Kathy E <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:


Here's a rather famous killers case for y'all:

Born "no name Maddox" in Cincinnati, Ohio, on November 12, 1934, Manson
was the illegitimate son of Kathleen Maddox, a 16-year-old prostitute.
His surname was derived from one of Kathleen's many lovers, whom she
briefly married, but it signified no blood connection. During 1936,    
Kathleen filed a paternity suit against one "Colonel Scott," of Ashland,
Kentucky, winning the grand monthly sum of five dollars for the support
of "Charles Milles Manson." Scott instantly defaulted on the judgment,
and he died in 1954, without acknowledging his son.

In 1939, Kathleen and her brother were sentenced to five years in prison
for robbing a West Virginia gas station. Charles was packed off to live
with a strictly religious aunt and her sadistic husband, who constantly
berated the boy as a "sissy," dressing him in girl's clothing for his
first day of school in an effort to help Manson "act like a man."
Paroled in 1942, Maddox reclaimed her son, but she was clearly unsuited
to motherhood. An alcoholic tramp who brought home lovers of both      
sexes, Kathleen frequently left Charles with neighbors "for an hour,"
then disappeared for days or weeks on end, leaving relatives to track
the boy down. On one occasion, she reportedly gave Charles to a barmaid,
in payment for a pitcher of beer.

By 1947, Kathleen was seeking a foster home for her son, but none was  
available. Charles wound up in the Gibault School for Boys, in Terre
Haute, Indiana, but fled after ten months, rejoining his mother. She
still didn't want him, and so Manson took to living on the streets,
making his way by theft. Arrested in Indiana, he escaped from the local
juvenile center after one day's confinement. Recaptured and sent to
Father Flanagan's Boy's Town, he lasted four days before his next
escape, fleeing in a stolen car to visit relatives in Illinois. He
pulled more robberies en route and on arrival, leading to another bust
at age 13. Confined for three years in a reform school at Plainfield,  
Indiana, Manson recalls sadistic abuse by older boys and guards alike.
If we may trust his memory, at least one guard incited other boys to
rape and torture Manson, while the officer stood by and masturbated on
the sidelines.

In February 1951, Manson and two other inmates escaped from the
Plainfield "school," fleeing westward in a series of stolen cars.
Arrested in Beaver, Utah, Manson was sentenced to federal time for
driving hot cars across state lines. Starting off in a minimum-security
establishment, Manson assaulted another inmate in January 1952, holding
a razor blade to the boy's throat and sodomizing him. Reclassified as
"dangerous," Manson was transferred to a tougher lockup, logging eight
major disciplinary infractions including three homosexual assaults - by
August 1952. He was moved to the Chilicothe, Ohio, reformatory a month
later, and suddenly turned over a new leaf, becoming a "model" prisoner
almost overnight. The cunning act was rewarded by parole in May 1954.

Arrested a second time for driving hot cars interstate, in September
1955, Manson got off easy with five years probation. He celebrated by
skipping a court date in Florida, on pending charges of auto theft, and
his probation was promptly revoked. Picked up in Indianapolis on March
14, 1956, he was sent to the federal prison at Terminal Island,
California, winning parole on September 30, 1958. Seven months later, on
May 1, 1959, he was jailed in Los Angeles, on charges of forging and
cashing stolen U.S. Treasury checks. Once more, he escaped with
probation, swiftly revoked with his April 1960 arrest for pimping and
transporting whores interstate. Entering the lock-up at McNeil Island,
Manson listed his religion as "Scientologist"; his IQ was tested at 121.
Paroled on March 21, 1967, over his own objections, Manson was drawn to
San Francisco and the teeming Haight-Ashbury district.

It was the "Summer of Love," when thousands of young people flocked to
the banner of drugs and "flower power," heeding Timothy Leary's advice
to "tune in, turn on, drop out." The streets and crashpads overflowed
with teenage runaways and drifters, seeking insight on the world and on
themselves.  Behind the scenes, a minor army of manipulators - gurus,
outlaw bikers, pushers, pimps and Satanists -- stood ready to squeeze a
grim profit from the Age of Aquarius.

In San Francisco, Manson displayed a surprising charisma, attracting
young drop-outs of both sexes, drawn from all strata of white society.
Some, like Mary Brunner, were college graduates. Others, like Susan
Atkins and Robert Beausoleil, were involved with Satanic cults. Most
were hopelessly confused about their lives, adopting Manson as a
combination mentor, father-figure, lover, Christ incarnate, and the
self-styled "God of Fuck." They drifted up and down the state in
fluctuating numbers, with the "family" topping fifty members at its
peak. From Mendocino and the Haight to Hollywood, Los Angeles, Death
Valley, Manson's nomads followed their leader as the Summer of Love
became a nightmare. Along the way, they rubbed shoulders with the      
Church of Satan, the Process Church of Final Judgment (worshipping
Satan, Lucifer and Jehovah simultaneously), the Circe Order of Dog
Blood, and -- some say -- the homicidal "Four Pi Movement." Manson grew
obsessed with death and "Helter Skelter," his interpretation of a
Beatles song predicting race war in America. In Manson's view, once
"blackie" had been driven to the point of violence, helpless whites
would be annihilated, leaving Manson and his family to rule the roost.

On October 13, 1968, two women were found beaten and strangled to death
near Ukiah, California. One, Nancy Warren, was the pregnant wife of a  
highway patrol officer. The other victim , Clida Delaney, was Warren's
64-year-old grandmother. The murders were ritualistic in nature, with 36
leather thongs wrapped around each victim's throat, and several members
of the Manson "family" -- including two later convicted of unrelated
murders - were visiting Ukiah at the time.

Two months later, on December 30, 17-year-old Marina Habe was abducted 
outside her West Hollywood home, her body recovered on New Year's Day, 
with multiple stab wounds in the neck and chest. Investigators learned
that Habe was friendly with various "family" members, and police believe
her ties with the Manson group led directly to her death.

On May 27, 1969, 64-year-old Darwin Scott - the brother of Manson's
alleged father - was hacked to death in his Ashland, Kentucky,
apartment, pinned to the floor by a long butcher knife. Manson was out
of touch with his California parole officer between May 22 and June 18,
1969, and an unidentified "LSD preacher from California" set up shop
with several young women, in nearby Huntington, around the same time.

On July 17, 1969, 16-year-old Mark Walts disappeared while hitchhiking
from Chatsworth, California, to the pier at Santa Monica, to do some
fishing. His battered body, shot three times and possibly run over by a
car, was found next morning in Topanga Canyon. Walts was a frequent
visitor to Manson's commune at the Spahn movie ranch, and the dead boy's
brother publicly accused Manson of the murder, though no charges were
filed.

Around the time of Walts' death, a "Jane Doe" corpse was discovered near
Castaic, northeast of the Spahn ranch, tentatively identified from
articles of clothing as Susan Scott, a "family" member once arrested
with a group of Manson girls in Mendocino. Scott was living at the ranch
when she dropped out of sight, and while the Castaic corpse remains
technically unidentified, Susan has not been seen again.

In the month between July 27 and August 26, 1969, Manson's tribe      
slaughtered at least nine persons in Southern California. Musician Gary
Hinman was the first to die, hacked to death in retaliation for a drug
deal gone sour, "political" graffiti scrawled at the scene in his blood,
as Manson tried to blame the crime on "blackie." On August 9, a Manson
hit team raided the home of movie director Roman Polanski, slaughtering
Polanski's wife - pregnant actress Sharon Tate - and four of her guests:
Abigail Folger, Jay Sebring, Voytek Frykowski, and Steven Parent. The
following night, Manson's "creepy crawlers" killed and mutilated another
couple, Leno and Rosemary LaBianca, in their Los Angeles home.

An atmosphere of general panic gripped affluent L.A., the grisly crimes
demonstrating that no one was safe. On August 16, sheriff's deputies
raided the Spahn ranch, arresting Manson and company on various drug
related charges, but Charles was back on the street by August 26. That
night, he directed the murder and dismemberment of movie stuntman Donald
"Shorty" Shea, a hanger-on who "knew too much" and was suspected of
discussing family business with police.

Ironically, Manson's downfall came about through a relatively petty
crime. On the night of September 18-19, 1969, members of the family
burned a piece of road grading equipment that was "obstructing" one of
their desert dune buggy routes. Arson investigators traced the evidence
to Manson, and he was arrested again on October 12. A day later, Susan
Atkins was picked up in Ontario, California, and she soon confided
details of the Tate-LaBianca murders to cellmates in Los Angeles.
Sweeping indictments followed, but even Manson's removal from
circulation could not halt the violence.

On November 5, 1969, family member John Haught - alias "Zero" -was shot
and killed while "playing Russian roulette" in Venice, California.
Eleven days later, another "Jane Doe" - tentatively identified as family
associate Sherry Cooper - was found near the site where Marina Habe's
body had been discovered in 1968. On November 21, Scientologists James
Sharp, 15, and Doreen Gaul, 19, were found dead in a Los Angeles alley,
stabbed more than 50 times each with al long-bladed knife. Investigators
learned that Gaul had been a girlfriend of Bruce Davis, a family member
subsequently convicted of first-degree murder in L.A.

And Manson's arm was long. Joel Pugh, husband of Mansonite Sandra Good,
flew to London in late 1968, accompanied by Bruce Davis. Their mission 
included the sale of some rare coins and the establishment off
connections with Satanic orders in Britain. Davis returned to the United
States in April 1969, but Pugh lingered on, and his body was found in a
London hotel room on December 1, his throat slit with razor blades, his
blood used to inscribe "backwards writing" and "comic book drawings" on
a nearby mirror.

Charged with the seven Tate-LaBianca murders, Manson and three of his  
female disciples - Susan Atkins, Patricia Krenwinkel, and Leslie Van
Houten went to trial in June 1970. The defense rested its case on
November 19, and attorney Ronald Hughes disappeared eight days later,
after he was driven to Sespe Hot Springs by two family associates called
"James" and "Lauren." The lawyer's decomposing corpse was found in Sespe
Creek five months later, around the time Manson's death sentence was
announced, and positive identification was confirmed through dental
X-rays.

Prosecutor Vincent Bugliosi believes that he has traced the fate of
"James" and "Lauren," suspected of guilty knowledge in Hughes's death.
On November 8, 1972, hikers found the body of 26-year-old James Willett,
shotgunned and decapitated , in a shallow grave near Guerneville,
California. Three days later, Willett's station wagon was spotted
outside a house in Stockton, and police arrested two members of the
Aryan Brotherhood inside, along with three Manson women. Lauren Willett,
wife of James, was buried in the basement, and an initial tale of
"Russian roulette" was dropped in April 1973, when four of the suspects
pled guilty to murder charges.

Meanwhile, the Manson trials continued in Los Angeles. Trigger man
Charles "Tex" Watson was convicted and sentenced to die for the
Tate-LaBianca murders in 1971. During August of that year, six family
members - including original disciple Mary Brunner - tried to steal 140
weapons from a Hawthorne gunshop, planning to break Manson out of jail,
but they were captured in a shootout with police. All were subsequently
convicted, and Brunner was also sentenced for participation in the
Hinman murder. Robert Beausoleil and Susan Atkins picked up additional
death sentences for that slaying, while Manson, Bruce Davis, and Steve
Grogan were convicted in both the Hinman and Shea murders. Various death
sentences were overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1972, and all of
the family hackers are now technically eligible for parole.

In Manson's absence, Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme held the family reins,   
corresponding with Charlie in prison and spreading his gospel on the
streets, forging new alliances with sundry cults and racist groups. In
September 1975, she tried to assassinate President Gerald Ford, but her
pistol misfired, and Squeaky was sentenced to life imprisonment. Family
remnants survive to the present day, and members have been linked with
groups promoting child pornography and sexual abuse, as well as rumored
human sacrifice.
--
Kathy E
"I can only please one person a day, today is NOT your day, and tomorrow
isn't looking too good for you either"
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