Wednesday, April 01, 2009

Spurious Stories



Aging Manson 'Family' members long for freedom

  • Story Highlights
  • Recent release of Charles Manson's prison photo rekindles interest in case
  • Other members of Manson's "family" now shun him
  • They are described as model prisoners
  • Susan Atkins, who has brain cancer, has her 18th parole hearing May 28
By Ashley Broughton
CNN

(CNN) -- Susan Atkins is terminally ill; Charles "Tex" Watson is an ordained minister. They and other members of Charles Manson's murderous "family" now shun him.

After three decades behind bars, Manson family members Atkins, Watson, Patricia Krenwinkel and Leslie Van Houten have repeatedly been described as model prisoners who have accepted responsibility for their crimes.

Parole boards, however, continue to reject their bids for release, and a debate rages over whether the four should ever be freed.

The release of Manson's prison photo recently rekindled public interest in slayings of pregnant actress Sharon Tate and six others in a two-night rampage that terrorized the city of Los Angeles, California, in August 1969. CNN looked into the status of some of his former followers.

Atkins, California's longest-serving female inmate, requested a "compassionate release" from the California Board of Parole Hearings in July. She has terminal brain cancer, doctors say. The board unanimously denied her request.

Atkins' 18th parole suitability hearing is scheduled for May 28, according to a Web site maintained by her husband and attorney, James Whitehouse. The Web site says Atkins, now 60, is paralyzed over 85 percent of her body and cannot sit up in bed or even be moved into a wheelchair.

Despite her declining condition and spotless prison record, the site says, "there is still a very real chance the Parole Board will nonetheless insist her release would be a danger to society."

The Manson family members were initially sentenced to death, only to have their sentences commuted to life in prison when the U.S. Supreme Court struck down death penalty laws in 1972, establishing a four-year moratorium on executions.

By her own admission, Atkins held Tate down as she pleaded for mercy, and stabbed the eight-months-pregnant woman 16 times. In a 1993 parole board hearing, Atkins said Tate "asked me to let her baby live ... I told her I didn't have any mercy on her."

After stabbing Tate to death, according to historical accounts of the murders, Atkins scrawled the word "pig" in blood on the door of the home Tate shared with her husband, director Roman Polanski, who was not home at the time. Three of Tate's house guests were also slain, as was a teenager who was visiting the home's caretaker in his cottage out back.

Atkins' compassionate release was opposed by Tate's sister, Debra, Los Angeles County prosecutors and California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, among others. However, the former prosecutor who won her conviction, Vincent Bugliosi, said he supported Atkins' request for release.

Debra Tate told CNN in an e-mail she does not believe any Manson family member convicted of murder should ever be set free. She said the slayings of the victims, including some that may have not been discovered, were "so vicious, so inhumane, so depraved, that there is no turning back. "

"The 'Manson Family' murderers are sociopaths, and from that, they can never be rehabilitated," Debra Tate said. "They should all stay right where they are -- in prison -- until they die. There will never be true justice for my sister Sharon and the other victims of the 'Manson Family.' Keeping the murderers in prison is the least we, as a society who values justice, can do."

In a manuscript posted on her Web site, Atkins, who was known within the Manson family as Sadie Mae Glutz, wrote, "I will never be able to replace what my crime took away. And that's not 'neat,' and that's not 'cool.'"

Known as Katie within the Manson Family, Krenwinkel killed coffee heiress Abigail Folger at the Tate home and, the following night, stabbed Rosemary LaBianca and carved the word "War" on her husband Leno LaBianca's abdomen.

She remained faithful to Manson throughout her trial and into the first few years of her incarceration, according to a profile posted on the University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Law Web site, but she later "made strides to turn her life around."

Now 61, Krenwinkel is a model inmate at the California Institution for Women in Frontera, according to Lt. Robert Patterson, a prison spokesman. She is involved in the Prison Pups program, which helps train puppies to be service dogs, he said.

"It gives you a reason to wake up every morning, and keep moving on," Krenwinkel told Los Angeles station KABC, a CNN affiiate. The program at that time had trained more than 100 dogs; Krenwinkel said she was training her seventh dog.

According to the Manson Family Today Web site, which keeps tabs on all things related to the case, Krenwinkel has largely accepted the fact that she probably will never leave prison. Her next parole hearing will be sometime before December, Patterson said.

Van Houten was convicted in the raid at the LaBianca home, where she helped hold Rosemary LaBianca down as the woman was stabbed to death. At the time, she was 19.

"The autopsy reports have shown that it was Tex that wielded the fatal wounds, but I contributed, and I attempted to hold her down for Pat [Krenwinkel]," Van Houten said in a 2002 appearance on CNN's "Larry King Live." "I called to Tex because we couldn't kill her. You know, it's -- morally, I feel as though I did."

Her conviction was overturned in 1976, on the grounds that a judge erred in not granting a mistrial after the disappearance of her attorney, Ronald Hughes, who later was found dead.

In Van Houten's first retrial, the jury was unable to reach a verdict, and she was released on bond for a few months. But in her third trial, in 1978, she was convicted of first-degree murder.

Known as Lulu within the Manson family, Van Houten, a former high school homecoming queen, is serving her life sentence at the California Institution for Women at Frontera, the same facility as Krenwinkel and, until last year, Atkins.

Like Krenwinkel, Van Houten is involved in prison programs and is a mentor to other inmates in the facility's college program, Patterson said. She is also a model inmate, he added.

During her 2002 CNN appearance, Van Houten called Manson "an opportunist of the cruelest, most vicious kind." But she was quick to emphasize that she accepts blame for her role in the crime.

Like the others, Van Houten, 59, has repeatedly been turned down for parole. She is widely seen as the best candidate for parole. But her next parole hearing probably will not be until 2010, according to Patterson.

"Tex" Watson's participation in the Manson murders is "a part of history that he deeply regrets," according to a Web site dedicated to his prisoner outreach program.

Watson converted to Christianity in 1975, several years after he was incarcerated, and became an ordained minister in 1983, according to the site.

"He was manipulative," Watson said of Manson in a November 2004 radio interview, the transcript of which is posted on the Web site. "But I take full responsibility for my ignorance, lack of identity, emptiness and choices in life, which left me prey to his deceptive plan. My actions were my own."

Watson stabbed four people, including Tate, to death and fatally shot two others. After the Tate murders, Watson reportedly told Manson, "Boy, it sure was helter skelter."

However, Watson was not tried along with the others in the slayings. A month and a half after the two-night crime spree, he said, he fled to Texas.

Watson, now 63, writes on the site that he has no computer or Internet access in prison, but maintains contact with the site administrator through the mail and writes much of the site's content.

Watson had been denied parole 13 times as of November 2006, a correction spokeswoman said. His next parole hearing is scheduled for November.


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Ageing Charles Manson 'Family' members long for freedom
Posted: March 30, 2009, 2:20 PM by Karen Hawthorne

Thirty years ago on Sunday, March 29, a California jury sentenced Charles Manson and three members of his “Family” to death for murdering actress Sharon Tate and seven others. Claiming to be Jesus Christ, Manson had told his recruits that they needed to carry out a violent racial war as part of a prophecy he referred to as “Helter Skelter.”

Charles Manson, Susan Atkins, Patricia Krenwinkel and Leslie Van Houten were expected to be executed by gas chamber to pay for their crimes, but those sentences were never carried out. In 1972, California abolished the death penalty and the four convicts’ sentences were commuted to life in prison.

Now, as CNN reports, Susan Atkins is terminally ill; Charles "Tex" Watson is an ordained minister. They and other members of Charles Manson's murderous "family" now shun him and have become model prisoners. Parole boards continue to reject their bids for release.

Renewed interest in the case has followed the recent release of a photo of the ageing Manson with a faded swastika still clear on his forehead.

Where are they now? According to a Web site maintained by her husband and attorney, James Whitehouse, Atkins, now 60, is paralyzed over 85% of her body and cannot sit up in bed or even be moved into a wheelchair. More from CNN:

By her own admission, Atkins held Tate down as she pleaded for mercy, and stabbed the eight-months-pregnant woman 16 times. In a 1993 parole board hearing, Atkins said Tate "asked me to let her baby live ... I told her I didn't have any mercy on her."

After stabbing Tate to death, according to historical accounts of the murders, Atkins scrawled the word "pig" in blood on the door of the home Tate shared with her husband, director Roman Polanski, who was not home at the time. Three of Tate's house guests were also slain, as was a teenager who was visiting the home's caretaker in his cottage out back.

As for Krenwinke, now 61, she is a model inmate at the California Institution for Women in Frontera, according to Lt. Robert Patterson, a prison spokesman. She is involved in the Prison Pups program, which helps train puppies to be service dogs, he said.

Known as Katie within the Manson Family, Krenwinkel killed coffee heiress Abigail Folger at the Tate home and, the following night, stabbed Rosemary LaBianca and carved the word "War" on her husband Leno LaBianca's abdomen.

She remained faithful to Manson throughout her trial and into the first few years of her incarceration, according to a profile posted on the University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Law Web site, but she later "made strides to turn her life around."

Known as Lulu within the Manson family, Van Houten, a former high school homecoming queen, is serving her life sentence at the California Institution for Women at Frontera, the same facility as Krenwinkel and, until last year, Atkins. Like the others, Van Houten, 59, has repeatedly been turned down for parole:

Van Houten was convicted in the raid at the LaBianca home, where she helped hold Rosemary LaBianca down as the woman was stabbed to death. At the time, she was 19.

"The autopsy reports have shown that it was Tex that wielded the fatal wounds, but I contributed, and I attempted to hold her down for Pat [Krenwinkel]," Van Houten said in a 2002 appearance on CNN's "Larry King Live." "I called to Tex because we couldn't kill her. You know, it's — morally, I feel as though I did."

And "Tex" Watson, now 63, converted to Christianity in 1975, several years after he was incarcerated, and became an ordained minister in 1983, according to a site for his prisoner outreach, CNN reports. He stabbed four people, including Tate, to death and fatally shot two others. After the Tate murders, Watson reportedly told Manson, "Boy, it sure was helter skelter."

6 comments:

Flora said...

Maybe, I haven't had enough coffee yet, but their math seems wrong. How could they not notice their error when it puts court in session on a Sunday? I guess they're referring to last Sunday, but the way it is written is weird and still doesn't add up.

Last I knew the death sentence was awarded on 3/29/71... a Monday. It would've been 30 yrs in 2001.

According to Bret's site Leslie is up for parole this August.

starship said...

Indeed. This sort of reporting gets me worried. How can they get wrong some of the most important details about what is widely considered the most horrific murders in american history? I mean, if they can get this wrong only 40 years later, what else do they get wrong? Normandy? The Civil War? The Holocaust? The 1952 World Series? The Renaissance?

Marliese said...

"spurious"...cool word.

Anonymous said...

a) Media are indeed idiotic and lazy and their reporting is full of inaccuracies.
b) Why is it that former Mansonoids, no matter how smart they are, how much education they get, how much time they get to think about it don't understand the laws regarding conspiracy? How hard is it to understand that every conspirator, no matter whether they made one non-fatal stab wound, three non-fatal stab wounds, held the victim so someone else could stab them or even stayed behind at the ranch until it was all over and then showed up afterwards and moved bodies around is as responsible for the death as if they had done the whole thing themselves?

starship said...

Groove on this Kathie Lee Gifford video:

http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/30195664/

angeLos said...

Very interesting Pristash, yes, I would not liked to have any kind of contact with TW, or any other CM "friends" for a tour damn......etc...

blipcrotch...

they do not understand the laws regarding conspiracy...because...well
...the one involved in the murders understand it quite well, and they are behind bars....and recognized their responsabilities allready in the 1970's...
it has been a long time and they moved on with their lifes...
for the others CM included it is allways the others faults...

http://img26.imageshack.us/img26/5933/cdw2009lg.jpg
TW 63