Erik and Lyle Mendez’s aunt, Terry Baralt, did not find responding in the hotel

Erik and Lyle Mendez
Auntie no longer found responding in the hotel room
Published
Lyle And Erik Menendezis aunt, Terry Baraltwas rushed to the hospital after he did not respond in a hotel room in Los Angeles … TMZ learned.
Our sources tell us that Terry – who is 85 and fights against colon cancer – is exhausted, stressed and traumatized in the past year while the whole family works to let the two brothers released from prison.
It all came to a boiling point on Friday when the Mensendez brothers appeared in a courtroom in Los Angeles for a hearing. During the tense hearing, the defense team joined with officers of justice while the Menendez family looked.
At one point, prosecutors showed graphic place offense photos of the double murder Jose And Kitty Menendez.
Mark Geragos -The lawyer of the brothers of Mendez, who has the Podcast of TMZ’s “2 Angry Men” Cohost has the move as a “Dog-And-Pony show” … The addition of prosecutors simply tries to re-contain the original murder case. Later he called the DA because he has not shown any concern for the victims – the family – who, according to him, “is traumatized by the DA for political purposes.”
Terry spoke out for the first time in 35 years about her convicted murderer Neefjes and called ‘the boys I did not have’.
Terry said she believes it is time for them to re -enter society and add it to them … “It is a whole branch of my family erased. Those who are gone and those who still pay for it were those children.”

Tmz.com
The brothers currently serve life in prison without a conditional release for murder in the first degree, although they are planned have a hearing This week.
Terry said she visits her nephews as often as possible, but it is difficult because of her age and because she lives in New Jersey. Lyle and Erik are in custody in the Richard J. Donovan Correctional Facility in San Diego County.
The infamous brothers have spent 35 years behind bars so far. Geragos hopes to have their conviction changes from murder in the first degree to manslaughter.