Charles Manson and Death Penalty
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America's Fascination with Multiple Murder
CHAPTER ONE AMERICA’S FASCINATION WITH MULTIPLE MURDER he break of dawn on November 16, 1957, heralded the start of deer hunting T season in rural Waushara County, Wisconsin. The men of Plainfield went off with their hunting rifles and knives but without any clue of what Edward Gein would do that day. Gein was known to the 647 residents of Plainfield as a quiet man who kept to himself in his aging, dilapidated farmhouse. But when the men of the vil- lage returned from hunting that evening, they learned the awful truth about their 51-year-old neighbor and the atrocities that he had ritualized within the walls of his farmhouse. The first in a series of discoveries that would disrupt the usually tranquil town occurred when Frank Worden arrived at his hardware store after hunting all day. Frank’s mother, Bernice Worden, who had been minding the store, was missing and so was Frank’s truck. But there was a pool of blood on the floor and a trail of blood leading toward the place where the truck had been garaged. The investigation of Bernice’s disappearance and possible homicide led police to the farm of Ed Gein. Because the farm had no electricity, the investigators con- ducted a slow and ominous search with flashlights, methodically scanning the barn for clues. The sheriff’s light suddenly exposed a hanging figure, apparently Mrs. Worden. As Captain Schoephoerster later described in court: Mrs. Worden had been completely dressed out like a deer with her head cut off at the shoulders. -
Nixon Assures Israel of Peace Talks Safety
Black Leaders Rap Inaction by City SEE STORY BELOW Hot and Humid Warn' and humid, showers possible today and tonight. FINAL Hot and humid tomorrow, Red Bank, Freehold (Be* Eefalll. Pa.j. « Long Branch J EDITION Monmouth County's Home Newspaper for 92 Years VOL'. 93, NO. 25 RED BANK, N. J., FRIDAY, JULY 31, 1970 20 PAGES TEN CENTS Nixon Assures Israel Of Peace Talks Safety LOS ANGELES (AP)' — President Nixon has to have forced policy in this area," he said. "Our' unrest, "it is a problem which college adminis- given the Israel government his-personal assur- policy is one of cooperation rather than coercion." trators and college faculties must face up to." ance that entering Middle East talks, as he pro- ; SEES ECONOMIC UPSWING He. said he thought it "very short-sighted" for uni- posed, would not endanger Israel's military posi- , • —The economy will be "moving upward in the versity presidents and professors "to put the last half of 1970" with inflation being cooled. blame for all the problems of the universities on tion. • ••'.' the government." Nixon told a television-radio news conference However, he said, he may have to veto some popular bills if'Congress appropriates more than Nixon also was asked about statements by at the Century Plaza Hotel last night that he hopes his campus advisers that government should Israel will join Egypt and Jordan in accepting his he wants and a request for higher taxes would be used as a last resort to keep the federal budget recognize the reality of fears of repression among proposal for a 90-day cease-fire while negotiations under control. -
“'The Paranoia Was Fulfilled' – an Analysis of Joan Didion's
“‘THE PARANOIA WAS FULFILLED’ – AN ANALYSIS OF JOAN DIDION’S ESSAY ‘THE WHITE ALBUM’” Rachele Colombo Independent Scholar ABSTRACT This article looks at Joan Didion’s essay “The White Album” from the collection of essays The White Album (1979), as a relevant text to reflect upon America’s turmoil in the sixties, and investigate in particular the subject of paranoia. “The White Album” represents numerous historical events from the 1960s, but the central role is played by the Manson Murders case, which the author considers it to be the sixties’ watershed. This event–along with many others–shaped Didion’s perception of that period, fueling a paranoid tendency that reflected in her writing. Didion appears to be in search of a connection between her growing anxiety and these violent events throughout the whole essay, in an attempt to understand the origin of her paranoia. Indeed, “The White Album” deals with a period in Didion’s life characterized by deep nervousness, caused mainly by her increasing inability to make sense of the events surrounding her, the Manson Murders being the most inexplicable one. Conse- quently, Didion seems to ask whether her anxiety and paranoia are justified by the numerous violent events taking place in the US during the sixties, or if she is giving a paranoid interpretation of com- pletely neutral and common events. Because of her inability to find actual connections between the events surrounding her, in particular political assassinations, Didion realizes she feels she is no longer able to fulfill her main duty as a writer: to tell a story. -
I Pfilll I Manson's Newspaper Leads to Jailing of Counsel
PAGE SIXTEEN TUESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1970 IIIanrti^Bti^r ^tn^ntng U m ld Average Dally *Net Press RUn For Tlie Wedc Bnaed The Weather ■\ . : June 27, 1980 use of the pools be restricted Fair, quite coc^ again to EHrectors Hear to town residents only. night; tow near 60. Tomorrow About Town moatly aunny, mild; high about Manchester Chapter, IMs- A fourth man questioned the 15,610 Comments On need for retaining the Griswold 80. Friday — partly cloudy abled American Verterans, and Warm. its auxiliary will sponsor a hot- Police, Pools Ehigineerlng Co. fo rpreparing BITUMINOUS Manchester——A City of Village Charm engineering reports on water: dog roast tonight at the Rocky needs. He recommended using Hill Veterans Hospital. Those How maany police cruisers VOL. LXXXIX, NO. 260 (THm'TY-SIX PAGES—TWO SECTIONS) qualified town personnel for the MANCHESTER, CONN., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 5, 1970 (Olaaaifled Advartlolng on Page IS) PRICE TEN CENTS planning to assist are remind should be dispatched to the work. DRIVEWAYS ed to be at the hospital by S :30. Paridng Areas e Oas Stations • Basketball OoUrts scene of an accident? One, two And a woman complained of I* Now Booking for Sommer Work The auxiliary will have its re -—how mahy? gular meeting tomorrow at 7:30 squeaWig wheels of garbage PLACE YOUB ORBER NOW BECSAB8B OF A p.m. at the ViFW Home. A Manchester reisdent claims trucks as they stop to make : PRICE INCREASE SOON that too many are being sent. pickups. AU Work PersonaUy Supervised. We Are 1#8% Insured. Babhidge Appearing at a Board of Direc Massive Offensive Manchester WAT6S will have tors’ comment session this a business meeting tonight at morning, he said police cruisers DeMAIO BROTHERS Serves HEW the Itallan-Amerlcan Club, Bl- could better be out patrolling Night’s RainfaU Manson’s Newspaper 643-7691 Part-Time drldge St. -
The Long Prison Journey of Leslie Van Houten: Life Beyond the Cult by Kariene Faith Boston: Northeastern University Press (2001), 216 Pp
The long Prison Journey of leslie Van Houten: life Beyond the Cult By Kariene Faith Boston: Northeastern University Press (2001), 216 pp. Reviewed by Liz Elliott n the last year of the 1960s, a decade of anomie, the U.S. experienced two I events that would symbolize different aspects of its culture into the next millennium. These events took place at opposite sides of the country, although they occun-ed less than a week apart. One event, a cultural festival of music and arts, has remained in time as an example of the possibilities of peaceful co existence in adverse circumstances oflarge numbers ofpeopJe. From August 15th to the 17th the Woodstock Music and Arts Festival's patrons endured rain and mud - and all of the other inconveniences that would reasonably accrue in a situation where unexpected large numbers ofpeople converged in one location -to see some of the decade's masters of rock and roll and folk music perfonn in the state of New York. Almost half a million people, many of whom were experiencing the event under the influence of various illicit drugs, attended Woodstock and lived together peacefhlly for one weekend. 1 Across the continent a few days earlier, the world heard the news of two ten-ible sets of murders in California that shook the sense of security that until then was enjoyed by Americans. We were soon to learn that these bizarre, seemingly ritualistic killings were the bidding of a charismatic but crazy man who was state-raised2 and resourceful. In this case the drugs were used to weaken the already fragile resolve ofyoung idealistic people who were searching for themselves and open to new ways of seeing the world. -
Retrospektive Roman Polanski the PIANIST Roman Polanski
Retrospektive Roman Polanski THE PIANIST Roman Polanski 31 Roman Polanski bei den Dreharbeiten zu Kino der Heimsuchung kennen. Und doch wird der Zuschauer augenblicklich Als die Cinémathèque française im Oktober letzten in den Bann des Films gezogen, in dessen Verlauf die Jahres eine große Ausstellung über die Geschichte der mulmige Enge nachbarschaftlichen Zusammenwoh- Filmtechnik eröffnete, fungierte er als Pate. Eine klü- nens nach und nach in einen Albtraum umschlägt. gere Wahl hätte die Pariser Kinemathek nicht treffen können, denn Roman Polanski hat immer wieder be- Ein Treibhauseffekt tont, wie unverzichtbar für ihn das Handwerk ist, das er Als LE LOCATAIRE 1976 herauskam, fügte er sich in an der Filmhochschule erlernt hat. Darin unterscheide einen Zyklus der klaustrophobisch-pathologischen Er- er sich, bemerkte der Regisseur mit maliziösem Stolz, zählungen, den der Regisseur ein Jahrzehnt zuvor mit doch ganz erheblich von seinen Freunden von der Nou- REPULSION (EKEL) und ROSEMARY'S BABY begonnen velle Vague, die als Filmkritiker angefangen hatten. hatte. Ihr erzählerischer Radius beschränkt sich weitge- Zur Eröffnung der Ausstellung präsentierte er LE hend auf einen Schauplatz. Der filmische Raum ist für LOCATAIRE (DER MIETER), der seinen virtuosen Um- diesen Regisseur eine Sphäre der Heimsuchung, an- gang mit der Technik spektakulär unter Beweis stellt. fangs auch der Halluzinationen und surrealen Verwand- 1976 war er der erste Filmemacher, der den Kamera- lungen. Sich auf einen Handlungsort zu konzentrieren, kran Louma einsetzte. Die Exposition des Films ist eine ist für ihn keine Begrenzung, sondern eine Herausfor- überaus akrobatische Kameraoperation, eine Kombi- derung an seine visuelle und dramaturgische Vorstel- nation aus Fahrten und Schwenks, der die Fassaden lungskraft. -
Will You Die for Me? by Charles Watson As Told to Chaplain Ray Hoekstra Copyright
Will You Die For Me? by Charles Watson as told to Chaplain Ray Hoekstra Copyright...................................................................................... 1 Acknowledgments ........................................................................2 Dedication ....................................................................................2 About the Author .........................................................................3 Sure, Charlie, You Can Kill Me ...................................................4 Behold, He Is In The Desert ........................................................8 The Campus Kid........................................................................ 14 The Times, They Are A-Changin' .............................................18 California Dreamin' ...................................................................23 Gentle Children, With Flowers In Their Hair ...........................27 Family .........................................................................................33 Magical Mystery Tour ................................................................37 Watershed: The White Album ...................................................42 Happy in Hollywood ..................................................................48 Revolution / Revelation .............................................................51 Piggies .........................................................................................57 You Were Only Waiting for This Moment .................................62 -
Charles Manson I
I FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION FREEDOM OF INFORMATION/PRIVACY ACTS SECTION COVER SHEET SUBJECT: CHARLES MANSON I ' ~-»/! '1 / 0 2n Rev. 7-21-av!I , son l?.4 ~ oac 92/ hr "- - Y O _____~t_ asper __._____. Callahan _.____ /T~ ggonradFelt _ " n P" Sullivan "'@§§%§._...i_ ' I Tavel ..____.__._. - Trotter _______ 'I _ ' l HolmesTele. Room_..____._.____._ . /' _ Gandy » Y ~11 .2?-r'>,7 I; , -92.>-/1 , I 0' , - _ *0 ~~ - -.-1 w92 _92 <-4 6 92.-. MURDERS! ' LOS ANCELES-A SIX-MANTEAM OFPOLICE DETECTIVESTODAY PROBED Q TWO MACABREMURDER CASESWHICH BORE STARTLINC SIMILARITIES-' E SENSELESS, SAVAGESTABBINGS WITH ALMOST RITUALISTIC OVERTONES., Q POLICE MAINTAINEDTHERE WAS NO DIRECT PHYSICALEVIDENCE TO _ I F ONNECT THESTABBING DEATHSOF A MIDDLEACED COUPLE SUNDAYAND * E MASSMURDER SATURDAYOF ACTRESS SHARON TATE AND HER FOURGUESTS . if T A SECLUDED ESTATE. - } BUT AN OFFICER SAID IT IS UNUSUALTO HAVETHE SAME TEAM ON TWO ASESTHE SOLE SUSPECTUNLESSTHERE'STHEINDICATION INTATE MURDERS CASESANWILLIAM THELINKED. AREGARR5%SON, 19 A/// A CARETAKERTHE AT BENEDICT CANYON LEASEDHOME THE BY AESS, WAS ; RELEASED YESTERDAY. 1 AFTER HISONLY SUSPECTWALKED OUTOE POLICEHEADQUARTERS INSPECTOR HAROLD YARNELLSAID THERE IS NOTSUEFUCIENT EVIDENCETO HOLD GARRETSON.THERE IS NO REASON TOSUSPECT HIM. DETECTIVES TODAYLEANED TOWARDTHE THEORYTHE STABINGS SUNDAY OF MARKET OWNERLEON LABIANCA ANDHIS WIFEROSEMARY EIR HOMMIGHT 92 8/12--ctsoeaH-I COPYA A NEW BY_ ASSAILANT THE or EARLIER. U MUR 11301;? ~ E4 " 101,0/~"n REC-69* ' l AUG 14196 ,»4 .Yb /DI/la,. ta LE '3* /0 - »J%4¢Q¢; IT?! Q _ I ;;Jt:"' h_ ._ -TN p 4'64-f-4:../ -.£/Q,1 -. -
Volume 6 Number 064 the Manson Murders
Volume 6 Number 064 The Manson Murders – I Lead: Of the turbulent events that marked the decade of the 1960s, the chilling and notorious Charles Manson murders are clearly among most shocking. Intro.: A Moment in Time with Dan Roberts. Content: Charles Manson was born in 1934. He had an unstable childhood and by the age of thirteen was ripening into young man with a decidedly criminal inclination. After being released from a California prison in 1967, he moved to San Francisco, where he began attracting a group of devoted young people who would eventually follow him on a path of violence and destruction. Playing upon sections of the Book of Revelation and drawing inspiration from certain Beatle songs, Manson and his followers began preparing for a racial war in which black and white would annihilate each other. After this war, which Manson called “Helter Skelter,” he and his followers, or as he called them, his “family,” would emerge from a bottomless pit in Death Valley ready to lead a new society. By August 1969 the “Manson Family” was living in the run-down ranch buildings of an abandoned movie set just outside of Los Angeles, running a crime ring specializing in car thefts and drug sales. Manson, through some type of psychological control, dominated members of “The Family.” He correctly suspected that they would commit murder if he so instructed. On the night of August 9, 1969, on his orders a group of his followers brutally murdered actress Sharon Tate and four others in her Beverly Hills home. The next evening Leno and Rosemary LaBianca, wealthy owners of a grocery chain, were as brutally murdered in their Los Angeles home. -
92 Together in News Reports. Both Sharon Tate and Rosemary Woodhouse Were White, Blonde, Pregnant Newlyweds. Both Were Tortured by a Cult
92 together in news reports. Both Sharon Tate and Rosemary Woodhouse were white, blonde, pregnant newlyweds. Both were tortured by a cult. The head of the Church of Satan, with which Manson was affiliated, played the role of the devil in the rape scene in Polanski’s film.47 There were fundamental, irreconcilable differences between the film, the Manson case, and its representation in the news, but their striking resemblances to one another stemmed from shared and intimate ties to the same expanding commercial media enterprise, increasingly owned by the same corporations, even in the late 1960s. Manson’s homicidal anger partly resulted from his frustrated ambitions in the music industry. After record producer Terry Melcher failed to honor a scheduled meeting with Manson and his followers, who hoped to record an album, Manson ordered his group to kill everyone at Melcher’s old house, where Tate and Polanski, a powerful and recognizable Hollywood couple, resided. The Manson murders demonstrated that similarities between reality and contemporary fiction were pliable, easily exploited, and profitable, especially when reported live on local and national news. Despite the fact that Manson was not present when his followers killed Tate and six others in her Hollywood Hills neighborhood, he became the living embodiment of evil, an example cited by emerging political pro-family groups, including evangelicals, of the hedonistic excesses of sixties liberalism. Manson was used as a means of reinstating early Cold War nuclear family values after young people began flagrantly rejecting them in the 1960s. As an eccentric cult leader remorselessly tied to brutal crimes, he served as an example of the devastating personal repercussions that came from straying beyond the limits of the 1950s middle-class suburban ideal in which he was raised. -
Chapter-11.Pdf
HUNTING CHARLES MANSON THE QUEST FOR JUSTICE IN THE DAYS OF HELTER SKELTER LIS WIEHL WITH CAITLIN ROTHER HuntingCharlesManson_1P.indd 3 1/25/18 12:11 PM © 2018 Lis Wiehl All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means— electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, scanning, or other— except for brief quotations in critical reviews or articles, without the prior written permission of the publisher. Published in Nashville, Tennessee, by Nelson Books, an imprint of Thomas Nelson. Nelson Books and Thomas Nelson are registered trademarks of HarperCollins Christian Publishing, Inc. Thomas Nelson titles may be purchased in bulk for educational, business, fund- raising, or sales promotional use. For information, please e- mail [email protected]. Any Internet addresses, phone numbers, or company or product information printed in this book are offered as a resource and are not intended in any way to be or to imply an endorsement by Thomas Nelson, nor does Thomas Nelson vouch for the existence, content, or services of these sites, phone numbers, companies, or products beyond the life of this book. ISBN 978-0-7180-9211-5 (eBook) Library of Congress Cataloging- in- Publication Data Names: Wiehl, Lis W., author. Title: Hunting Charles Manson : the quest for justice in the days of Helter skelter / Lis Wiehl. Description: Nashville, Tennessee : Nelson Books, [2018] Identifiers: LCCN 2017059418 | ISBN 9780718092085 Subjects: LCSH: Manson, Charles, 1934-2017. | Murderers- - California- - Los Angeles- - Case studies. | Mass murder investigation- - California- - Los Angeles- - Case studies. | Murder- - California- - Los Angeles- - Case studies. -
Justice Charles Vogel [Charles Vogel 6260.Doc]
California Appellate Court Legacy Project – Video Interview Transcript: Justice Charles Vogel [Charles_Vogel_6260.doc] Charles Vogel: My title – my former title, you mean? David Knight: Sure. Charles Vogel: Okay. I am, and was, Administrative Presiding Justice of the Court of Appeal, Second District. My name is Charles S. Vogel. My last name is spelled V (as in Victor)–o-g-e-l. David Knight: Wonderful. Justice Rubin. Laurence Rubin: Okay. Today is September 23, 2008. I am Larry Rubin, and I’m an associate justice on the California Court of Appeal, Second District, Division Eight. It is my great privilege to interview Justice Charles S. Vogel, retired Administrative Presiding Justice of the Second District and Presiding Justice of the court’s Division Four. This interview is part of the Legacy Project of the Court of Appeal and is produced by David Knight of the Administrative Office of the Courts. Good afternoon, Justice Vogel. Charles Vogel: Good afternoon, Larry. Laurence Rubin: Most judges – and certainly most attorneys – would probably associate you with complex business and civil cases, speaking of when you were a justice on the Court of Appeal, president of the state and county bar, head of the ABTL, law-and-motion judge, Sidley & Austin – the whole gamut of your background. I went back to 1972 and found kind of an interesting quote, I thought. And you said at the time, “Contrary to other respectable opinion, I think it’s better for a judge if he doesn’t heavily specialize in one field of law. If you’re constantly dealing with people charged with crimes, for example, you may get too callous.