DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Why Nick Reiner Could Face the Death Penalty

December 17, 2025
in News
Why Nick Reiner Could Face the Death Penalty

Nick Reiner, the younger son of the celebrated Hollywood director Rob Reiner and Michele Singer Reiner, faces two counts of first-degree murder in the death of his parents. In California, a single conviction on that charge typically carries a maximum sentence of life in prison with the possibility of parole after 25 years.

But Mr. Reiner, 32, could face the death penalty because of how the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office filed the charges against him. The two murder counts include a special circumstance of committing multiple murders, which increases the possible punishment.

Special circumstances around a first-degree murder charge in California can elevate it to a more severe crime, and raise the maximum punishment to the death penalty or life in prison without parole. In addition to multiple murders, these circumstances include killing for financial gain, killing a police officer or public official or a killing that involved torture, according to the state penal code.

The Los Angeles County district attorney, Nathan Hochman, said that his office had not yet decided if it would pursue the death penalty against Mr. Reiner, and that it would take the desires of the Reiner family into consideration.

“Prosecuting these cases involving family members are some of the most challenging and heart-wrenching cases that this office faces because of the intimate and often brutal nature of the crimes involved,” Mr. Hochman said during a news conference on Tuesday.

Soon after taking office in 2019, Gov. Gavin Newsom of California put a moratorium on executions in the state. But the death penalty is still legal, and the moratorium doesn’t mean that people can’t be sentenced to death, said Aya Gruber, a criminal law professor at the University of Southern California. There are currently 580 prisoners on death row in the state, and they could be executed if the moratorium is lifted.

“Prosecutors can pursue death cases, and people can be sentenced to death. It’s just that right now they’re not being put to death,” Ms. Gruber said.

Mr. Hochman said that his office would also bring against Mr. Reiner a special allegation of using a deadly weapon, in this case a knife. That enhancement, another form of adding time to a sentence, typically adds another year to a felony sentence, but would very likely only be relevant if Mr. Reiner is convicted of lesser charges, experts say.

Mr. Hochman, who took office in 2024, reversed his predecessor’s countywide moratorium on pursuing the death penalty. He said at the time that he would pursue it only in “exceedingly rare cases.”

Ms. Gruber, the law professor, said she was surprised that the death penalty was on the table, given Mr. Reiner’s history of substance abuse and that such a punishment might go against the family’s wishes. But she said Mr. Hochman might have introduced the idea to try to quickly secure a conviction.

“It’s a very useful tool in getting people to plead guilty,” she said.

Soumya Karlamangla is a Times reporter who covers California. She is based in the Bay Area.

The post Why Nick Reiner Could Face the Death Penalty appeared first on New York Times.

Google Shakes Up Its Browser Agent Team Amid OpenClaw Craze
News

Google Shakes Up Its Browser Agent Team Amid OpenClaw Craze

by Wired
March 19, 2026

Google is shaking up the team behind Project Mariner, its AI agent that can navigate the Chrome browser and complete ...

Read more
News

Trump breaches fire wall between watchdogs and agencies they investigate

March 19, 2026
News

Afroman Just Won the Lawsuit Brought Against Him by Ohio Cops He Ridiculed After They Raided His Home

March 19, 2026
News

Goldman Sachs is shaking up how it cuts low performers this spring

March 19, 2026
News

It’s a free country — for 21 percent of the world

March 19, 2026
‘Not going well’: MAGA author warns Steve Bannon Trump’s war spiraling out of control

‘Not going well’: MAGA author warns Steve Bannon Trump’s war spiraling out of control

March 19, 2026
Trump Administration Surveys Cornell Employees About Antisemitism

Trump Administration Surveys Cornell Employees About Antisemitism

March 19, 2026
2,000-year-old artifact may be evidence that Romans found New World — a thousand years before Columbus

2,000-year-old artifact may be evidence that Romans found New World — a thousand years before Columbus

March 19, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026