Nick Reiner: One Brother Grieves, the Other Reportedly Retaliates
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Jake Reiner's Substack essay is the kind of writing that only comes from a place of absolute destruction. He described his parents — Rob and Michele Reiner — as guiding lights, confidants, heroes who supported their children unconditionally. He wrote about milestones stolen and a career they will never witness. He said he would trade every Dodger game and every Broadway show for one more hour with them. His words are grief put on a page by someone who has nothing left to protect.
According to sources, his brother Nick is allegedly writing a revenge tell-all from Twin Towers Correctional Facility — reportedly aimed not at explaining what happened the night their parents were allegedly stabbed to death in their Brentwood home, but at naming names, exposing what he calls family secrets, and causing maximum damage to the surviving family members who have cut contact with him.
That gap between the two brothers tells you everything about where this case stands emotionally — and behaviorally.
Nick, 32, faces two counts of first-degree murder with a special-circumstance allegation of multiple murders. He has pled not guilty. He is held without bail. His original defense attorney, Alan Jackson, withdrew from the case in January. He is now represented by a public defender. Reports describe him as delusional and almost childlike in custody, reportedly screaming innocence at night inside the facility, allegedly unable to process why he is incarcerated despite reportedly knowing what he did. He has a reported schizoaffective disorder diagnosis. Sources indicate a medication change occurred approximately a month before the alleged killings. His documented history of addiction stretched through years of treatment facilities, relapses, and homelessness — years during which his family reportedly tried to intervene at every stage.
Retired FBI Counterintelligence Behavioral Analysis Program Chief Robin Dreeke examines the behavioral profile — what it means when someone described as nearly childlike is simultaneously reportedly plotting retaliation, whether the tell-all is a calculated move or a symptom of the mental state sources have described, and whose idea it may actually be.
Dreeke takes listener questions on the medication timeline, the viability of an insanity defense in a case carrying special-circumstance allegations, and the question that haunts every family dealing with a loved one in crisis — whether the years of trying to save Nick are what kept Rob and Michele in proximity to the danger that allegedly killed them.
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This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.
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