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Menendez: A Killing In Beverly Hills (1994) is a two-part miniseries that aired on CBS in June 1994.
Karen Lamm ( June 21, 1952 – June 29, 2001) was a model, actress, and film producer. She was married and divorced twice from Beach Boy Dennis Wilson, which was her main claim to fame. Lamm claimed to have befriended Kitty Menendez in the last year of her life and said that Kitty confided in her about family problems (which doesn't seem to fit with Kitty's nature), but she maintained in an interview on The Joan Rivers Show in the autumn of 1993 that the problems were caused by Lyle. Rivers mentioned during the interview that Lamm was involved as a producer of a TV movie based on "her account of the crime", which would air in the late spring of 1994, Menendez: A Killing In Beverly Hills, which Lamm was credited as executive producer and Dominick Dunne's articles in Vanity Fair magazine listed as a source. In the interview, a brief clip was shown of Lyle's testimony where he revealed his father sexually abused him. Lamm said she never believed that, she thinks Lyle was "a good actor" and said it was impossible for a young adult male to be sexually abused by his father.
From the book Bad Blood, by Don Davis, published in 1994:
New World Television and CBS were able to announce in March of 1990, the same month the boys were arrested, that an agreement had been reached on what show business types call a "development". Their contact was actress Karen Lamm, who had known Kitty Menendez for a year. Under Hollywood rules, this qualified the slender blonde as a total confidante of the murdered woman. Lamm, who had also happened to be an aspiring producer, knew a good thing when she saw it and explained to the Los Angeles Times that she had begun her push the previous December to scare away any potential competitors. "It's piranhas coming at each other, and they're all ready to bite, The point in announcing it as quickly as we did is that we were on this months ago, and this is a done deal, and it's important to let people know that," she said. At this point, there were still three years before the case would go to trial.
Lamm stated that she did not believe the sexual abuse, and Dunne always publicly claimed that he didn't believe the sexual abuse either. This explains why, apart from depicting a few incidents of physical and emotional abuse from Jose (played by Edward James Olmos) on his sons (played by Damian Chapa and Travis Fine) in the first half of the miniseries, the sexual abuse wasn't brought up until the second half when the brothers were testifying about it. There are no flashbacks, or any indication that sexual abuse took place other than the brothers' testimonies, and the corroborating testimony and evidence are never shown either. This was because Lamm and Dunne wanted to give the impression that the sexual abuse never happened and that it was fabricated while the brothers were awaiting trial (a theory that the prosecution in both trials, heavily insinuated, but had no evidence to support it). It also explains the portrayal of Kitty (played by Beverly D'Angelo); she is depicted as being a victim of everyone, which is clearly how Lamm wanted her to be portrayed, but of course, if you've watched the first trial, this is not an accurate portrayal of her. There's no doubt that this miniseries (along with another TV dramatization about the case that had aired a few months earlier) poisoned the jury pool and, along with Dunne's articles (which also conveniently left out the corroborative evidence) have presented a very prosecution-biased slant on the case.
This is a video of Dominick Dunne, Karen Lamm, and A.J. Benza interviewed on The Joan Rivers Show in
1993.
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