Crime

GROSSMAN’S MAKES HER LAST STAND AS THE CONVICTED MURDERER FILES APPEALS TO C.A. SUPREME COURT

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Lana J. Yang
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Image source: Joe Knows Ventura

As the civil "trial of the century" enters its first full week, convicted socialite Rebecca Grossman is making one final attempt to wipe her slate clean. Official court records confirm that Grossman has formally appealed her second-degree murder conviction to the California Supreme Court.

This move, initiated on April 23, 2026, follows a March ruling by a lower appellate court that upheld her original 2024 conviction. Grossman’s legal team is specifically challenging the "implied malice" instructions given to the jury, arguing they were legally flawed.

By filing case S296344, Grossman is exhausting her last possible legal avenue to overturn her 15-years-to-life sentence.

However, legal experts describe this as a "long shot." The California Supreme Court only accepts cases that involve significant, unresolved questions of law. If the court declines to hear the case, which is the outcome for the vast majority of petitions, her conviction and sentence will remain final and binding.

Criminal Appeal vs. Civil Reality

While this "Hail Mary" plays out in the high court, it has zero impact on the wrongful death civil trial currently underway in Van Nuys. The two cases are moving on entirely separate tracks:

  • No Pause on Prison: The appeal does not pause Grossman’s current incarceration; she remains in state prison.
  • The Civil Focus: The civil trial, which began April 24, 2026, focuses on financial liability and has a much lower burden of proof. The Iskander family is seeking over $100 million from both Grossman and former Dodger Scott Erickson.
  • Explosive Evidence: The civil proceedings are already unearthing damaging new details, including the amorous text messages exchanged between Grossman and Erickson in the months following the fatal 2020 crash.

Even if Grossman were to somehow win her criminal appeal, it would likely not stop the civil case, where the family is fighting to hold both drivers accountable as "co-tortfeasors" for the deaths of Mark and Jacob.

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