Monday, April 9, 2012

Charles Manson has not been a model prisoner

Charles Manson, who will go before the parole board for the 12th time next week, has not been a model prisoner.

Twice in the last few years, guards at Corcoran State Prison found phones in the notorious killer's possession. Manson called people in California, New Jersey and Florida with an LG flip phone found under his prison bunk in March 2009, The Times reported in 2011. A second cellphone was found a year later. Thirty days were added to his sentence for the first offense, officials said.
Earlier, a homemade weapon was found in his possession.

A parole board will consider whether Manson should be released from prison on  Wednesday, though the chances of that happening are pretty slim. The board has rejected parole for Manson 11 times before.

Manson, now 77, refused to participate in his last parole hearing, in 2007, describing himself as a "prisoner of the political system." He also declined to participate in any psychological evaluations that were part of that process.

A prison spokeswoman told the Associated Press on Thursday that Manson has informed local prison officials that he will not be at next week's hearing.

Nonetheless, the Los Angeles County district attorney's office on Thursday said it would vigorously oppose Manson's release. "We consistently [opposed parole] and will continue to do so," spokeswoman Sandi Gibbons said.

In 2007 at his last parole hearing, the board concluded that Manson "continues to pose an unreasonable danger to others and may still bring harm to anyone he would come in contact with."

"He refused to cooperate, so the conclusion they drew from the reports is he still remains a danger to the public," Los Angeles County Deputy Dist. Atty. Patrick Sequeira said at the time. "He was convicted of nine horrible murders. He has expressed no remorse or empathy for any of the victims."

A new photo released by the California prison system shows Manson with long, gray hair and a beard. It was released at the request of CNN.

Manson and other members of his so-called family were convicted of killing actress Sharon Tate and six other people during a bloody rampage in the Los Angeles area during two August nights in 1969. Prosecutors said that Manson and his followers were trying to incite a race war that he believed was prophesied in the Beatles song "Helter Skelter."

Tate, the wife of director Roman Polanski, was 8½ months pregnant when she was killed at the couple's hilltop home in Benedict Canyon on Aug. 9, 1969. Polanski was out of the country working on a film. Besides Tate, four others were stabbed and shot to death, including Jay Sebring, 35; Voytek Frykowski, 32; Abigail Folger, 25, a coffee heiress; and Steven Parent, 18, a friend of Tate's caretaker. The word "Pig" was written on the front door in blood.

The next night, Manson rode along with his cohorts to the Los Feliz home of Leno and Rosemary LaBianca, then left three of them to commit the murders. "Death to pigs" was written on a wall, and "Healter Skelter," which was misspelled, on the refrigerator door.

Manson was also convicted of the earlier murder of musician Gary Hinman in his Topanga Canyon home, and the slaying of former stuntman Donald "Shorty" Shea at the Spahn movie ranch in Chatsworth, where Manson had his commune.

Manson initially was sentenced to death. A 1972 ruling by the California Supreme Court found the state's death penalty law at the time unconstitutional and his death sentence was changed in 1977 to life in prison with the possibility of parole.

Article in the LA Times





6 comments:

fiona1933 said...

But the girls expressed enormous remorse and have been totally model prisoners, yet they are not released either. What's the point? I admire them for carrying on. After Susan's refusal, on her very death-bed, it must be clear to Pat and Leslie they will never get out. Yet they carry on doing the best they can to make amends and live a useful life.

fiona1933 said...

But the girls expressed enormous remorse and have been totally model prisoners, yet they are not released either. What's the point? I admire them for carrying on. After Susan's refusal, on her very death-bed, it must be clear to Pat and Leslie they will never get out. Yet they carry on doing the best they can to make amends and live a useful life.

Anonymous said...

What really is there to be scared of if he is released. Look at him, he is a little OLD man with COPD, even if he tried to stab someone he would run out of breath before any real damnage was done.
To say he has followers to do his bidding is a lack of common sense. If this is so, why have they NOT been doing his bidding and been cutting and slashing and killing all these years he has been locked up! I say let the old fool go, and save me some tax dollars. Just broadcast it all over the news when they release him, and some gangbanger or crackhead will stick him to try and make a name for themselves.

A.C. Fisher-Aldag said...

Amazing how a crochet hook made from the wire inside an earpiece to a pair of eyeglasses is considered a "dangerous weapon". I'm scared. A 77 year old guy with a crochet hook might poke me in the arm, or something.

A.C. Fisher-Aldag said...

Janson, I've been doing Charles Manson's bidding... planting trees and a garden.

hexjoe53 said...

Charile is a great song writer, has spoken a lot of truth, and is far more of a man than most. He is still very handsome and charismatic. Like it or not,charles manson has what women want: A heathy sense of male chauvinism, which by the way is biblical.