Biografia De Charles Manson Pdf
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Biografia de charles manson pdf Continue American Crime and Cult Leader This article may contain inappropriate or misinterpreted quotes that do not check the text. Please help improve this article by checking for inaccuracies in citation. (July 2020) (Learn how and when to delete this message template) Charles MansonManson in 2017BornCharles Milles Maddox (1934-11-12)November 12, 1934Cinnati, Ohio, USA Died19 November 2017 (2017-11-19) (age 83) Bakersfield, California, U.S.Other namesCharles Milles MansonOccupationSinger-songwriterKnown forManson Family murdersHeight5 ft 2 in (157 cm) div. 1958) Leona Stevens (m. 1959; div. 1963) Children2Parent (s) Colonel W. H. Scott Sr. (father) Kathleen Maddox (mother) William Manson (stepfather) Criminal charge9 charges of murder, 1 count of conspiracy to commit murderPenaltyDite (originally) Life imprisonment (1972-2017) Partner (2017) including Susan Atkins, Mary Brunner and Tex WatsonDetailsVictims9 killed by proxy, 1 attempt, 2 raped, 4 non-life-old arson Signature Charles Mills Manson (at his home Maddox November 12, 1934 - November 19, 2017) was an American criminal and cult leader. In mid-1967, he created the manson family, a quasi- community based in California. His followers committed a series of nine murders in four locations in July and August 1969. Although the motive for the murder was disputed by Manson, the Los Angeles county district attorney believed that Manson intended to start a racial war. In 1971, he was convicted of first-degree murder and conspiracy to commit murder for the deaths of seven people, including actress Sharon Tate. The prosecution argued that while Manson never directly ordered the killing, his ideology was a direct act of conspiracy. Manson was also convicted of first-degree murder for the deaths of Gary Hinman and Donald Shea. Before the murder, Manson spent more than half his life in correctional facilities. When he began to collect his cult following, he was a singer-songwriter on the edge of the Los Angeles music industry, mainly through a chance association with Dennis Wilson of the Beach Boys, who introduced Manson to record producer Terry Melcher. In 1968, the Beach Boys recorded Manson's song Cease to Exist, re-credited Never Learn Not to Love as a B-side on one of their singles, but without Manson's merit. Wilson and Melcher broke off their relationship with Manson around the beginning of 1969. The Los Angeles county district attorney said Manson was obsessed with The Beatles, especially their 1968 self-titled album. Manson claimed to have been guided by his interpretation of The Beatles and adopted the term Helter Skelter to describe the impending apocalyptic racial war. At trial, the prosecution argued that Manson his followers believed that the killings would help speed up the war. Other recent interviews and those who testified during Manson's trial insisted that Tate-LaBianca's murders were imitative crimes designed to acquit Manson's friend Bobby Bosola. Manson's fame as an emblem of madness, violence and creepy also influenced pop culture. Recordings of songs written and performed by Manson were released commercially, starting with Lie: The Love and Terror Cult (1970). Various musicians covered some of his songs. Although originally sentenced to death, his sentence was commuted to life imprisonment with the possibility of parole after the California Supreme Court invalidated the state's death penalty law in 1972. He served a life sentence at California Corcoran State Prison and died at the age of 83 at the end of 2017. 1934-1967: Charles Manson's early childhood childhood was born on November 12, 1934, to 16-year-old Kathleen Manson-Bauer-Cavender, born Maddox (1918-1973), at the University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center in Cincinnati, Ohio. At first it was called without the name Maddox. For several weeks, his name was Charles Mills Maddox. Manson's biological father appears to have been Colonel Walker Henderson Scott Sr. (1910-1954) of Catlettsburg, Kentucky, against whom Kathleen Maddox filed a paternity suit, leading to an agreed decision in 1937. Manson may never have known his biological father. Scott periodically worked at local mills and had a local reputation as a con artist. He let Maddox believe he was an Army colonel, even though the colonel was just his name. When Maddox told Scott that she was pregnant, he told her that he had been drafted into the army; a few months later she realized that he had no intention of returning. In August 1934, before Manson was born, Maddox married William Eugene Manson (1909-1961), a worker in a dry cleaners. Maddox often drank with his brother Luther, leaving Charles with several nannies. They divorced on April 30, 1937, after William declared a gross disregard for the duty of Maddox. Charles kept William's last name, Manson. On August 1, 1939, Luther and Kathleen Maddox were arrested for assault and robbery. Kathleen and Luther were sentenced to five and ten years in prison, respectively. Manson was housed in the home of his aunt and uncle in McMezen, West Virginia. His mother was released on parole in 1942. Manson later described the first weeks after she returned from prison as the happiest time of his life. A few weeks after Maddox's release, the Manson family moved to Charleston, West Virginia, where Manson played a truant and his mother evenings, drinking. She was arrested for grand theft but not convicted. Family Family he moved to Indianapolis, where Maddox met an alcoholic named Lewis (without a name) through anonymous alcoholics, and married him in August 1943. In an interview with Diane Sawyer, Manson said that when he was nine years old, he set fire to his school. Manson also got into trouble for truancy and petty theft. Although there was no shortage of foster families, in 1947, at the age of 13, Manson was placed in Gibault School for Boys in Terre Haute, Indiana, a school for male offenders run by Catholic priests. Gibo was a strict school, where the punishment for even the smallest violations were beatings with either a wooden paddle or a leather strap. Manson escaped from Gibo and slept in the woods, under bridges, and wherever he could find refuge. Manson fled home to his mother and spent Christmas 1947 in McMeehen, at his aunt's and uncle's house. His mother returned him to Gibo. Ten months later, he fled to Indianapolis. In 1948, in Indianapolis, Manson committed his first known crime by robbing a grocery store. At first the robbery was just to find something to eat. However, Manson found a box of cigars containing just over a hundred dollars, and he took the money. He used that money to rent a room on Indianapolis' Skid Row and buy food. For a while, Manson tried to go straight, getting a job delivering messages to Western Union. However, he quickly began to supplement his salary through petty theft. He was eventually caught, and in 1949 a sympathetic judge sent him to Boyce Town, a juvenile detention facility in Omaha, Nebraska. After four days at Boys Town, he and his fellow student Blackie Nielson got a gun and stole a car. They used it to commit two armed robberies on the way to Uncle Nilson's home in Peoria, Illinois. Uncle Nielson was a professional thief, and when the boys arrived, he allegedly took them as disciples. Manson was arrested two weeks later during a late-night raid on a Peoria store. During the investigation that followed, he was linked to two previous armed robberies. He was sent to Indiana Boys' School, a strict school of reform. At the school, other students allegedly raped Manson with the support of a staff member and he was repeatedly beaten. He ran away from school eighteen times. While at school, Manson developed a self-defense technique, which he later called a crazy game. When he was physically unable to defend himself, he squealed, grimace and waved his hands to convince the aggressors that he was crazy. After several unsuccessful attempts, he escaped with two other boys in February 1951. Three escapees were robbing gas stations while trying to drive to California in stolen cars when they were arrested in the state. For the federal crime of driving a stolen car through states, Manson was sent sent Washington, D.C., National School of Boys Training. Upon arrival, he was given fitness tests that determined that he was illiterate but had an intelligence ratio above the average of 109. His employee found him aggressively antisocial. The first prison sentence on the recommendation of a psychiatrist, Manson was transferred in October 1951 to Natural Bridge Honor Camp, a minimum security facility. His aunt visited him and told the administrators that he would let him stay at her house and help him find a job. Manson had a parole hearing scheduled for February 1952. However, in January he was caught raping a boy with a knife. Manson was transferred to the Federal Reform system in St. Petersburg, Virginia. There he committed eight other serious disciplinary offences, three of which are related to homosexual acts. He was then transferred to a maximum security prison in Chillicothe, Ohio, where he was to remain until his release on his 21st birthday in November 1955. Good behaviour led to an early release in May 1954 to live with his aunt and uncle in McMeechen. Booking photo, Federal Correctional Institute Terminal Island, May 2, 1956 In January 1955, Manson married a hospital waitress named Rosalie Jean Willis. About three months after he and his pregnant wife arrived in Los Angeles in a car he stole in Ohio, Manson was again charged with a federal crime for passing a car across state lines.