauge shotguns, killing their parents.
Prosecutor Bozanich depicted the brothers as "vicious, spoiled brats" who had killed their parents out of greed and then lied repeatedly to cover their tracks. When they were caught, Bozanich continued, the pattern of lies grew into elaborate tales of abuse intended to gain sympathy. Even if the unproved allegations of abuse were true, however, the brothers should not go free.
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Thanks to Law & Order True Crime: The Menendez Murders, the more than two-decade-old case surrounding Erik and Lyle Menendez has been presented to a new generation of TV viewers.
Stanley Weisberg graduated from UCLA School of Law in 1968, and went on to work at the LA District Attorney’s office as a deputy DA until 1986.
In 1986, Judge Weisberg was appointed to the municipal court of LA County, and soon after he presided over the murder trials of Hare Krishna member Thomas Drescher. Two years later, he was elevated to the Superior Court, and in 1991, he was assigned to the Rodney King beating case.
Judge Weisberg married fellow lawyer and Superior Court Judge Jacqueline L. Weiss, making them one of the few (and potentially the first) husband-wife judge pairs ever on the LA county court. Jacqueline was already presiding over the Santa Monica Courthouse at the time of her husband’s elevation to the Superior Court.
The media went crazy over the trials in the mid-90s, to the point where those involved were parodied on Saturday Night Live — Phil Hartman took on the role of Judge Weisberg. Most recently, he’s been portrayed on Law & Order True Crime by ER and Top Gun star Anthony Edwards.
Both Judge Weisberg and his wife have retired from the bench — he in 2008, after more than 20 years of service. He’s now 73 years old, and living out of the spotlight.
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Born in East Los Angeles, Weisberg's father was a sheet metal worker. Weisberg attended Alexander Hamilton High School in Los Angeles, from which he graduated in 1961, and received a B.A. in political science from the University of California, Los Angeles in 1965, followed by a J.D. from UCLA School of Law in 1968.
In 1986, California Governor George Deukmejian appointed Weisberg to the municipal court of Los Angeles County. In 1988, Deukmejian elevated Weisberg to the Superior Court.