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Charles Manson: 'I am a very dangerous man'
From: latimesblogs.latimes.com
April
11, 2012 | 2:15 pm
In
rejecting freedom for Charles Manson, a California parole board
Wednesday said they were swayed in part by comments he made to prison
psychologists.
John Peck, a member of the parole panel, quoted from the statements.
"'I'm special. I'm not like the average inmate,'" Peck said, according
to the Associated Press. "'I have spent my life in prison. I have put
five people in the grave. I am a very dangerous man.'"
Before the hearing, his attorney, DeJon R. Lewis, said he would like to
see Manson transferred to Atascadero State Hospital from the state
prison near Corcoran. "Charles Manson does not need incarceration at
this point in his life," Lewis told CNN. "He needs hospitalization."
But the board decided he should stay in prison, saying Manson showed no
signs of rehabilitation.
PHOTOS: The Manson murders
Manson did not attend the hearing, which was the 12th in which state
officials concluded Manson was too great a danger to be released. The
77-year-old will be eligible for another hearing in 15 years.
Manson and other members of his so-called family were convicted of
killing actress Sharon Tate and six other people during a bloody rampage
in the Los Angeles area during two August nights in 1969. He is housed
at Corcoran State Prison in a special unit for inmates felt to be
endangered by other inmates, separate from the general prison
population.
Twice in the last few years, Corcoran guards said they found the
notorious killer in possession of a cellphone. Manson called people in
California, New Jersey and Florida with an LG flip phone discovered
under his prison bunk in March 2009, The Times reported in 2011. A
second phone was found a year later. Thirty days were added to his
sentence for the first offense, officials said.
Earlier, a homemade weapon was found in his possession.
The Los Angeles County district attorney's office had said it would
vigorously oppose Manson's release. "We consistently [opposed parole]
and will continue to do so," spokeswoman Sandi Gibbons said.
A new photo released by the California prison system shows Manson with
long, gray hair and a beard.
In 2007 at Manson's last parole hearing, the board concluded he
"continues to pose an unreasonable danger to others and may still bring
harm to anyone he would come in contact with."
Prosecutors said Manson and his followers were trying to incite a race
war that he believed was prophesied in the Beatles song "Helter Skelter."
Tate, the wife of director Roman Polanski, was 8½ months pregnant when
she was killed at the couple's hilltop home in Benedict Canyon on Aug.
9, 1969. Polanski was out of the country working on a film. Besides
Tate, four others were stabbed and shot to death: Jay Sebring, 35;
Voytek Frykowski, 32; Abigail Folger, 25, a coffee heiress; and Steven
Parent, 18, a friend of Tate's caretaker. The word "Pig" was written on
the front door in blood.
The next night, Manson rode along with his cohorts to the Los Feliz home
of Leno and Rosemary LaBianca, then left three of them to commit the
murders. "Death to pigs" was written on a wall, and "Healter Skelter,"
which was misspelled, was written on the refrigerator door.
Manson was also convicted of the earlier murder of musician Gary Hinman
in his Topanga Canyon home, and the slaying of former stuntman Donald "Shorty"
Shea at the Spahn movie ranch in Chatsworth, where Manson had his
commune.
Manson initially was sentenced to death. A 1972 ruling by the California
Supreme Court found the state's death penalty law at the time
unconstitutional and his death sentence was changed in 1977 to life in
prison with the possibility of parole.
Photos, from top: Charles Manson in a recent photo; Manson in a 1968
booking photo, left; and at Corcoran State Prison in 2009. Credits:
California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation via KTLA News;
Ventura County Sheriff’s Department; Department of Corrections
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