Charles Manson, now 74, sports a grey beard and bald head.
Updated: Sunday, 09 Aug 2009, 4:49 AM PDT
Published : Sunday, 09 Aug 2009, 4:48 AM PDT
Posted by: Scott Coppersmith
Los Angeles (myFOXla.com) - It was 40 years ago today that America's worst fears of the
hippie generation crystallized when Sharon Tate and four others
were slaughtered by Charlie Manson's "family" in her rented
Benedict Canyon home.
On Aug. 9, 1969, coffee heiress Abigail Folger, Voytek
Frykowski, Jay Sebring, Steven Parent and Tate -- who was 26 years
old, eight months pregnant and married to film director Roman
Polanski -- were slain "to instill fear into the establishment,"
one of the killers, Susan Atkins, later told a grand jury.
A day later, Manson's followers struck again -- slashing to
death grocery store chain owner Leno LaBianca and his wife,
Rosemary, in their Los Feliz-area home.
The murderers left bloody messages at both crime scenes,
including the title of a Beatles song, "Helter Skelter," in what
authorities believe was an effort to start a race war.
Following a nine-month trial in 1970-71, jurors convicted
Manson, Atkins, Leslie Van Houten and Patricia Krenwinkel -- and
Charles "Tex" Watson in a separate trial -- of first-degree murder
and recommended they die for their crimes. In 1972, however, the
California Supreme Court invalidated the then-existing statute for
capital punishment, and their sentences were commuted to life in
prison.
Manson's brief reign of terror is four decades ago, but it
continues to have a hold on America's psyche.
Sandi Gibbons covered their trial for City News Service.
Today, she is a spokeswoman for the Los Angeles County District
Attorney's Office, which prosecuted the case.
What Charlie Manson meant to America was "the death of the
hippie movement," Gibbons told CNS.
The Manson family was "the dark side of the peace, love and
brotherhood movement," she said. "These were still the '60s, with
flower children, love- ins ... peace-loving druggies ... but Manson
was another side altogether. This was murder. This was killing
people."
She said that from the moment Manson's family was uncovered
at their commune in Death Valley a couple months after the murders,
"people looked at hippies in a different light."
She added that the commune movement also "started shrinking."
But Gibbons said she never considered Manson a hippie.
Rather, she said, he was simply a "con man."
She said he knew "how to get people to do his bidding through
drugs, spouting a bunch of philosophy to a bunch of drugged-out
kids, promising them a home -- sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll. The
main thing was that Charlie was never a hippie."
She noted he had been institutionalized for most of his life
since he was a child and that he discovered the hippies in the late
'60s after he got out of prison in Washington state and "wandered
down the coast to the Haight Ashbury District of San Francisco."
She said he played the guitar and gathered a small following,
and that "his visions didn't turn dark until he got rejected in Los
Angeles on the music front."
"The bottom line is that Charlie was a con man, and he's
still conning people," she said. "I was raised in the South, and
Charlie to me was a redneck Southerner who did not like women --
they were something to use, and he used them well."
Manson has repeatedly been turned down for parole, as have
the so-called Manson women, even when one of them became terminally
ill with brain cancer.
When asked for her personal opinion on whether the women
should be paroled after 40 years, Gibbons said that as a
spokeswoman for the District Attorney's office she couldn't discuss
that.
"So far, this office has opposed parole," she said.
Gibbons noted the Manson women were in their mid 20s when
they committed their crimes, and that she wasn't much older at the
time.
"I could easily have been them -- but I wasn't," she said.
She said she sat behind Manson during some of the trial, and
did not consider him to be charismatic in the least.
"He was like 5 feet 2 inches, a little redneck Southerner. I
did not find him charismatic, or fascinating or interesting. He was
a little creep."