Lawyer says Eric Mendes has a “serious medical condition.”
His lawyer said on Tuesday, weeks before the convicted murderer would show a listening session to the conditional release with his brother due to the crimes of their parents for more than three decades.
A spokesman for the lawyer, Mark Geragos, did not provide details of the case, and the MINIDES family refused to comment.
A spokesman for the Ministry of Reform and Rehabilitation in California said Mindez, who is in San Diego prison, was transferred to an external medical facility on Friday and is still in a fair condition.
TMZ was first reported to develop.
Eric, 54, and 57 years old, were resentful to 50 years in prison due to the killings of Kitty and José Mindez on August 20, 1989, after Los Angeles judge found that they had not posed an “unreasonable danger” if they were released.
They were spending the conditions of prison life without the possibility of conditional release, but the judge’s ruling made them eligible for a conditional release immediately.
A listening session is scheduled for the suitability of the conditional release on August 20 and 21.
During a hearing on May 13, Eric described his crimes as “cruel and eastern” and said he was “directly responsible for everything.”
Layl said that the brothers, who were tried twice in the 1990s, claimed that the murders committed self -defense after that, they faced their father about the abuse of Eric’s alleged treatment.
Prosecutors said the motivation was a financial gain and described the killings as a cold seed.
The first trial ended without a unanimous ruling. On March 20, 1996, after a second trial, the brothers were convicted of the first -class murder.
A batch for their release-which included support from their families and some prominent figures-after examining the case in recent years in the movie of peacocks and the Netflix series. (Peacock is owned by NBCunivesal, NBC News.)
Supporters were martyred by offending the abuse, the brothers said that they suffered at the hands of their father and rehabilitation efforts during their detention, which was described by George Gascon, a former lawyer in Los Angeles province as “exceptional”.
Khalaf Jaskoun, Nathan Hoshman, opposed their dissatisfaction and sought in vain to keep them imprisoned. He said they had failed to be “clean” about a series of unrecognized lies that he had told her about murders.