Live
Updates: Reiner Son Appears in Court for First Time in Parents’ Murder Case
Nick
Reiner, who did not enter a plea, has been charged with two counts of
first-degree murder in the stabbing deaths of his parents, Rob and Michele
Singer Reiner. The couple’s other children said they were experiencing
“unimaginable pain.”
Tim
Arango
Soumya
Karlamangla
Tim
Arango and Soumya Karlamangla
https://www.nytimes.com/live/2025/12/17/us/rob-nick-reiner-murder-charges
Here’s
the latest.
Nick
Reiner appeared briefly in court on Wednesday morning, a day after he was
charged with murder in the death of his parents, the celebrated director Rob
Reiner and his wife, Michele Singer Reiner.
Mr.
Reiner, 32, had been scheduled to appear in Los Angeles Superior Court for an
arraignment, during which he was expected to enter a plea. But his lawyer, Alan
Jackson, told the court that it was “too early” for a plea and that he and the
prosecution had agreed to delay the arraignment. It is now scheduled for Jan.
7.
Mr.
Reiner has been charged with two counts of first-degree murder in the stabbing
deaths of his parents. Nathan J. Hochman, the Los Angeles County district
attorney, is also pursuing a murder conviction with “special circumstances,” a
designation that could make Mr. Reiner eligible for the death penalty or life
in prison without parole.
In brief
remarks to reporters outside the courthouse, Mr. Jackson said there were “very
complex and serious issues associated with this case” that needed time to be
examined. He urged the public and news media not to “rush to judgment.”
Mr.
Reiner’s siblings, Jake and Romy Reiner, on Wednesday spoke publicly for the
first time since their parents’ deaths, issuing a statement asking for respect
and privacy and for any “speculation to be tempered with compassion and
humanity.”
“Words
cannot even begin to describe the unimaginable pain we are experiencing every
moment of the day,” the statement said. “The horrific and devastating loss of
our parents, Rob and Michele Reiner, is something that no one should ever
experience. They weren’t just our parents; they were our best friends.”
A person
close to the Reiners, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the immediate
family was not yet ready to speak publicly, told The New York Times on Tuesday
that Romy Reiner found her father’s body on Sunday after receiving a call from
a massage therapist who had arrived at the Reiners’ Los Angeles home for a
scheduled appointment.
After
receiving no response at the gate, the therapist contacted Romy Reiner, who
quickly went to the house and discovered her father’s body. Romy Reiner then
fled the home. She did not see her mother’s body in the house and learned later
from paramedics that she was dead, too, the person said.
Here’s
what else to know:
A
troubled path: The authorities said that Nick Reiner was arrested without
incident on Sunday. Over the years, he has spoken publicly about his struggles
with drug abuse. He collaborated with his father on the film “Being Charlie,” a
project loosely inspired by his early life that offered an opportunity to help
mend a fraught relationship.
Experienced
prosecutors: Habib Balian and Jonathan Chung, the prosecutors assigned to
handle the case against Nick Reiner, have managed complex homicide cases that
attracted heavy attention from the media. Mr. Balian led an effort to block the
resentencing of Lyle and Erik Menendez, who killed their parents in 1989 and
whose case received renewed attention from a popular Netflix show, and Mr.
Chung secured a felony conviction last year against a man who broke into the
home of Mayor Karen Bass of Los Angeles.
Hollywood
legacy: Rob Reiner rose to fame as a sitcom actor before directing a slate of
beloved films, including “This Is Spinal Tap” and “The Princess Bride.” Michele
Singer Reiner was a photographer and later a producer, who also inspired Rob
Reiner to rework the ending of “When Harry Met Sally …”. Rob Reiner had three
children with Michele — Jake, Nick and Romy — while a fourth, Tracy, was
adopted with the actress and director Penny Marshall.
Death
penalty: Gov. Gavin Newsom of California issued a moratorium on executions in
the state in 2019. But people in California are still sentenced to death every
year, and the 580 people currently on death row could be killed if the
moratorium is eventually lifted.


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