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Nick Reiner pleads not guilty to killing parents Rob, Michelle Reiner in Los Angeles courtroom
Euronews
Published about 2 hours ago

Nick Reiner pleads not guilty to killing parents Rob, Michelle Reiner in Los Angeles courtroom

Euronews · Feb 23, 2026 · Collected from RSS

Summary

Nick Reiner has entered a not guilty plea to two counts of first-degree murder on Monday. The 32-year-old is accused of stabbing his parents, Hollywood actor and director Rob Reiner and photographer Michelle Singer Reiner, to death in their Los Angeles home on 14 December.

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Published on 23/02/2026 - 22:20 GMT+1•Updated 22:22 Nick Reiner, the 32-year-old son of Hollywood luminary Rob Reiner and Michele Singer Reiner, pleaded not guilty on Monday to two counts of first-degree murder more than two months after their deaths, denying for the first time that he fatally stabbed his parents. Reiner’s attorney, Deputy Public Defender Kimberly Greene, entered the plea on his behalf as he stood behind glass in an enclosed custody area of the packed Los Angeles courtroom. The third of Rob Reiner’s four children, Nick Reiner has been held without bail since his arrest hours after the beloved actor-director and his photographer-producer wife, Singer, were found dead on 14 December at their home in the Brentwood neighbourhood of Los Angeles. Reiner appeared in court with a shaved head and light facial hair, wearing brown jail clothes. He talked to his lawyer briefly through the glass before the judge began the hearing. At one point a low door in the enclosure was opened and they crouched down and spoke face-to-face. During the hearing, he spoke only to answer yes when the judge asked if he waived his right for next steps of the case to proceed speedily. Nick Reiner was not wearing the suicide prevention smock he wore in his first court appearance on 17 December, just days after his parent's killings. It was the third time he had been set to enter a plea, but issues surrounding the high-stakes, closely watched case, including a surprising change in defence lawyers, kept it from happening until Monday. The judge told Reiner to return to court on the 29th of April for the scheduling of a preliminary hearing where prosecutors will present evidence and a new judge will decide if it’s enough for the suspected son to go to trial. The case will now be handled by long-time Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Sam Ohta. He has had many prominent murder, manslaughter and public corruption cases in his courtroom in recent years, but none of which have drawn media attention as much as this case. District Attorney Nathan Hochman said outside court that his office still hasn’t decided whether it will seek the death penalty for Reiner. Hochman said the death penalty decision “goes through a very rigorous process. We will be looking at all aggravating and mitigating circumstances.” Reiner’s not guilty plea is common for criminal defendants at this stage of the case, whatever their longer-term plan might be. Reiner’s former attorney had to quit the case at the previous hearing, citing reasons beyond his and his client’s control that ethics wouldn't let him reveal. But in parting, he adamantly declared that “pursuant to the laws of California, Nick Reiner is not guilty of murder,” a stance made official by Reiner's plea Monday. Authorities have said nothing about possible motives, and leaks in the case have been virtually non-existent on both sides, leaving some of the most basic questions about the killing unanswered publicly. Rob Reiner, 78, and Michele Singer Reiner, 70, died from “multiple sharp force injuries,” the Los Angeles County Medical Examiner said in initial findings. Authorities said they were killed hours before the bodies were discovered. A court order has prevented the public release of more details related to the incident.


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