The Menendez Brothers and Shifting Attitudes Over 35 Years.
Journal:
The American journal of nursing
Published Date:
Mar 26, 2026
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Parricide is an exceptionally rare phenomenon, constituting approximately 2% to 3% of all homicides in the United States. Double parricide, involving multiple victims and/or offenders, is even less common. The most famous case of double parricide in recent history is that of the Menendez brothers, who were convicted of the 1989 murders of their parents. PURPOSE: This narrative review examines the evolving societal, academic, and legal attitudes toward the Menendez brothers' case over 35 years. METHODS: An examination was conducted of criminological studies, media analyses, legal records, and primary source materials such as letters and drawings from the Menendez case. RESULTS: Findings indicate a shift over 35 years from framing the brothers as deviant and greedy to understanding their actions as extreme responses to prolonged familial trauma. Media narratives, true crime portrayals, social media advocacy (through documentaries and platforms like TikTok), and evolving victimology and trauma theories have influenced public opinion and legal reconsideration. The application of machine learning and artificial intelligence (AI)-driven analysis through multiple professional lenses reveals patterns in pre-offense communications and artwork that may have been underappreciated in traditional forensic evaluation. IMPLICATIONS FOR FORENSIC NURSING: Forensic nurses are essential in assessing trauma, documenting abuse, and contributing to interdisciplinary evaluations. Trauma-informed approaches enhance accurate risk assessment and ethical consideration of both survivors' and offenders' experiences in cases of extreme familial violence. The emerging integration of AI tools in forensic practice offers forensic nurses new capabilities for systematic case analysis, while maintaining the critical human expertise needed for clinical judgment and compassionate care. CONCLUSIONS: The Menendez case serves as a powerful reminder that our understanding of complex human behavior deepens over time, and that maintaining openness to new perspectives and methodologies is essential to providing ethical, evidence-based forensic care.
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