Charles Manson follower ends her silence 40 years after night of slaughter

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/aug/02/charles-manson-linda-kasabian-polanski

The 1960s, the decade of love, came to an abrubt and bloody end when 
Charles Manson's 'family' murdered actress Sharon Tate and her 
friends. Now, accomplice Linda Kasabian, tells the full story of that 
awful night for the first time, reports Robin McKie

Robin McKie
2 August 2009

They were the murders that ended the 1960s, the decade of love, in a 
bloodbath that shocked the world. Now, on the 40th anniversary of the 
killing of Hollywood actress Sharon Tate and her friends by Charles 
Manson's "Family", the gang member whose testimony convicted the 
killers has revealed for the first time her full involvement in the crimes.

On the night of 9 August 1969, Linda Kasabian was sent by Manson with 
three other members of his Family - Tex Watson, Susan Atkins and 
Patricia "Katie" Krenwinkel - to break into Tate's home. There they 
tied up the actress and her friends and stabbed them to death. 
Kasabian acted as look-out.

Tate was married to the film director Roman Polanski and was eight 
months' pregnant. In the interview with Kasabian, to be screened in 
the docu-drama Manson on Channel Five next week, she tells how Tate 
pleaded in vain for the life of her unborn child. She was stabbed 16 
times. Her killers wrote the word "pig" in her blood on the wall of her house.

"I saw a woman in a white dress and she had blood all over her and 
she was screaming and she was calling for her mom. I saw Katie 
stabbing her," says Kasabian, who is now 60. "I thought about going 
to a house where there were lights down the road and then I said, 
'No, don't do that, because they'll find me and kill all those 
people'. So I went down the hill and I got into the car and I just 
stayed there and waited."

The killings horrified America and the rest of the world and the 
subject has continued to fascinate ever since. It is not hard to see 
why. Manson's strange, hypnotic hold over his followers turned a 
group of peaceful hippies living in a commune into a group of 
merciless killers. In addition, the case involved a range of 
celebrity names including the Beatles, the Beach Boys, and record 
producer Terry Melcher, the son of Doris Day.

In the end, Manson was convicted of the murders of nine people, 
thanks to Kasabian who was the prosecution's star witness at his 
trial in 1970 - although he and his followers claimed they had, in 
fact, "offed" a total of 35 people whose bodies had been buried in 
the desert. It is a claim "that may be high, but could still be 
true", according to Vincent Bugliosi, the lawyer who prosecuted them.

"The Manson murders sounded the death knell for hippies and all they 
symbolically represented," Bugliosi told the Observer last week. 
"They closed an era. The 60s, the decade of love, ended on that 
night, on 9 August 1969."

Kasabian had been living in hiding, under an assumed name, since the 
trial. The documentary is her first full public interview since her 
appearance 20 years ago on an American cable chat show. "I could 
never accept the fact that I was not punished for my involvement," 
says Kasabian. "I felt then what I feel now, always and forever, that 
it was a waste of life that had no reason, no rhyme."

Kasabian was a 20-year-old hippy with a 16-month daughter in July 
1969 when she met members of Manson's Family and was asked to join 
their commune at a dilapidated ranch known as Spahn's. There she met 
Manson, a 32-year-old racist who had already spent more than half his 
life in jail. About 20 people were living on the ranch, maintained by 
a life of petty crime and selling drugs.

"Manson - who was uneducated but highly intelligent - had this 
phenomenal ability to gain control over other people and get them to 
do terrible things," said Bugliosi. "Eventually he convinced them 
that he was the second coming: Christ and the Devil all wrapped up in 
the same person."

Armageddon was coming, Manson claimed as part of his racist, 
anti-establishment gospel that predicted a black uprising against the 
state. Once that was over, he and his followers would take over 
America. Manson named this insurrection Helter Skelter because he 
believed details of it were revealed in the song of the same name on 
the Beatles' White Album. "A typical day would be Charlie playing 
guitar, telling stories, dancing around just being free," Kasabian 
states in the documentary. In fact, Manson was a talented musician 
who had met Beach Boys drummer Dennis Wilson. The pair had recorded a 
few tracks, including one jointly written song "Never Learn Not to 
Love" that was subsequently recorded by the Beach Boys.

Manson also tried to set up a record contract with the producer Terry 
Melcher, but the deal had fallen through, a development that was to 
lead directly to the murders of Tate and her friends. Manson was 
angry with Melcher for not pursuing the deal and arrived at the 
latter's house at 10050 Cielo Drive to confront him. However, Melcher 
had moved on and the house was now occupied by Roman Polanski and 
Sharon Tate. Manson was told to leave.

"This residence - 10050 Cielo Drive - where Tate and Polanski now 
lived, came to symbolise the establishment to Charles Manson, 
particularly the establishment's rejection of him," said Bugliosi. By 
now, Manson's control over his Family was virtually total, and on 25 
July he ordered three of them to go to the house of a drug-dealing 
acquaintance, Gary Hinman, to demand money. Hinman refused, so they 
stabbed him to death, using his blood to paint the words "political 
piggy" on the wall - a grim rehearsal for what would occur at Tate's house.

Then Manson ordered Kasabian, Watson, Atkins and Krenwinkel to drive 
to Cielo Drive. "I felt excited, special, chosen," recalls Kasabian. 
"When we arrived at the Tate residence there were lights on the 
outside, the driveway was lit up. Tex got a rope and wire cutters and 
cut the telephone wires. There was a car coming so we got down. Tex 
jumped out and shot the gun four times. He told me to take the wallet 
from the kid he had shot. I got in the car. There was this person 
slumped over. I didn't see any blood or anything but I knew he wasn't there."

The others went inside the house. Polanski was in Europe, but Tate 
was entertaining her friends Wojtek Frykowski, Abigail Folger and Jay 
Sebring. "You are all going to die," Watson told them after tying 
them with rope. There was a desperate fight in which all four victims 
were stabbed to death. A total of 102 wounds were inflicted. As they 
drove off, Kasabian took the weapons, wiped them clean and dropped 
them in a ravine.

The next day Manson sent his Family out again to kill and this time, 
at random, he selected the house of Leno and Rosemary LaBianca, 
wealthy owners of a chain of grocery stores. Manson broke in and tied 
them up. Then he left, ordering three of the Family to stab them to 
death. Manson was involved in at least one more murder - of an 
acquaintance known as "Shorty" Shea - before his arrest in October. 
However, it was for his instigation of the slaying of Tate and her 
friends that he will always be remembered.

"Some people point to the extreme brutality of the murders to explain 
our enduring interest, but you know we have had killings even more 
brutal in America,' said Bugliosi. "And yes, the victims were 
prominent people but they weren't that prominent. But what really 
gives the Tate killings such durability is the fact they are the most 
bizarre murders in the recorded annals of American crime. If they had 
been written as fiction no one would have read it. It would have 
seemed too far out. After all, the story has just about everything - 
Beatles lyrics spelled out in blood, quotes from the Bible, and nice 
kids from average families being persuaded to go on horrible killing sprees.

"The very name Manson has now become a metaphor for evil as a result. 
The name is synonymous with evil today. Mike Tyson, when he was 
applying for reinstatement of his boxing licence, admitted he was a 
bad guy but insisted 'I am not Charlie Manson'. Certainly Manson was 
different from all other mass murderers. He got others to do his work 
and he was intelligent and manipulative. Most deranged cult leaders 
end up getting their followers to commit suicide en masse. Manson got 
them to carry out mass murders. That is why we remember him."

How the hunt for Linda Kasabian led TV producers to a trailer park

Nick Godwin, the Cineflix executive producer responsible for making 
Manson, had only an assumed name to go on when his company began its 
search for Linda Kasabian. "We also had a vague area, somewhere in 
the west of America, in which she was said to be living," he told the Observer

So his team tracked down each woman with that name and ruled them out 
one by one - until they had a shortlist of two.

"One was a school librarian in California who was very surprised to 
be mistaken for an accessory to mass murder," said Godwin. The other 
was living in near-poverty in a trailer. Her details were checked out 
and fitted those of Linda Kasabian, but when contacted by the company 
she refused to cooperate. "None of her friends or neighbours knew 
about her dramatic past," said Godwin.

It took six months to establish a rapport and to get Linda to tell 
the story of the four weeks she lived with the Manson Family. Then 
she was shown a tape of the programme in which actors portray her and 
other gang members . "Linda had her entire extended family sitting in 
the trailer for the viewing. It was an emotional experience. Linda's 
daughter cried throughout the murder scene. But Linda said it 
accurately portrayed what happened."

She also had no idea that a British band had been named after her. So 
Cineflix gave her a CD by Kasabian to listen to. She was pleasantly 
surprised, said Godwin.

As to Linda's role in the conviction of Manson and the rest of his 
Family, the prosecutor at the trial, Vincent Bugliosi, is in no 
doubt. "She never asked for immunity from prosecution, but we gave 
it," he said. "She stood in the witness box for 17 or 18 days and 
never broke down, despite the incredible pressure she was under. I 
doubt we would have convicted Manson without her."

• Manson by Cineflix Productions will be shown on Five on 10 August at 10pm

.


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