Yes. I’m with you.
I clearly remember the trial. I thought they lied about the abuse. The female attorney’s attempts to make her client seem frail and boyish were annoying.
Since then, more facts have come out to indicate that indeed, the father and possibly the mother were abusive. I mean there is usually a reason people become criminals.
Does that mitigate the crimes they committed? It could, for sure. But there are things that sort of mute those mitigators:
1. Premeditation.
2. They were adults who could have left instead of killing their parents.
3. The cold blooded manner of killing.
4. The crazy spending and buying and living large after the murders.
Is it true that they were so twisted by abuse that it turned them into killers? I’m certain. But as a society, we have consequences for criminal activity despite what led to it, for a reason: because unless they were totally insane or forced to kill or actually killing in self-defense (rather than worrying about some future possible harm to themselves), they had a choice. They could have gone to the police, filed for protective orders, etc.
They had a choice not to brutally murder their parents. Our laws aren’t supposed to enable people to take the law into their own hands.
Two episodes in and its so unpleasant to watch.
I remember the case, too. It occupied the news media heavily, and was only replaced by OJ Simpson murdering his wife and Ron Goldman.
I agree with all your points and my opinion hasn't changed. Much of it has to do with how they went about it and how it seemed as much a grab for their parents fortune as revenge for the abuse. They could have walked away, gotten jobs, got their own apartments, etc. and waited for their parents to pass on, to inherit the estate. They certainly should have reported it to police, though admittedly, it would have been difficult to get LAPD or Bev Hills PD to respond. In 1989, there hadn't been much awareness raised about child sexual abuse.
Learning more about possible abuse doesn't change or mitigate the circumstances, though. As you say, it was premeditated, they had other options and they couldn't use an insanity defense. In most cases, wouldn't the killers end up with LWOP? Do they still present a possible threat?