The provided text, “Menendez Brothers Fake Out” by Miles Mathis, argues that the trials and subsequent legal proceedings involving Lyle and Erik Menendez were fabricated. The author claims that the resentencing of the brothers is baseless and that the entire case, including televised trials, is a staged event orchestrated by entities like the CIA. Mathis supports his claims by analyzing inconsistencies in public records, such as prison locations and family relationships found on sites like Instantcheckmate. He also scrutinizes the legal proceedings, questioning the admissibility of confessions, the role of defense attorneys, and the motivations of judges and prosecutors, often attributing these actions to a conspiracy involving Jewish individuals and governmental agencies. The author also delves into the backgrounds of individuals connected to the case, including defense attorneys, prosecutors, and even the alleged victims, suggesting their biographies are fabricated to fit a false narrative. The text concludes with the author’s broader assertions about the crumbling of major corporations and media outlets, which he attributes to his own efforts in exposing their alleged falsehoods, and his belief that his work is leading to significant societal change.
Here’s a list of subjects, names, references, locations, companies, etc., marked with double square brackets:
The author, Miles Mathis, presents an argument that the Menendez Brothers’ legal proceedings were fake. He discusses their resentencing, stating it lacks a legal basis and attributing the orchestrations to entities like the CIA. Mathis questions the validity of the trials, particularly those televised by CourtTV, which he labels a CIA front. He scrutinizes information from Instantcheckmate regarding Lyle Menendez, noting discrepancies in his listed relatives and locations, including Ione, Los Angeles, West Hollywood, Marina del Rey, Chatsworth, Port Saint Lucie, Florida, New Jersey, Wellington, Kansas, Gloucester Township, Hopewell Township, Princeton, Trenton, and Sea Isle City. He also mentions McConnell AFB near Wichita and Coast Guard as potential locations. The author highlights a gap in Lyle Menendez’s biography, noting he was 21 at the time of the alleged murders. He contrasts this with Erik Menendez, who allegedly began attending Beverly Hills High in 1987 at age 17.
Mathis questions the possibility of Lyle Menendez having conjugal rights in prison to marry, referencing his alleged prison wives, including Rebecca. He also points to Donovan Correctional Facility, where Lyle Menendez is allegedly housed, and lists other inmates supposedly there: Sirhan Sirhan, Tex Watson, John Getreu, Jesse James Hollywood, Daniel Marsh, a Maupin, and a Northrup. He compares this to other allegedly fake prisons like Corcoran, Alcatraz, and ADX Supermax.
The author criticizes Lyle Menendez’s defense attorney, Leslie Abramson, whom he identifies as Jewish, for invoking the Fifth Amendment and attorney-client privilege during the trial, suggesting this is scripted. He mentions Abramson’s later hiring by Phil Spector, another case he labels as fake, and notes Spector’s previous attorney was Robert Shapiro, involved in the OJ Simpson trial, also covered by CourtTV. Mathis also mentions Abramson’s husband, Tim Rutten, a reporter for the Los Angeles Times, who he claims won an award from the ADL for advancing First Amendment ideals. He also points out Rutten’s work in exposing fake photos, specifically mentioning “bombings of Lebanon by Israel”.
Mathis critiques prosecutor Pam Bozanich, also identified as Jewish, for her statement that men cannot be raped. He compares her to prosecutors in the OJ Simpson trial and Robert Blake trial, calling them Deputy District Attorneys and implying they were planted by the CIA after having backgrounds in actors equity. He also names Lester Kuriyama as another Deputy DA who prosecuted Erik Menendez. He provides Bozanich’s biography, mentioning her birthdate, Palos Verdes High School, Wellesley College, and her admission to the California State Bar. He connects her to the McMartin Preschool Trial, which he also labels fake, noting its length and lack of convictions, and states Ira Reiner was the lead prosecutor, not Bozanich. Mathis also links Bozanich to Joel Dean Goldman, a former classmate of Erik Menendez at Beverly Hills High School, which Beverly Hills High School has allegedly deleted profiles from. He also claims Pam Bozanich was an actor.
Mathis discusses the judge’s ruling on Erik Menendez’s confession to his psychologist, Dr. Oziel, and the alleged nullification of doctor-patient privilege. He questions the reasoning behind admitting the confession, suggesting it’s for the “legally illiterate.” He also refers to the first trial ending in “two hung juries,” finding it implausible. He criticizes the judge in the second trial for disallowing claims of sexual abuse, comparing it to the Alex Jones trial judge disallowing mention of the First Amendment. He references a supposed new California law in 2016 allowing appeals for defendants barred from using abuse as a defense. He also mentions Judge Stanley Weisberg, identified as Jewish, and his past as a Deputy District Attorney in Los Angeles County, involved in prosecuting Marvin Pancoast for the murder of Vicki Morgan, and Ricky Kyle for the murder of his wealthy father. Mathis disputes the prosecution of Pancoast, stating he confessed, and questions the circumstances of Vicki Morgan’s death, linking her to Alfred Bloomingdale and a palimony suit, and suggesting Bloomingdale may have faked his death. He also mentions Vicki Morgan’s alleged marriage to John David Carson, son of Eldridge “Kit” Carson, and her marriage to Robert Schulman. He uses people search results for Victoria Morgan of Studio City, CA to support his claims.
Mathis points out Erik Menendez’s middle name, Galen, linking it to Claudius Galenus and Phoenician origins. He references a Geneanet page and Tim Dowling for information about the Menendez parents, specifically the mother, Mary Louise “Kitty” Andersen, who he claims is from Oak Lawn, Cook County, IL, not New Jersey. He connects her to Mary Louise Andersen Whitney from Homewood, husband Salmon Deforest Whitney, and their relatives Neville, linking them to the Stuarts and suggesting the Menendez brothers are Stuarts. He also mentions the Kaufmans and Remelsbergers, implying they are Jewish, and states these Andersens emigrated from Norway in 1880.
Through Geneanet, he connects the Menendez brothers to Mae Maloney, her mother Elizabeth Lyons, and potentially King of England through Bowes-Lyon. He also mentions Mae Maloney’s other grandmother, Annie Kennedy. He discusses the father’s side, mentioning his grandfather from Cuba and his role as head of Carolco Film Studio. He notes Carolco’s past work with IVE on films like Angel Heart and Stallone movies such as First Blood.
Mathis analyzes alleged crime scene photos, questioning the identity of the legs, the appearance of the blood, and the shotgun blast accuracy. He calls the family portrait a “paste-up” due to inconsistencies in lighting and shadows, particularly around the mother’s head. He also deems photos of Lyle and Erik in jail to be fake, citing staged backdrops and apparent product placement for Nike and Under Armour.
He investigates Tammi Saccoman, allegedly Erik’s wife, noting a listing without a connection to the Menendez family. He questions her former husband Chuck’s death at 33 and Tammi Saccoman’s headstone with no death date. He searches for Tammi Teske and Tamarah Devault, linking them to Marissa Devault, who allegedly killed her husband Dale Harrell with a hammer in Phoenix at age 33. He connects Harrell to Wahiawa, Hawaii (a joint military base mentioned in a Pelosi paper) and Glendale (Luke AFB).
Mathis mentions Lyle’s alleged marriage to model Anna Eriksson, finding the story unbelievable due to the lack of conjugal rights and Eriksson’s disappearance from public record. He reiterates his theory of “Operation Chaos: Men-are-Pigs/Split the Sexes,” and claims California taxpayers funded the “movie” produced by these “actors and directors,” potentially from the CIA budget. He suggests this saga distracted from real news, similar to the OJ Simpson trial.
In the latter part of the text, Mathis shifts focus to broader societal and economic trends, claiming his criticisms are leading to the downfall of major corporations and media outlets. He cites losses for Amazon (700 billion), Hollywood (80 billion and 11,000 layoffs), Microsoft (40%), Twitter (tanking), CNN, Jimmy Fallon, Jimmy Kimmell, Steven Colbert, The Oscars, Grammys, big banks, Blackrock (FTX crash), Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, Bank of America (40% stock value loss), National Bank of Switzerland (132 billion loss), and FTX (crypto collapse). He attributes his success and influence to his critiques of these entities and his advocacy for paper ballots, opposing Dominion voting machines, and ending projects like the Steven Hawking project and the BICEP2 fake. He claims mainstream science is threatened, citing “science is real” signs and the Air Force reporting sunspot numbers. He also claims credit for identifying the Covid fake and vaccines, leading to their decline, and for the rise of homeschooling, plummeting college matriculation, and the banning of Glyphosate and Monsanto being sued into oblivion. He mentions Bayer’s losses and the “Great Resignation.” He also claims to have spearheaded the counter-attack on Modern Art, helping to spark the return of realism, mentioning his work at ArtRenewal Center and his influence on the Vermeer saga. He concludes by asserting that things are changing due to his efforts.