Charles Manson's 1992 Parole Hearing
SUBSEQUENT PAROLE CONSIDERATION HEARING
STATE OF CALIFORNIA
BOARD OF PRISON TERMS
In The Matter of The Life Term Parole Consideration Hearing of:
CHARLES MANSON
CDC NUMBER B - 33920
CALIFORNIA STATE PRISON
CORCORAN, CALIFORNIA
TUESDAY
APRIL 21, 1992
1332 HOURS
MEMBERS PRESENT
Ron Koenig, Board Comissioner, Presiding
Joseph Aceto, Board Commissioner
Cleo Brown, Deputy Board Commissioner
ALSO PRESENT
Charles Manson, Inmate
Stephen Kay, Deputy District Attorney County of Los Angeles
P R O C E E D I N G S
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: These
hearings are being taped, Mr. Manson, so if you would answer up
so that it will be recorded, please.
This is a subsequent parole consideration hearing
for Charles Manson, B-33920. Received California Department of
Corrections on April the 22nd, 1971 pursuant to Penal Code
Section 1168 for violation of Section 187; California Penal
Code, first degree murder, counts one through seven and
182.1/187, conspiracy to commit murder, count eight, stayed;
Los Angeles County case number A-252156.
On February the 2nd, 1977, this sentence was
changed being case number A-252156 from death to life pursuant
to Court of Appeal. The prisoner was additionally received on
December the 13th, 1971 for violation of P.C. 187, first degree
murder, concurrent with prior term, Los Angeles County case
number 8267861, count one.
Counts two and three of case number A-267861 for
violation of P.C. 182.1/187/211 and 187, conspiracy to commit
murder and robbery and first degree murder were stayed.
The controlling minimum eligible parole date is
December - was December 13th, 1978.
Today's date is April the 22nd, 1971 [sic]. The
time is now 1332 hours and we are at the Corcoran State Prison.
For purposes - participants in today's hearing are
Commissioners Koenig and Aceto and Deputy Commissioner Brown.
Representing - the prisoner has declined an attorney, a state-
represented attorney or an attorney of his own. Representing
the people of the County of Los Angeles is Stephen Kay. We
also have several members of the news media attending the
hearing today and the CNPR and assistant CNPR, and we have an
observer in the room.
For purposes of identification we're going to go
around the room, state our first name, last name and why we are
here. I want only participants in the hearing to participate
in this.
I am Ron Koenig. I'll start and I'll go to my
right. Mr. Manson, when we come to you would you also give
your C.D.C. number. Okay.
I am Ron Koenig, K - O - E - N - I - G. and I'm
Commissioner for the Board of Prison Terms.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: Good afternoon. Joe
Aceto, A - C - E - T - O. Commissioner, Board of Prison Terms.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: Cleo Brown, B-
R - O - W - N. Deputy Commissioner, Board of Prison Terms.
MR. KAY: Okay. I'm Stephen Kay, Deputy District
Attorney of Los Angeles County.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Mr. Manson?
INMATE MANSON: Charles Manson, inmate, B-33920.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Would you
spell your last name please?
INMATE MANSON: M - A - N - S - U - N.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Thank you.
Today, Mr. Manson, the panel from the Board of Prison Terms
that you see before you will once again consider your
suitability for parole, Certain things we have to go through,
so let me go through this, if you will please.
INMATE MANSON: Uh-huh,
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: And we have a
procedure that we follow, If you follow that it will make it
much easier on all of us.
The - you've had nine prior hearings. Let me
explain the process so you know what's going on, The hearing
is basically broken down into three areas. The first area is
the instant offense and I'll incorporate that instant offense.
And then I'll give you - and read the instant
offense - and then I'll give you the opportunity to make
corrections or additions to the instant offense,
Then I'll talk about your prior criminality -
INMATE MANSON: I don't understand instant defense.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Instant.
That's the offense that you're in here for, The murders -
INMATE MANSON: Instant?
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Yes.
INMATE MANSON: Offense?
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Yes.
Offenses that you're in here for. We'll then go to your social
factors and your prior criminality and then we'll go to the
second part of the hearing which is your post-conviction
factors and your psychiatric evaluation. That will be handled
by Deputy Commissioner Brown on my far right.
The third area of the hearing are your parole plans
and Commissioner Aceto will handle your parole plans.
From there we go to questions by any one of the Commissioners
regarding any part of the hearing, and then questions by the
District Attorney. The District Attorney will pose the
questions to the panel and when you answer his questions would
you please answer the panel.
Do you understand what's going on here so far?
INMATE MANSON: Yes. I have a couple questions.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: All right.
It's alright. Let me finish and then you can ask. We'll then
go to closing statements. The first closing statement will be
by the District Attorney and then you'll have the opportunity
for the final closing statement. We will then recess. We'll
make a decision and call you back. Everybody will clear the
room when we recess, make a decision. We'll call you back and
we'll read into the record that decision.
There are certain rights you are afforded, Mr.
Manson. You were notified of the hearing. I saw where you
were notified, however you refused to sign the notification.
Also, you had an opportunity to review your central file and I
don't know whether you did or not. Did you review your central
file?
INMATE MANSON: I've been checking this thing out
that I'm sent here.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Okay. All
right, good. You also have a right to appeal the decision
within ninety days of receiving that decision.
You have a right to an impartial panel, Mr. Manson.
Do you have any problems with the three representatives from
the Board of Prison Terms you see before you today?
INMATE MANSON: No, not at all.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Thank you.
You'll receive a tentative written decision today. The
decision will be effective in approximately sixty days after
the Board of Prison Terms' review process has taken place.
You are not required, Mr. Manson, to discuss the
matter with the panel if you do not wish to. But you must keep
in mind that the Board of Prison Terms' panel accepts as true
the Court findings in the case, the fact that you are guilty of
these murders. Are you going to talk to the panel today and
answer questions?
INMATE MANSON: Yes. Yes, sir.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Would you
raise your right hand as best as possible. Do you solemnly
swear or affirm that the testimony you give today will be the
truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth?
INMATE MANSON: Yes, sir.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Thank you.
Okay, at this time I'm going to incorporate the instant offense
from the decision held on December the 1st, 1982, pages two
through six.
INMATE MANSON: I don't have that.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Okay. I'm
going to read it to you so you can - if you would listen to-
and then I'll give you opportunity to make corrections or
additions to the instant offense.
INMATE MANSON: I'm a little nervous.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Okay. Just
settle down because it's very informal and we want you to relax
as we go through this. Are you still - you're nervous?
INMATE MANSON: Yes. Yes, yes, very. I've been a
long time sitting in that cell -
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Well, we have
a lot of people who -
INMATE MANSON: - I'm not used to people that
much.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Okay. Let me
read the instant offense. If you'll listen please -
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: Mr. Chairman?
Mr. Chairman?
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Yes.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: we need to make a
correction. The date is the -- April 21st.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Excuse me,
The date today is April the 21st, 1992. Thank you.
Shortly before midnight on August - I'm reading
from the second - third page - second page of the Board
report dated 12/01/82. Shortly before midnight on August 8,
1969 the prisoner informed his crime partners that now is the
time for helter skelter. The crime partners were directed to
accompany Charles Watson to carry out the orders given by the
prisoner. The crime partners at the time were Linda Cabastian
UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: Kasabian.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Kasabian,
Susan Atkins and Patricia Krenwinkel. As the crime partners
were in the car getting ready to leave the area, the prisoner
informed them, "you girls know what I mean," something to which
he instructed them to leave a sign. Crime partner
Watson drove directly to 10050 Selio - Selio [phonetic
spelling] Drive where he stopped the car. Linda Kasabian held
three knives and one gun during the trip. Watson then cut the
overhead telephone wires at the scene and parked the vehicle.
INMATE MANSON: Excuse me. Where we getting this
from?
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: This is from
the Board report dated 12/01/82. Do you have a copy of that?
INMATE MANSON: No, I don't. Who - whose
signature's on the end of that?
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: This is a
Board report. This is the hearing that was held at that
particular time -
INMATE MANSON: Uh-huh.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: - and this
was the reading of the instant offense at that particular time.
INMATE MANSON: That sounds like a book.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Well, if
you'll listen and then you can make corrections.
INMATE MANSON: Yes. Okay.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Okay?
INMATE MANSON: Yes.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: All right.
Crime partner Atkins and Krenwinkel had been in the back seat
with Linda Kasabian, the passenger in the right front seat.
Watson then carried some [inaudible] over the hill and to the
outer premises of 10050 Selio Drive.
The vehicle containing victim Stephen Parent
[phonetic spelling] approached the gate opening into the
street. Watson stopped him at gunpoint and Parent stated,
"please don't hurt me, I won't say anything.' Watson shot
Parent five times and turned off the ignition of his car.
All of the crime partners then proceeded to the house where
Watson cut a window screen. Linda Kasabian acted as a lookout
while another female crime partner entered the residence
through an open window and admitted the other crime partners.
Within the residence the prisoner's crime partners,
without provocation, logic or reason, murdered Abigail Anne
Folger by inflicting a total of 28 multiple stab wounds on her
body. Victim Wachezski - excuse me - victim -
MR. KAY: Voitek [phonetic spelling]
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Voitek, count
two, was killed by multiple stab wounds. A gunshot wound to
his left back and multiple forced trauma of blunt nature to the
head. Victim Sharon Tate Polanski was killed with multiple
stab wounds. Victim Jay Sebring was killed
by multiple stab wounds.
On August the 10th, 1969, the prisoner drove his
crime partners to a location near the residence of victim Leo
and Rosemary LaBanca - LaBianca. The prisoner entered the
LaBianca home alone at gunpoint and tied up the victims.
He impressed them with the statement that they would not be
harmed and that a robbery was taking place. He then returned
to the vehicle containing his crime partners and then directed
them to enter that residence and kill the occupants. He
informed them not to notify the victims that they would be
killed.
Crime partner Charles Watson, Patricia Krenwinkel,
Leslie Van Houten, then entered the residence and the prisoner
drove away from the scene. The crime partners entered the
residence and in a callous manner killed Leo LaBianca by
inflicting multiple stab wounds to his neck and abdomen.
Rosemary LaBianca was killed by multiple stab wounds which were
inflicted to the neck and trunk.
The crime partners carved the wood war - the word
war on the Leo LaBianca's stomach with the use of a carving
fork. At both of the above murder scenes, the prisoner's crime
partners used blood of their victims to write the words.
Under case number A-267861, the prisoner was
received into the institution on December 13th, 1971 for
violation of first degree murder concurrent with prior term.
The pistol, knives and swords were used in the following crimes
which the prisoner committed with crime partners Bira Alstea-
how do you pronounce that?
MR. KAY: Beausoleil.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Beausoleil, and
Atkins and Grogan and Davis. The prisoner directed the crime
partners to go to the home of victim Gary Allen Highman -
MR. KAY: Hinman.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: - and have
him sign over his property. The crime partners followed the
prisoner's directions and on July 26th, 1969 they contacted the
prisoner from the Hinman residence. Prisoner and Davis then
went to the Hinman home and the prisoner struck Hinman with a
sword severing a part of the right ear and causing a laceration
to the left side of his face from his ear to his mouth. The
prisoner and Davis then drove away from the crime scene in
Hinman's automobile.
On July 27th, 1969 after suffering three days of
tortuous treatment, Hinman was killed by a stab wound through
the heart which was inflicted by Beausoleil.
When Hinman was found in the Topanga Canyon home on
July 31st, 1969 he had been stabbed through the heart in
addition to suffering a stab wound in the chest, a gash on the
top of his head, a gash behind the right ear, and a laceration
on the left side of his face which cut his ear and cheek.
This concludes the reading of the instant offense.
Do you have any additions or corrections, Mr. Manson, to the-
INMATE MANSON: I'd like to know who signed that,
who put their name on it.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Nobody put
their name on it. This was a hearing conducted in 1982. Your
hearing was conducted at that particular time and that's the
reading of the instant offense as taken from the probation
officeris report at the time of the trial that you had. Do you
have any corrections or additions to that?
INMATE MANSON: No. We could correct the whole
thing because it's basically hearsay.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Okay. Do you
remember what I said at the beginning of the hearing?
INMATE MANSON: Yes.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: I said that
we accept as true the court findings in the case. The fact
that you were found guilty and you are guilty of those
particular murders. If there's any change or anything you
wanted to say about -
INMATE MANSON: So all that is reality to you?
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Yes. Yes, we
accept it as true -
INMATE MANSON: And that - and either - even it
never happened it's still reality to you?
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Yes, because
you were found guilty by a court of law.
INMATE MANSON: And - okay - and all the things
that in that courtroom that went through that courtroom is
reality to you?
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Yes. Okay.
We accept as true -
INMATE MANSON: Now let me - let me just say one
thing.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Okay.
INMATE MANSON: Nine black Muslims and three
Mexicans signed a writ that said I was Jesus Christ. Is that
reality to you as well?
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: I didn't read
that in the Board report.
INMATE MANSON: Oh, well it's in the record. I
mean, you know.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Well, we've
read - we have your C-file and all the reports were made
available to us.
INMATE MANSON: Okay.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: And I think
we know most about, but that's the reason for the hearing, Mr.
Manson -
INMATE MANSON: Okay, okay.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: - that you
can bring these things out if you wish.
INMATE MANSON: I think if you'll look in your own
minds for every point, there's a counterpoint. For every red,
there's a black. For every black, there's a red.
In other words t what you're making me into in your
reports so that you can write your books and do your Rambo
trips and make your movies for public entertainment, is not
really what happened and what happened could have been
explained but if you will allow me to call a witness?
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: No. We do
not allow witnesses in here -
INMATE MANSON: I mean, it's within the panel. I'd
like to question that man in front of the panel.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: No. We do
not allow that, Mr. Manson. We have a procedure that we
follow.
INMATE MANSON: Okay. All right.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Now, if you
want to tell about the crime -
INMATE MANSON: Okay.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: - then go
ahead and tell about the crime. Otherwise [inaudible] -
INMATE MANSON: Then I will say it and then if it
isn't true, he can interrupt it through you, and then we can
talk through you. Is that legal?
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: You may-
you may - [inaudible]
INMATE MANSON: It says here that I can call
witnesses on this paper here.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: No.
INMATE MANSON: This says I got these rights to do
that.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: No, you do
not. If you would please respond to me there - any additions
or corrections to the instant offense that I just read?
INMATE MANSON: Yes. I didn't tie anybody up.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Okay.
INMATE MANSON: I was never on the scene where
anyone was killed. I think the law says you can only keep me
17 years or 18 years if I was never on the scene when anyone
was killed. I was never on the crime scene of anything.
The closest I came to the crime scene is I cut
Hinman's ear off in a fight over some money because the
Frenchman - he wouldn't pay the Frenchman and I told him, why
don't he be a man about himself and pay his debts? And we had
a fight.
So to - in order to hook me up to that they say
well, they tortured the dude three days. I was gone from that
scene of that crime for three days. I was never on the scene
of any crime. I never told anyone directly to do - to go
anywhere and do anything.
I always said - and mostly it come from the
witness stand - I said like, you know what to do, you have a
brain of your own, don't ask me what to do, I've just got out
of prison, I don't know what's going on out here. I hadn't
been out of jail long enough to really get a perspective of
what was happening.
I just was released from McNeil Island and I was in
Mexico City prison before that and I was in Terminal Island
before that. So I really wasn't up on the sixties as much as
you all make me out to be. I had just got out of prison.
Most of those people, I - like Kasabian, I knew
her two weeks. I had seen her two or three times around the
ranch. I had never even been with the broad, man, that much,
you know. People came around me because I played a lot of
music and I was fairly free and open because I really didn't
know, honestly.
Everyone says that I was the leader of those
people, but I was actually the follower of the children
because, like I never grew up. I've been in jail most of this
time, so I stayed in the minds of the children. And I'm pretty
much a street person so violence is no new thing to me. And
people getting hurt around me is no new thing.
I've lived in prison all my life. That happens all the time. I've
always walked on a line. In Ohio, Kentucky, Indiana, all
across this country. Cook County jail, Chicago, it's always
about fighting. That's part of everyday life where I live, you
know.
So, a lot of the things that people were doing were
just their own little episodes that they get involved in and
they looked at me like I was something like a friend or a
brother or a father or someone that understood because I
learned in prison that you can't really tell any one anything
because everybody's got their own perspective.
And all you can do is reflect people back at themselves and let
them make up their own mind about things.
So, when Beausoleil come to me with, could I be a
brother? I told him certainly, you know. So we were like in a
little brotherhood together, like we didn't lie to each other.
And whatever he said do, I would do. And whatever I said do,
he would do.
But as far as lining up someone for some kind of
helter skelter trip, you know, that's the District Attorney's
motive. That's the only thing he could find for a motive to
throw up on top of all that confusion he had.There
was no such thing in my mind as helter skelter. Helter skelter
was a song and it was a nightclub - we opened up a little
after-hours nightclub to make some money and play some music
and do some dancing and singing and play some stuff to make
some money for dune buggies to go out in the desert.
And we called the club Helter Skelter. It was a
helter skelter club because we would be there and when the cops
would come, we'd all melt into other dimensions because it
wasn't licensed to be anything in particular. And that was
kind of like a speakeasy back in the moonshine days behind the
movie set.
And I'm an outlaw. That's - they're right there,
you know, and I'm a gangster and I'm bad and I'm all the things
that I want to be. I'm pretty free within myself. I cut
people and I shoot them and I do whatever I have to do to
survive in the world I live in. But that has nothing to do
with me breaking the line.
Let me explain something about the penitentiary in
my mind. I came to Gilbault in Terre Haute, Indiana overlooking
the federal penitentiary in Indiana. And I was raised by a
bunch of monks that taught us how to tell the truth and how to
play handball and how to box in a boxing ring.
So, I learned to fight early and I ran off and
stole a bicycle and then I went to reform school for that. And
I ran off from reform school. And all my life I've been in
prison. I've been in jail running off. I never went to
school. I've never grown up. I've never accepted the system.
I've always accepted the ole man, the ole winos and I accepted
the retired veterans that were guards at the prisons and county
supervisors and such.
But there's a line that man walks. All men walk a
line. And I walk that line in prison. I don't tell on other
people. I don't carry tales about other people. If someone's
going to kill themselves, I feel obligated by Christian ethics
to tell him don't do that, your life is worth more than that.
But if he continues to go on a self-destructive path, I step
from his way. I get out of his way. I've learnt that in
prison.
Someone's got a knife and they're going to do
something, I say don't do that. And they say I'm going to do
it, I say I'm gone. It's got nothing to do with me. So they
call me on the phone and said the guy's got a gun, what do I
do? I said, well if he's got a gun he must be afraid of
something.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: Hold on a minute.
I think he's kind of straying away from what you had going -
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Okay.
INMATE MANSON: I 'm right there in Beausoleil's murder
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Yes. I think
he's talking - that's alright. [inaudible]
INMATE MANSON: I'm right there on the telephone
where he called and asked me what to do, This is the point
where I got convicted.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Go ahead, Mr.
Manson.
INMATE MANSON: It would come from the witness
stand that when on the telephone the only thing that ever
connected me with Hinman's murder was Beausoleil called me and
asked me what to do and I told him, you know what to do. I
didn't tell him like, [raising voice] you know what to do. I
told him, man, you're a man, grow up juvenile. Don't ask me
what to do. Stand on your own two feet. Be responsible for
your own actions. Don't ask me what to do. I just got out of
prison. I don't want to go back to jail.
I know what walking that line is. It's a straight
razor in the barber shop in McNeil Island. I've worked in a
straight razor, I've worked in the barber shop in the McNeil
Island. I was with all the ole men that came out a Alcatraz.
I don't break the law. The old man tells me, if you don't
break the law, you don't have to go to jail. You break the
law, you're putting yourself in jail. The law is there and the
will of God. You break that law, you're breaking the will of
God and you're going to go to jail. When I got out,
that was my symbol. Everybody else was doing this and this and
different symbols. I would do that. And they'd say, what is
that symbol? I'd say, that symbol is, I got one positive
thought. I'm in a rebirth movement. I just come out a prison.
I got a chance to start over. And I'm starting over and I'm
not breaking no laws. So don't come around me with no-
nothing. I don't want no money. I'll eat out of garbage cans.
I'll stay on the complete bottom. I'm underneath this snake
here. I'm not breaking no law.
So a lot a people came to me from the underworld
and in the outlaw world and run away from the war, from the
Vietnam War. That was - what's his name - them guys that
testified for you on them motorcycles. Them Italian kids that
came off of that Venice, California. They took the witness
stand and they said everything they could get away with to get
their cases dropped. There wasn't a witness that took that
witness stand -
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Okay. I
don't want to go into the hearing, Mr. Manson. Just talk about
the crime. Any changes from what I read which is -
INMATE MANSON: Well, that's what made that-
that's what wrote that down is what all these people said to
you guys, you know. They told you all these trips about what I
said, and when I said it, and how in the hell -
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: But any more
INMATE MANSON: - could you possibly know what I
said to somebody 25 years ago in the corner of - when we were
only talking to ourselves and I couldn't even remember what
that - what I said. I may have said just anything, but I know
what I would say now and I don't lie, so I know what I would
say then, you know. And I certainly wouldn't tell nobody to go
in and do nothing to anybody that I wouldn't want done to me.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Okay.
INMATE MANSON: Listen, listen. I got enough sense
to know that if I spit on you, that you - that gives you the
God-given right to spit on me back. Anything I do to you got
the right to do right back to me. And I'm not going get caught
up in that. I've been in jail long enough to know if you go
over on the other side of that yard and you beat somebody up
and you walk that lines, pretty sooner or later somebody's
going beat you up.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Okay. Let me
go on a little bit, okay, and talk about your prior
criminality. You've covered it pretty well. It says here that
you started your criminal history when you were very young, is
that right? Back in '48 you went to Terre Haute, Indiana Boys
School because of a burglary of a grocery store. And then you
went AWOL from the school and was placed in Indiana State
Reformatory -
INMATE MANSON: Before you get into that, before
you rush me off into that.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Okay.
INMATE MANSON: Every time I go to these committees
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Uh-huh.
INMATE MANSON: - I'll wait two or three years for
you and I'll sit in the cell and stare at the wall for two or
three years just waiting for you people. And then when you get
here you can't even give me five minutes.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: No -
INMATE MANSON: You're in such a rush, you know,
you know.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: All right.
Then what I -
INMATE MANSON: You have to slow down with my mind
and to - to see where your mind is.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: All right.
All right. You're right.
INMATE MANSON: Let me say this. The courtroom-
Charles Older would not been sitting on that bench had I not
went in the courtroom. So, we're kind a like married in this
thought together, like we're together whether we want to be
here together or not, you know, we're stuck in this madness,
you know.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Right.
INMATE MANSON: I don't want this job. I'm not
getting paid very much, you know.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: No, that's
true.
INMATE MANSON: And you're certainly going to get
paid if you take your time, so give me time to finish what I
was trying to do, will you, please?
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Is it on the
crime, Mr. Manson?
INMATE MANSON: Yes sir, it is.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Okay. Then -
INMATE MANSON: Yes, sir. It's the very same thing
that you read.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Okay.
INMATE MANSON: You know, I kind of anticipated
what you were going to say because you've been saying the same
thing for 20 years.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: All right.
INMATE MANSON: This has grown so much that the
people living in my life have moved in with uniforms and
penitentiaries. They built whole penitentiaries in the fear
that they generated off of this case. So the public can feel
safe against this monster, we're going to charge you 200
million dollars to build another set of penitentiaries.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Mr. Manson -
INMATE MANSON: so people living in my life, they
don't care whether I broke the law or not. They'll make up a
lot a things and sell a lot a books, 58 of them to be exact,
and billions of dollars has been made. And it's okay if I have
to spend my life in prison - let me finish - just to hold me
because I've shown you some strong strength and I haven't
surrendered to - to this by - by copping out to you or
telling tales on someone else or playing weak. You've
medicated me, you've burnt me, you've beat me, you've stabbed
me, you've done everything you can do to me and I'm still here.
And you're still going have to face the truth about this case
sooner or later. If not here -
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: [inaudible]
INMATE MANSON: - in the street.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: All right,
Mr. Manson. I'm going to give you an opportunity to give a
closing statement and you can read that or talk about that at
that particular time.
We're going to now talk about your prior
criminality. I said before, and I think you stated that you
were placed in a boys school at an early age, in 1948, for
burglary. You tried to escape from there or run away, whatever
it was, and you were placed in Indiana State Reformatory.
Again went AWOL in February of '51. You stole an
automobile, went to Utah. You were arrested there and you were
convicted of the Dyer Act and sentenced to the National
Training School for Boys in Washington, D.C.
Your adult convictions there are one, two, three,
four, five, six, seven, eight or nine adult convictions
beginning in 1955 and ending in 1969. They've consisted of the
Dyer Act - you were sentenced to three years in federal prison
for that, attempted escape, five years probation; forgery, mail
theft, ten years suspended; Los Angeles probation violation;
ten years federal prison, McNeil Island, Washington; South
Ukiah, interfering with an officer, three years probation; and
in Ventura possession of a drivers license and in Los Angeles,
was the instant offense of murders.
Now you said you also spent time in Mexico in a
prison.
INMATE MANSON: Yes, I was in Mexico for -
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: In prison
down there?
INMATE MANSON: In Mexico City, prison, yes.
Immigration prison.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: What was that
for?
INMATE MANSON: I had been accused of killing some
French people and a couple dudes in Acapulco.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: And how long
were you in prison down there?
INMATE MANSON: I was there a couple different
times.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: A couple
times?
INMATE MANSON: Uh-huh.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: I have here
under your personal factors, Mr. Manson, that you were born
on - in 1934 in Cincinnati, Ohio. Your mother was Kathy
Maddox, who never - and you never saw your natural father.
INMATE MANSON: That's not true.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: It's not
true?
INMATE MANSON: No. My father's name was William Manson.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: William?
INMATE MANSON: Yes.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: And did you
live with him for a while?
INMATE MANSON: No. You know, it's one of those
divorce trips where you see a guy walk by and he's your father
and you really don't - you know, I remember his boots -
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Yes.
INMATE MANSON: - and I remember him when he went
to the war. I remember when he - his uniform, but I don't
remember what he really looked like.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Your mother
was arrested shortly after the birth and sentenced to prison
for assault and robbery?
INMATE MANSON: Yes.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: And you lived
with your maternal grandparents in West Virginia. You don't
have a southern accent, do you?
INMATE MANSON: When I need it.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Yes, when you
need it. you later resided in foster homes until you were made
a ward of the court in '47. The rest of your juvenile life was
spent in various informatories, reformatories and boys schools
in Pennsylvania and Indiana. You dropped out of school
at the age of 9 in the third grade. You married Rosealie
Willis in 1954. The marriage ended in divorce in 1956. You
have one son, Charles, Jr. which resulted from this marriage,
but you have not seen your son since the divorce. Is that
correct, Mr. Manson?
INMATE MANSON: I don't know.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Okay. It
says here, no military service. You used L.S.D. extensively,
mescaline, amphetamines and barbiturates, but no alcohol. Is
that correct?
INMATE MANSON: No.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: No?
Enlighten me.
INMATE MANSON: I've taken a few tabs of acid, I
smoked grass, I smoked a little hash. I don't mess with drugs,
per se. I don't do anything self destructive. I like the
cactus buds. They're a spiritual experience, and I -
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Peyote?
INMATE MANSON: And mushrooms are okay.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Yes.
INMATE MANSON: I drink scotch whiskey. I like
scotch whiskey and I drink beer occasionally. I'm not much of
a wine drinker, but now and then some wine with meals is
alright.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: You get any
of that in here?
INMATE MANSON: No, no, no.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: All right.
We're going to - remember I said there was three areas of the
hearing. The second area is your post-conviction factors. We
may come back to this. I told you one area we have questions.
INMATE MANSON: Do I get to say anything about
that?
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Oh, yes.
We're going to do that in just a little bit. We're going to go
to your post-conviction factors and your psychiatric factors
and your psychiatric evaluation. Now, that's everything that's
happened to you since your last hearing, and also the
evaluation and Deputy Commissioner Brown will handle that on my
far right.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: Thank you, Mr.
Koenig.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: You're
welcome.
INMATE MANSON: Do I get a minute here - in
between there?
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: Why do you want a
minute?
INMATE MANSON: To respond to just what that record
that you laid out there?
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: We'll go back
to that. You -
INMATE MANSON: There's just no way my mind can
handle that.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: All right-
INMATE MANSON: In other words, I don't have the
papers you have and I can't refer to what you're referring to,
you know.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Yes. You may
respond to this right now, if you wish. Go ahead.
INMATE MANSON: Okay, okay. What that whole first
11 years being locked up in was trying to get away. You've got
a juvenile. You lock him up in juvenile hall, you don't know
anything. He's got no parents. He's got nobody telling him
the truth. Everybody's lying to him. So the only thing he can
do is run away.
So that's all I did. I ran away. And everytime I
ran away, they just got me and put me in a harder place to get
away. So everytime I would run away, they would take me and
put me in a more difficult place to run away until I got to the
federal prison system.
I ran through Indiana and I ran through Illinois
and I ran through Ohio. And then when they put me in
Washington, D.C., Dr. Hartman put me in Virginia, Natural
Bridge Camp with a [inaudible] and that was in 1952 - '51.
Then I went to Petersburg - Camp Petersburg, Virginia where
they got the military academy.
And then I went to Pennsylvania, then I went to
Ohio, and then in 1954 I got out and I [inaudible] knew what I
was doing. I'm still nine years old in third grade in my mind.
I couldn't very well know what was going on, you know, I never
had any help from anyone. No one ever done anything for me.
So what I did was I married the first girl I came
to and stole a car and came to California because that's where
she wanted to come and I just followed her around like a blind
guy because I really don't - California was a -you know, I
didn't know what California was. you know, I'm this dumb
hillbilly. I thought the pigeons were sea gulls and the sea
gulls were pigeons. I didn't know the difference, you know.
So when I got to California, it was all about
fighting in the county jail. I wasn't out there on the street
but what, maybe two or three weeks before they had me in the
jail back in Terminal Island.
So I went through the lieutenant there and they
brought the guys - the lieutenants and the men that were in
the uniforms from the dentist office and all the Navy and the
doctors from Dr. Hartman, they brought them from back East,
they brought them to Terminal Island with a lot of the old time
gangsters that were being released. They're going to Needles,
California and out in the desert, to doing different things in
the - in the Mafia world, in that old underworld, where they
made all that moonshine stuff.
So I learned all the things they learned. So
this - I'm picking up all these things from all these older
men. So they're laying out to me what's right and what's
wrong, and I don't really know what's right and what's wrong,
because people that say what's right and wrong, they're not
doing what they say. They're doing something different than
what they say, you know. So I had to find all this out for
myself.
So then when you keep calling me a criminal and
keep calling me a bad guy, then I got to be all the things that
you think in your mind that I am, which is - that's not really
what I am. you got me being a bastard, you got me being a dope
fiend. You got me being everything's bad. I'm only
five foot tall. I was five-seven, then I went to five-six, now
I'm down to five-two. I figure about another 20 years, I'll be
about four feet tall, because everybody's just constantly
pushing it over on me, like they got permission to get away
with doing anything they want to do to me, because I don't have
no parents, because I don't have no money, because I don't have
no education.
You've got to have some education or some parents
or you're not smart. You've got to be stupid if you don't read
and write, you know. You've got to be all the things that are
bad if you ain't got nobody to protect you, because you find
out in that cell, the only person that loves you, Jesus Christ.
And that rebirth movement in 1967 was mine. Now
you can tell Carter and all them other people that have been
stealing my life everyday and living in my reality, you know,
that they can read Corinthians 13, chapter verse, you know.
And that'll handle that part of it. That's the end of what I
got to say then.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: All right.
You did a good job there. We're going to go to the second area
of the hearing now. Mr. Brown will handle your post-
convictions.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: I want to start
right in with your C.D.C. 115s. You have about 60 of them.
And it doesn't appear that you have been doing very much to
change them. I won't go all the way back past 1981. As a
matter of fact, I'll start in '83. Your last time you appeared
before the Board was 1981, and I'm sure that that panel
reviewed all of those 115s with you prior to that time.
There are 60 of them starting from that time.
Disrespect towards staff, possession of hacksaw blade. Do you
have a copy of those?
INMATE MANSON: No.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: [Inaudible]
violence, dangerous properties?
INMATE MANSON: No. No, I know what all those are
though.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: I want you - I'm
going to read a couple this year that you had. March 14th,
1992 threatening staff. [reading] on 03/14/92 at approximately
1510 hours while conducting my duties as floor officer, I was
sweeping up a tier [inaudible] when Inmate Manson, B-33920
verbally demanded I go out to the S.H.U. yard and clear the
showers now - clean the showers now because in my - in his
opinion they're dirty. I informed Inmate Manson that I didn't
have time to clean them today. Inmate Manson began to call me
a liar and treacherous bitch. Inmate Manson also stated, I
would like to break all the bones in your body starting with
your elbow working down to your knees. Then Inmate Manson
stated, tell that man up there, the patrol group operator to
open his cell door and let me beat you into submission so that
you'll be under my power. [end reading]
Do you recall that?
INMATE MANSON: Yes.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: Threatening
staff -
INMATE MANSON: Do I get to explain it?
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: You want to explain that?
INMATE MANSON: Yes.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: You got it. Go ahead.
INMATE MANSON: Prison is a treacherous place to
live in. you miss one move, and you get stabbed. You've got
to be aware of everything that goes on. There's nothing that
you can overlook. You've got to be aware of your air and
ventilator that you breath, because if you've got emphysema and
a Ninja warrior gets in your air, he can stop your air.
So I'm in the shower area. They got some rust
that's coming out of the pipes, and this rust is building up
and it looks just exactly like instant coffee. If you take a
spoonful of that rust and you mix it in with instant coffee and
you give somebody a cup of coffee, you can burn their kidneys
out, you can kill them.
So there's a deadly substance out in the yard that
needs cleaned up, because if I'm aware of this substance, when
someone else comes out they see this substance, they may pick
some of it up and put it in my coffee. So I try to be aware of
everything.
So I asked the woman when she came to work - I
said, would you take the hose that you've been watering me down
with and squirting me with when no one's looking and go out
there and squirt down that yard and clean up that mess out
there, to where - and she says, well, no, she wasn't going to
do that. I said, well, somebody needs to do that because it's
a danger, you know. So she said she didn't want to do it and
she called me a liar so I called her a liar back.
Now, whether you want to accept this or not, the
deer in the woods - there's a doe and there's a buck. And the
buck comes up to doe and scares the doe and the doe turns
around and backs up to the buck. That's a matriarch and a
patriarch. I live in a patriarch. You live in a matriarch.
You back up to your women. I don't back up to my women. I
don't take no lip from my women. I don't give them none, but I
don't take none either.
If they disrespect me, I'll disrespect them back.
If they hit me, I'll hit them back.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: I 'm going to
interrupt you. I'm going to read these other two, because
they're along the same line. You keep your thought, and I'll
let you continue to go in that vein for a short while longer,
but I'm not going to allow you to ramble all day.
INMATE MANSON: You got it.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: The second one,
February the 1st, 1992, written by an officer by the name of
Bass and you told her Bass you're a fucking punk. She
attempted to counsel. You stated, open this - Bass open this
fucking door and I'll take that stick away from you and beat
your ass with it.
You got another one, February the 10th, i992,
officer by the name of Moony. You became verbally abusive
saying, get your nose out of my ass, you bitch. When I
attempted to proceed with the C.D.C. 115, Manson exposed his
penis, and said, suck my dick, you white bitch, you're nothing
but a witch. Manson then proceeded to spit on me.
You may go ahead with your - conclude your
statement that you were making about why this kind of behavior
keeps going on, as far as you're concerned.
INMATE MANSON: Prison is a place where they keep
men. They chew tobacco, they spit, they cuss, they do bad
things. They ride horses, they fall down. It's not a place
where women should be working.
Women come in here and we're sitting on the toilet.
We have to bare down and take our clothes off and bend over and
show our private parts and they stand there and gawk. And it's
not a place for a woman. I wouldn't want my mother working in
a prison, if I had one. I wouldn't want my sisters, I wouldn't
want my old ladies working in a prison.
Prison and the authoritative type jobs kind of-
they like certain kinds of jobs. Some women that don't like
men, they like these kind of jobs. They can get over on some
men and they feel really good about that, because they didn't
like their father and they don't like men anyway. Well, I
don't particularly like men either, whatever men is. Or
whatever that is to them, it's got nothing to do with what it
is to me.
So what it is to me is like - I say a lot of words
they say are bad words. To me, they're just words. I don't
see good words or bad words. Good and bad is up to the
individual to decide whatever he feels likes goods words.
So when you're talking to a man, you say, hey, you
old dirty [unintelligible]. You're saying things that you're
rapping, what they call the dozens, you're rapping back and
forwards. Then you got a guy and you're sitting there rapping
and you let a stinker, and there's two guys in the room and
(sniff-sniff] one of them smells it and looks at the other one,
says wasn't me. I mean, there's only two of you there. It
could - you know, I mean, how are you going to lie to
yourself, you know.
So me and this man is standing there and we're
rapping and man-talking back and forwards and this woman come
around the corner like I was talking to her. I wasn't talking
to her to start with. I was talking to the guy.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: You have enough
sense to understand that when you accumulated this many
disciplinaries, that somewhere along the line, somebody's
saying that you're doing it wrong. And somewhere in your mind,
you need to make some kind of decision that you're going to
make a choice to stop.
INMATE MANSON: Uh-huh.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: Now you can sit
up and you can rationalize and you can come up with all of the
rhetoric that you want to, but it isn't going to get you out of
the hole. You're just going to continue to dig yourself in
deeper.
INMATE MANSON: Okay. Can I explain that?
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: Go ahead.
INMATE MANSON: The turnaround, it comes to push,
push comes to shove, shove comes looking around to see where
you're up above or down below, where you're at and how it
turns. Something that says good, says bad, that's good, say
what it is, what it is, that's cool.
So when you catch cool you got some fool coming
through the door, you don't know what he's doing about what.
He just come and fell out of the water like a fish on the
floor. And he don't know what he's doing, he got no idea where
he's at and he's coming into other people's lives talking about
words he don't even know nothing about it.
He comes in to my world, my life, and tells me roo-
roo-rah, some old punk ass mother fucker shit that's going to
get me killed if I don't put up some force fields in his mind
to get his ding-dong ass off of me. So I tell him, get off of
me. If you don't get off of me, I'll teach you how to get off
of me. And he learns that, and he turns that around and he
tells the inmate, you get up against that wall and shake down.
And then he learns his man from getting the man and
when they feel real secure, then they have to get them 115s in
before I get to parole, because they want to get them 115s in
because they don't want to ever let me go, because if they let
me go they lose the best thing they've got because they feel
secure as long as they got me locked up in a cell. And they
feel like - yeah, they feel like they got the man right there
in the box where they can go back and say what's what to who
and says where, and you represent and who in what part or whose
courtroom, see.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: All right.
INMATE MANSON: Here's the thing - let me say this
to you Chief Thomas [sic]. When we -
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: Hold up, hold up
just a minute. My name -
INMATE MANSON: Brown - excuse me, Mr. Brown.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: My name is
written right there and don't you ever call me anything but
that name right there. Do you understand?
INMATE MANSON: Yes, sir. Yes, sir. Yes, sir.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: Now proceed.
INMATE MANSON: Sure. So it comes to this, it's
like, I'm not going to try to kid you. I'm not going to try
playing nothing with you.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: And I'm not going
to play with you and let me tell you something else -
INMATE MANSON: Now, wait a minute, wait a minute,
wait a minute -
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: No, no, no. you
wait.
INMATE MANSON: Oh, you want to kick me out of here
and [inaudible] go home.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: No, I'm not going
to kick you out of here. No way I'm going to kick you out-
INMATE MANSON: Well, I just don't - you know,
like the words you like -
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: Hold up. Will you
INMATE MANSON: - what do you want to prove here?
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: And I'm not going
to tell Corrections what to do with you, but we're going to
follow some kind of decorum and procedure in this hearing room.
INMATE MANSON: Uh-huh.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: I'm going to let
you go just a little bit longer on this that you're talking
about, then we're going to move to your psych reports. Now go
ahead.
INMATE MANSON: I reflect the procedure back to
stay alive, man, and I've got to get nasty sometimes, because
everybody you sending here working over me is not a nice guy,
you know. I think if any of you have any experience in jail,
you know that jail is not a very nice place to be.
And you have all kinds of different people in all
kinds of different levels and I have to deal with all those
levels. I have to deal with every kind of psychotic maniac you
got in the world trying to burn me up, trying to beat me up,
trying to get some attention to get me in any kind of direction
he can. And I have to propose a certain image and keep a
certain kind of guy stuck up there to keep those bullies off of
me. Because if I show any weakness, if I fall down in any
perspective, I get ate up because I run with a pack of wolves
and I've got to be a wolf.
And when it reflects back to you that I'm a no good
so and so and so forth, I'm reflecting a procedure that's
reflected on to me. If I don't have any other choice but to
get a 115 to stay out of something more dangerous or more
terrible, rather than stand - rather than stay out of my cell
and fight this big old ugly guy, I'm going to call him a bunch
of names so he'll put it on paper. And then when he puts it on
paper, I say, whew, boy, I didn't have togo with that
physically, then I could do it mentally.
As long as I run my jaw mentally and I get it put
on the paper, then physically I can walk around all the
violence and I can stay in peace and harmony.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: Are you saying
that you're deliberately keeping yourself placed in a security
holding unit?
INMATE MANSON: No, I'm saying that we're all doing
this. We all only use each other in different perspectives all
the time. If the song's saying, love won't let you go - it
ain't got nothing to do with, love won't let you go. It's
people who need you that they don't want to let you go.
They need you for different reasons. They need you
to feel secure in - because if they got guys they're afraid
of, you got two or three dudes over there that are bad and
you're afraid of them and you're a correctional officer, but
yet you got a guy over here that ain't afraid of you. It's
like this woman come to work and she goes over to this guy and
tells him, turn your radio down, and he tells her, shove it
right up your ass [inaudible], run her off.
So she comes over to my cell and because she sees
that he's afraid of me, so she takes my radio away and looks
back at him and says, hmnph. So then she uses me to stand up
over you, because in the darkness on the yard out there, you do
what I tell you to do.
When you're on that committee, I'll do what you
tell me to do. I'm the man in here. And that's a fact.
[OFF THE RECORD]
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: This is Tape 2 in
the case of Charles Manson, April the 21st, 1992, California
State Prison, Corcoran, California.
We're going to proceed to your psychiatric
evaluations. You don't have one. Well, you had one for this
year, but you didn't have one completed for the Board of Prison
Terms specifically.
Bruce T. Reed, Ph.D., Clinic Psychologist, went
over to see you on February the l9th and you refused to be
evaluated. Any reason why?
INMATE MANSON: Yes, I had two other doctors trying
to evaluate me at the same time. I couldn't - I can't write
that many books.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: What doctors were
trying to interview you at that time?
INMATE MANSON: Well, see the front side, you see
the doctor coming to me to give me help. The back side, he get
his information, he'll go to Turkey. He's over in France
writing books about the psychotherapy or [inaudible] therapy-
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: Which doctors came
to visit you at the time Dr. Reed tried to get in?
INMATE MANSON: Dr. Christopherson, Dr. White.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: Where are they
from?
INMATE MANSON: Right here. Since then, I think
Christopherson's been fired for ethics violation of some sort.
Then there's Willis - Dr. Willis.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: Willis came over
to see you this -
INMATE MANSON: Willis has been my psychiatrist.
We went through - if you'll check the record, we went through
two sessions. He said I was okay for level 3. He said that I
was alright for level 3.
What this latest doctor wants is a - what's
happening out of 'Frisco is this law firm is coming up with new
psych evaluation with the prisoners union. The prisoner's
union in San Quentin, they got a bunch of inmates to sign a
suit for better psychiatric treatment. What that means is more
political power because they're using the psychiatric base to
get their doctors in here so they can get doctors up over the
uniform, so they can hold the reality up over the courts and
the minds of the people that live inside the prisons. Because
when they can do that, then they can do Vacaville.
See when I left Vacaville, there was 12 dead
doctors there of heart attacks. Dr. Morgan was the last doctor
that they found dead in the parking lot with his brains blown
out. I went to doctors -
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: Dr.
Christopherson saw you on January the 24th of this year.
INMATE MANSON: Yes, sir.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: And in his report
of that date, states that he went over to see you because you
were not eating. Staff was concerned.
INMATE MANSON: Yes, he came to see me two or three
times about that.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: But he didn't
appear to be concerned because he said you were eating
something, either candy bars or canteen or -
INMATE MANSON: Yes, I fast a lot.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: - or whatever,
but he wasn't concerned about your not eating. He talked about
your paranoid delusional disorder at that time in his report.
INMATE MANSON: Perspective.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: He prescribed a
plan for you and that was to put you on [inaudible] and said
this will have two affects. One, they will support or deny the
fact that he is on hunger strike, and they will also give the
inmate a chance to get out of his cell on occasions as a form
of environmental stimulation.
On the same vein, one, will have more frequent
visit to the psychiatrist. This too will monitor signs and
symptoms of active psychosis versus malingering; three, if
indeed he's on a hunger strike, he should be considered for the
M.O.U. What's M.O.U.?
INMATE MANSON: It's some kind of -
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: Memorandum of
Understanding? If he does refuse psychotropic -
INMATE MANSON: Medical observation unit.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: Medical
observation unit.
INMATE MANSON: Uh-huh.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: If indeed he's on
a - if he does refuse psychotropic medications, we may ask him
[inaudible] our decision, which is adjudged ordered involuntary
medication. It should also be noted that we should have a
careful monitoring of his intake and output including material
from the canteen.
So he's suggesting that you were kind of faking
things a little bit.
INMATE MANSON: Whenever you do something beyond
someone else's understanding, and they don't want to understand
it, they - they'll hate it and look at it as being bad. It
doesn't really - it isn't really bad. I fast. I fast to
tighten my stomach up. It makes me healthy. It's a spiritual
experience. Sometimes I go ten, 15, 30 days. Sometimes I go
longer than that. I fast until I can get my mind straightened
around.
Whenever - when a bad circumstance comes to me and
I have to deal with the mental situation all around me, I'm
surrounded by inmates and officers and all kinds of things
beyond your comprehension, I have to sit and I have to balance
all those things in my mind.
So what I do is I quit eating, and when I quit
eating, what happens is that everything trusts, and trust is
going one way, but trust it goes the other way too. I'm your
economy. If I don't eat, then you don't know whether I'm
trusting you, because the only way you know if I trust you is
if I eat from your hands.
So I hold all the trust with the food and when I
don't eat, then everybody gets scared and they start going
through - they're not sure and then I'm paranoid, because
anything around me is going to be my fault because I'm the last
chicken in line.
One chicken - the dogs bark at the chickens and
the chickens get to pecking on each other and then you get the
last chicken in line and they just peck him till he's either
gone, or they get it straightened around, you know.
And like, being the last chicken in line, I have to
take up the slack, so I - what I do is I quit eating. And
then all the fat people that can't quit eating, they start
going through a lot of changes when I show them I'm about ten
times stronger then they ever thought about dreaming about.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: Let me ask you
something, now that you got the fat joke out. What have you
done in all the years that you've been on prison that this
panel or anybody could look at that would indicate that there's
been a change in Charles Manson?
INMATE MANSON: I change all the time, sir.
Everyday I'm going to change.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: Well, I can't
measure that. you have to tell me.
INMATE MANSON: Can I ask you a couple questions?
What did you do before this - so I know what foundation in
your mind where I can speak to you from? You got any juris
prudence? You got any correctional officer experience or
policeman or what?
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: I don't think you
need to know that. All you need to know is -
INMATE MANSON: Can I ask you?
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Just answer
the question.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: All you need to
know is that I'm sitting on this panel today.
INMATE MANSON: Okay. Well, we'll go the judge.
The judge sets on the bench and he takes in his mind the crime.
It comes to him for judgment. If it goes through his
understanding and he watches it, judge itself. The judge
really doesn't judge it. He judges - he lets the district
attorney and it passes through his understanding.
He does this six hours a day, seven days a week,
five days a week. He retires 65 years old. He's done that for
8000 hours. I've done the same thing all my life, 24 hours a
day, so I'm about 15 street poor judges in my mind. In other
words, I know more about law than anybody in the world. I know
more about courts and procedures and criminology and penalogy
and procedure than any card shark dealing devils off the bench
in Monte Carlo.
I know more about the economy, more about money,
more about the government than any ten presidents you got. you
know, in other words, I've sit in solitary confinement and I've
watched everything you guys do, and the truth is you're all
lying to yourselves, you know. And like -
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Mr. Manson,
you're not answering Mr. Brown's question.
INMATE MANSON: I'm not?
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: No. He asked
you what have you done in the institution to show the Board of
Prison Terms and society that you've changed?
INMATE MANSON: I'm real with you. I don't
pretend. I'm not bringing you a bunch of phony garbage. I'm
not trying to tell you that I'm a good guy. I'm just myself,
whatever that is. I believe in God and I do the best I can
everyday by everybody I can, you know. When something bad
comes up, I react bad to it, you know. I can fight. I can't
read and write too good, but boy I can fight. You wouldn't
believe how I could fight because I've been fighting ail my
life to survive, and I live right on that edge of survival, you
know. I just survive.
I play a little music when I'm allowed to. I draw
real good, but they took my pencils. Everything I do, if I can
do it real good, they'll take it away from me. I used to do-
make little dolls of strings, then he come took the string.
So I'm not allowed to do anything. I don't have any clothes.
I haven't combed my hair in two, three years, you know, I can't
comb my hair. I can't do that.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: Have you been
involved in any psychiatric intervention?
INMATE MANSON: Yes, yes. I've seen more doctors
than doctors have seen inmates. I was with Dr. Nichol there in
the back alley over there in Vacaville with [inaudible].
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: Was this in a
therapy setting?
INMATE MANSON: Well, I guess you could call it the
therapy setting. I was handling all the crazy people and
taking care of the kids in the visiting room and [inaudible] in
the garden and chapel.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: Was anybody doing
anything with you?
INMATE MANSON: No, everybody was doing what I told
them.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: No, no. Were any
of the therapists doing anything to assist you in your life?
INMATE MANSON: No. It was me doing it for them.
I had to look out for the veterans just came back from the war
and all the wheelchairs and all the doctors. They had a lot of
Vietnamese doctors come in, couldn't speak English, so I had to
get the medication all straightened around for that, you know,
because my life at the bottom, I got to look out for everybody
else's life too or I can't get on through what I'm trying to
do.
I like to play music, but they took my music away
and they took my guitar away. That's the only thing I do. I
play a little music. But they're scared of that. Anything I
do, they get afraid of and then they'll run and tell the cops
that they're afraid of whatever I'm doing and they run, take it
away from me and I'm not allowed to do anything. So I just sit
in a cell, you know. I don't really need to do anything
because I'm doing everything all the way anyway. And my
radio -
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: Now you keep
talking about not being able to read and write.
INMATE MANSON: Not that well. I read and write
[inaudible].
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: You have an I.Q.
that's up well over a 100 points.
INMATE MANSON: Yes, I am pretty smart.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: And you've been
in prison all these years. Have you done anything at all to
improve your grades?
INMATE MANSON: Grades for what? What am I doing?
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: Well, you keep
harping on the fact that you cannot read very well, nor can you
write very well.
INMATE MANSON: No, I just - I'm not harping. I'm
just explaining that that's -
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: You keep saying
it.
INMATE MANSON: - that's where I'm at.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: Have you done
anything to improve your reading and writing skills?
INMATE MANSON: Yes, I read a book. I read a book.
It was kind of boring, man. you know, I can think better
things than I can read. I mean, reading is kind of like
slowing down and people only love each other in books. You
can't love each other in reality, because you're all trapped in
books, locked up in wars. You're all locked up in the Second
World War, man. You're still fighting wars over there, you
know.
I was trying to unlock that war. That's what was
over there trying to unlock the wars. Bob Arondis [phonetic
spelling] came from India and the Dr. Hyler [phonetic spelling]
used to come over and tell me what Bob Arondis had to say
about, you know, the lovey love center there in Berkeley where
they've had to hire minds of the religious perspective there.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: And so you
haven't done any of those kinds of things?
INMATE MANSON: Well, what I'm trying to explain to
you without a lot of - I don't want to appear like I'm
somebody, but I'm on top of everything. I'm the smartest guy
in the world, you know. I can't - I don't think there's
anyone in the world - there's no subject I can't tell you
everything you want to know about it, you know. I've even
fixed a Harley Davidson motorcycle. I'm short change, I know
how to deal off the bottom. I've learned everything that you
taught me dad.
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: Okay -
INMATE MANSON: Yes, yes, yes, uh-huh, well
[inaudible] -
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: Return to the Chair.
PRESIDING BOMB COMISSIOND KOENIG: Thank you.
Okay. Mr. Manson, we're going to the third area of the hearing
now, parole plans. Mr. Aceto [background noise/inaudible].
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: Thank you. We have to
talk about your parole plans. Do you know the statement that
you made to your Counselors
INMATE MANSON: No.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: You stated that you had
no plans for the future. You also stated that you were not
interested in paroling and that you would be lost in our
society. His main concern at this time is to be released to a
general population setting in order to program.
INMATE MANSON: Makes sense to me.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: That's a good statement,
if it's yours, It doesn't sound like you.
INMATE MANSON: Well -
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: Was that your statement?
INMATE MANSON: Yes, basically I said that to that
broad, yes, but I might've said something else to somebody else
in a different perspective. I generally say to people what
they want to hear.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: Hold it. What broad are
you talking about?
INMATE MANSON: Some caseworker woman. Name was
Virginia. I think her name was Virginia.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: Correctional counselor?
INMATE MANSON: Yes, who was it?
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: I'm not going to tell
you. It's your counselor, you should know
INMATE MANSON: Well, yes, I have - there's all
kinds of counselors, man -
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: Talk too loud
[inaudible].
INMATE MANSON: There's all kinds of counselors,
they turn over all the time. They come and go like - I can't
keep track of those.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: Montero [phonetic
Spelling].
INMATE MANSON: [inaudible]
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: Montero.
INMATE MANSON: Montero I think that's a woman.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: It's not a broad. It's
a woman.
INMATE MANSON: I should say woman, okay.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: Okay. That's good
enough.
INMATE MANSON: Let me explain something.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: I didn't ask you nothing
yet. I just want to get the statement out of the way. Is that
your statement?
INMATE MANSON: Partly.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: Partly.
INMATE MANSON: To that person on that level. I've
got other legs. Cockroach got eight legs [inaudible] got
six.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: You said that you would
be lost in society today.
INMATE MANSON: My position is taken.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: You're safe in here
without society.
INMATE MANSON: No. It's got nothing to do with
safety. I'm not in that [inaudible]. The position that I
should be holding is taken by someone else.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: All right. Let me tell
you what you've got here. You may have seen them yourself.
You had 45, what your counselor call, fearful letters. Fearful
letters opposing your parole. That right?
INMATE MANSON: I've got a bunch of them, but I
think they're all from one person, aren't they?
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: Well, it would appear
that they're written by different people at a certain time,
except for a few. And it's all based on some rumor you let out
of this joint that you were going to be paroled and that you
would be accepting a hide out place and money in the bank and
that's what you put out as a rumor. Did you do that?
INMATE MANSON: Can't say for real.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: Can't say for real?
INMATE MANSON: No. There's a lot of rumors that
go in and out of different things I've been doing. That's what
hard about this whole thing. They put so much pressure on you
that everything I say or do goes - gets twisted around to what
people want it to be, want they wanted to have said. It hasn't
really got anything to do with what it really is. It's what
other people need it to be.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: This appeared in an
article in the paper, I know that. Here it is. Charlie Manson
should never return to society. It was written because the
news media said that Charlie Manson, masterminded through his
claim, the outrageous murder of Sharon Tate, da-da-da-da-da,
according to them [background noise/inaudible] admitted
[inaudible] put fear into the system. Now the system may be
putting fear into us. That the witness protection program
[inaudible] program to release Charlie Manson.
INMATE MANSON: Yes, they offered me a place in
Valachi [phonetic spelling].
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: Who was they?
INMATE MANSON: F.B.I.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: What do you got to do
with the F.B.I.? You don't have nothing to do with the F.B.I.
INMATE MANSON: Yes, I do. I was a barber in the
federal penitentiary for 20 years.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: Were you a snitch?
INMATE MANSON: Nope. That's the reason I didn't
take the program.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: Well, anyway -
INMATE HANSON: If had been a snitch, I'd been gone
for Virginia.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: There was a [inaudible]
there in l990 that almost got out of hand for you.
INMATE MANSON: Well, they come to me two or three
times and they wanted me to work and do different - draw
profiles for new criminal types. And that Mexican - New
Mexico thing jumped off the - they asked for some help. I'm
not really a - I'm not a - an informant type guy.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: Okay. Now, you're
talking what's [inaudible] when you get home, mom and dad? You
got a mom and dad? [inaudible] Sir?
INMATE MANSON: I 'd like to explain. I really
would.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: You don't have to. I
mean, it's -
INMATE MANSON: But I mean, I really want to. I
really want to.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: The question is, do you
have folks to rely on?
INMATE MANSON: But you don't understand. Each one
of you is somebody. I ain't nobody. I'm nothing. I'm now
[inaudible] now [inaudible]. My mother went to prison. She
left me. And everybody's lied to me. A few old men in the
Second World war were honest with me, you know. The older
dudes were, you know - I was used to working the hospital
[inaudible] you know.
I've always run with the - I've always run a main
line with the guys that were truthful and honest. And like,
the reason I haven't been - you haven't been able to kill me
is you haven't been able to find me, because everytime you send
somebody after me they can't find me because I'm not really
there in your minds.
Just like you draw a line across the desert and I'm
sitting there and you come and draw a line, you say, you can't
get out of there. I say, I'm aware. You say, you're locked
up. I say, locked up in what? He say, well, you're locked up
and we're free. And I say, oh yeah? And then you walk back
and forth and you play important with my life as if you've got
something that I want, you know.
Like you got out and I'm supposed to be in, but yet
I'm everywhere and I'm out and in and I'm all around, down to
San Diego Zoo, and I'm riding a motorcycle and I'm your
children and I'm the trees and I'm your -
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: Okay. Hold it. Hold it
up. Hold it up.
INMATE MANSON: I'm crazy and you got to get
another doctor. Yes, sir.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: I get the point.
INMATE MANSON: In other words, like you won't find
them on here, man. Not [inaudible] -
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: You do have some letters
on your behalf. Okay? Let me find it here. Support letters.
Sharon Quimbley - Sharon Quimbley, Cindy White. Do you know a
Cindy White?
INMATE MANSON: No. I know Squeaky. She's doing
time. she wrote a letter to the president.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: Margaret Ramone-
Ransom? You don't know that person?
INMATE MANSON: No, I don't know them.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: These are your
supporters I'm talking about.
INMATE MANSON: Well, I didn't know I had any
supporters. I didn't really need any supporters actually. I
thought I was my supporter.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: George Stinson from
Cincinnati, Ohio.
INMATE MANSON: Simpson. Yes. George - St.
George. Yes, he's a good man. He's an orthodox religious kind
of guy. He's got a very good - very good mind.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: A relative of yours?
INMATE MANSON: Huh?
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: Is he a relative?
INMATE MANSON: No, no. Spiritually we're allies.
I'm allied spiritually with a lot of things.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: Okay. He wrote a two
page letter for you. Cindy White, again, she has -
INMATE MANSON: I never really applied for this, or
asked my friends for any support.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: Well, I know that but
you do have some people out there that are interested in you
INMATE MANSON: But you realize where most of those
letters come from, don't you?
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: Don't have an idea.
INMATE MANSON: Ulterior motive. I think the
doctor sent you one of them, but he sent it to you and he
didn't sign his name. He sent it from Sacramento. They
hoodwink their own paperwork, and then when it comes back, then
he can keep me here and then he can build a medical association
with me.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: You talking about Dr.
White?
INMATE MANSON: Yes. He - yes, Dr. White and
Christopherson.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: Did you want to show us
something here? The pictures?
INMATE MANSON: Oh, no. I had some pictures here.
No, no. These are just - I'm working on a zoo project for the
ecology. I've got frogs and I've got hawks and turtles,
lizards and I'm working on the backside of this game, trying to
get C.C. camps. We was trying to start C.C. camps when I was
in Folsom with Governor Brown. That's when Squeaky and Red and
Blue and Gold was out. That's when we were running colors out.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: Okay. One last thing I
have. Somewhere I read that you were getting $500 for an
autograph picture on the outside.
INMATE MANSON: Uh-huh.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: Is that correct?
INMATE MANSON: Yes.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: How is that done?
INMATE MANSON: Well, you see I live in the under
world. You live in the over world. I do a lot of things under
world that you guys don't see. I made about 75 albums in
Vacaville and I bootlegged about three times more music than
the Beatles put out.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: Music?
INMATE MANSON: Yes. I had the surfboard of the
Beach Boys but I didn't sell it because everytime I would go
to the music, they'd want to change the music. So rather than
change the music, I went into the subculture with it. I
got in an old nuclear submarine that I had from the Navy when I
was Section 8 in Leavenworth, Kansas with brother Dynamite and
the Mafia coming off of Frankie Costello and the Horseshoe Pits
in Pennsylvania in 1952. And it was like, I'm an awful big
fellow. I'm really big. I've got a great big body, because my
body's underground.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: Tell me about the
albums.
INMATE MANSON: This is music about the ecology,
the air [inaudible].
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: The pictures - the
autograph were on the albums. Is that what you're saying?
INMATE MANSON: No, no. That's just a backlash of
the younger generations, like -
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: You got me mixed up
then.
INMATE MANSON: Remember the old movie where the
piper - the pied piper, they said you play all the rats into
the river and that they would pay you. And then the people
never paid the piper so they always kept losing their
children. Well, you've lost six generations of children to me,
because you won't pay me what you owe me. Because I didn't
break no law. I didn't kill nobody. I didn't tell nobody to
get killed.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: Okay.
INMATE MANSON: I didn't get no trial, you know.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: Okay. Okay, Mr.
Manson.
INMATE MANSON: We don't want to hear none of that,
see -
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: That's it. I don't have
anything -
INMATE MANSON: we don't want to mention anything
up in the truth.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: We're back to
me. I'm the Chairman.
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: I 'm all done.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Okay. And
this is time for questions by any one of the panel members and
the District Attorney. I have a couple questions. Do you feel
any responsibility for the murders?
INMATE MANSON: Sure.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Okay. Could
you elaborate briefly?
INMATE MANSON: I influenced a lot of people,
unbeknownst to my own understanding of it. I didn't understand
the fears of the people outside. I didn't understand the
insecurities of people outside. I didn't understand people
outside.
And a lot of things that I said and did effected a
lot of people in a lot of different directions. It wasn't
intentional and it definitely wasn't with malice or
aforethought.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG; Okay. You
answered it. Do you have remorse, Mr. Manson? Do you feel any
remorse for the victims whatsoever?
INMATE MANSON: Now, we've reached an impasse here,
man. We're in pawn four, bishop 4 and seven - let's see. How
do I finesse that? You say in your minds that I'm guilty of
everything that you've got on paper. So therefore, it would
run logic that I would need to have remorse for what you think
is reality, and if that be true, then all the oceans' contents,
if it were my tears, there would not be enough to express the
remorse that I have for the sadness of that world that you
people live in.
But I don't have - on the other side of that, I
ask you back the same thing, you know. You've been using me
ever since I was ten years old. You used to beat me with
leather straps, you know. It's like, does anyone have any
remorse that I've spent 23 years in a solitary cell and even on
Devils Island, you didn't keep anyone over five years. You
broke every record that they've ever set in the planet Earth.
You only kept Christ on the cross three days.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Mr. Manson, I
think you answered the question. Do you have a - still have a
family, per se, that is, the type of family you had at the time
of the crimes? Do you still have a family?
INMATE MANSON: Family?
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Uh-huh.
INMATE MANSON: That's another one of the District
Attorney's - see, when they set that case into the paper were
to make it real, they had to get - catch a little words so
they could turn all that into - make it into a reality.
Hippie cult leader, is a word that they used, leader, family.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Well, I
believe I read in the reports where you yourself mentioned your
family [inaudible] -
INMATE MANSON: Yes, well, you -
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG:
[inaudible] [inaudible] -
INMATE MANSON: - you keep driving that on me,
and then I have to refer to what's already on me.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: My simple
question is, do you still have a family as existed at that
particular time?
INMATE MANSON: Well, I can't - I can't answer
that in just a - you know, it would take more time than you
want to listen to me -
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Well, yes or
no? You either have a family [inaudible] -
INMATE MANSON: Well, there's no yes or no
[unintelligible].
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: All right.
All right.
INMATE MANSON: Yes, no or [unintelligible] you
know, like you is stuck in yes or no, yes, all right.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: All right.
Mr. Brown, do you have any other questiens?
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: I have no further
questions. Thank you.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Mr. Aceto?
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: No.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: All right.
Mr. Kay, we're going to go to questions by the District
Attorney on something that has not been covered, anything that
has not been covered or something that he would like to
emphasize. He will pose the questions to the panel and when
you answer the panel - the questions, Mr. Manson, would you
answer the panel, please.
INMATE MANSON: All right.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Okay. Go
ahead, Mr. Kay. Do you have any questions?
INMATE MANSON: And do we get to do this back the
other way?
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: No.
INMATE MANSON: Oh, yes, yes. Now what do all you
people think about that? Yes, yes. We have fair play, huh?
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: This is -
[inaudible] -
INMATE MANSON: [inaudible] -
BOARD COMMISSIONER ACETO: Don't look at the
camera. Look at the panel.
INMATE MANSON: Yes, I know, yes, I know
[inaudible].
MR. KAY: Thank you. I think the interesting thing
for the Board to do here is to question Mr. Manson about the
ninth murder he was convicted of. He doesn't mind talking
about the Tate-LaBianca murders and Hinman murder because he's
never accepted the law of conspiracy and aiding and abetting in
California. And he always thought that if he didn't physically
do the murder himself, that he wouldn't be guilty. His
followers would be guilty, but he didn't really care about
that.
But the one murder that he doesn't like to talk
about because the evidence came out in court that he personally
stabbed Shorty Shea to death. He stabbed him, Bruce Davis
stabbed him, Tex Watson stabbed him.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Excuse me,
Mr. Kay.
MR. KAY: Yes.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: This is time
for questions.
MR KAY: Yes.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Do you have
any questions?
MR. KAY: Yes. That's the question I would like
you to ask Mr. Manson, what he did to Shorty Shea and how
Shorty Shea died.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG; Okay. You
heard the question, Mr. Manson. Would you answer - face the
panel and answer, please?
INMATE MANSON: Shorty Shea was not short. He was
a great big guy and he's very tough. He had everybody bullied,
he had everybody buffaloed and there was a whole bunch of guys
around. And he was pushing on Steve and he was pushing on
someone else and I moved in and I said, if you go into combat
with someone you don't hesitate, and I'm going to show you kids
how to do this one time and then don't invoke me to no violence
any more.
And I moved on Shorty and I put him in a - in a
situation where he couldn't move. And then I said, now can you
understand what I'm saying to you? And he said, yeah. I
stepped up on the highway and hitchhiked a ride. And about
three or four minutes later, somebody stabbed him and he was
stabbed to death and he was killed.
Now wait a minute -
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Go ahead.
INMATE MANSON: Anybody that knows anything about
combat knows that when you go into a combat situation and
you're on a line with something, that line can mean your life
or your death. If you're on the line of life and death and
you're gone and you're up on another line, that other reality's
a completely different reality. It hasn't got anything do with
the other side of that line.
I was on that side of the line and it was a violent
situation and I did deal with it and I put it into where it
was - let me say this - there's only one way I can explain
it. Duke in the joint is a guy that can fight with his fists.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Mr. Kay -
INMATE MANSON: Wait a minute, let me explain
this.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: All right.
INMATE MANSON: This will explain it. The count is
somebody who don't fight with his fists. He fights with his
mind. He sits up on top of the count. When the count is
clear, he runs the radio and the duke does all the physical
things, like the first cop does his level, then the sergeant -
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Mr. Manson,
just a second.
INMATE MANSON: I can't explain it to you, man.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Now, wait a
minute.
INNATE MANSON: Don't have a yes or no.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: The question
was, did you kill Shorty Shea?
INMATE MANSON: No, no, I didn't have -
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: You didn't
personally kill Shorty Shea?
INMATE MANSON: Not personally, no.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Did you order
him to be killed?
INMATE MANSON: I know there was a fight, man -
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Did you order
him to be killed?
INMATE MANSON: No.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: All right.
Another question, please?
MR. KAY: All right. The last question, because I
don't want to take up a lot of the Board's time, but I'd like
the Board to ask Mr. Manson whether on the night of the Tate
murders at the Tate house, after the murders were committed,
did he go to the residence to see what had been done? And if
so, what did he do when he was there?
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: You heard the
question, Mr. Manson. Answer -
INMATE MANSON: I had a traffic ticket in San
Diego, but ask him why the District Attorney moved the highway
patrolman to the East Coast along with the traffic ticket.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Mr. Manson,
did you go to the residence afterwards?
INMATE MANSON: No, no. Let me - let me explain
that to the Board. The reason they want to say that is because
they should've let me out of here three years ago because if
I'm not on any scene of the crime, he can only keep me 18
years. You've already had me 23, so I can sue you for Hearst
Castle, probably.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Okay. Did
that answer your question?
MR. KAY: Yes, thank you.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Are there any
other questions you have Mr. Kay?
MR. KAY: No.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Thank you.
INMATE MANSON: Thank you.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Now, this
time we're going to have closing statements. First by the
District Attorney and then you'll have the opportunity for the
final closing statement before we recess. Okay, Mr. Kay.
MR. KAY: Thank you very much. Penal Code Section
3041.5(b)(2), subsection © empowers the Board to deny a life
prisoner a new parole hearing for five years if you find three
things: (1) that the prisoner is unsuitable for parole, (2)
that he has been convicted for more than two murders, and (3)
it would not be likely that he would be suitable for parole
during the period of five year denial.
Charles Manson, through his actions and [inaudible]
to the murders of nine innocent people, plus the attitudes and
actions that he has shown while in person for those murders.
By those actions and attitudes, he has demonstrated
unquestionably that he is deserving of a unanimous finding of
unsuitability by the Board and the maximum five year denial.
Charles Manson attained his status as America's
most famous and feared criminal by his powerful ability to
control his followers. And from July 25th, 1969 through and
including August 28th, 1969 led them on a month long murderous
rampage.
That murderous rampage started at Gary Hinman's
residence on July 25th. Mr. Hinman was not killed until the
27th, but he was tortured over a three day period, and then
went to the Tate hour where Sharon Tate, Jay Sebring, Abigail
Folger, Voytek Frykowski and Stephen Parent were killed on
August 9th. Then on August 10th, Leno and Rosemary La Bianca,
and on August 28th, Donald Shea - and I should repeat that the
evidence was clear in his trial that Mr. Manson did stab Mr.
Shea.
The first three murders involving eight victims
were all tied into Mr. Manson's desire to ferment or take
advantage of black-white race war. The murder of Shorty Shea
was caused by Mr. Manson wanting to get revenge against him.
The enormity and cruelty of these murders almost
defies belief. The motive for the Tate and La Bianca murders
is enough in and of itself for the Board to deny Mr. Manson
parole and Mr. Watson and the three girls parole forever.
Helter skelter, what was this and how did it start?
Well it started by Manson, who was the guru on L.S.D. trips
leading his family members through the trips. They would
listen to the Beatles white album. And Mr. Manson and the
others - and it wasn't just Mr. Manson alone, because they
would kind of feed on each other - and they determined,
listening to the White album, with songs like Helter Skelter,
Revolution 9, Black Bird, Piggies, Sexy Sadie, Back in the
U.S.S.R., that the Beatles were the prophets.
It talked about in Revelations 9 and 10 of the
Bible - Mr. Manson I heard even is still quoting the Bible.
He could quote the Bible very well, but twist it to mean what
he wanted it to mean.
INMATE MANSON: [Inaudible]
MR. KAY: Mr. Manson felt that there was going to
be this black-white revolution and the family was going to be
the beneficiaries because the blacks were going to kill all of
the whites, except for Manson and the family. And Manson and
the family were going to escape to the bottomless pit talked
about in Revelations 9 and 10 of the Bible. And they would
live in this bottomless pit for 50 to 100 years in miniaturized
form and then they would've grown to the size of 144,000, the
12 tribes if Israel.
And at the end of this 50 to 100 year period,
Manson and the family would come out of the bottomless pit and
there would only be blacks left - black president, black
senators, black congressmen. But Manson, who is a real racist,
thought that blacks were too stupid to maintain power. And as
soon as he and the family came out of the bottomless pit, the
blacks would rush up to him and turn over all power. Now it
was never clear whether he was going to rule the world, but at
least he was going to rule the United States.
Now I know this sounds bizarre, but the problem is
that Manson and his followers believed in this motive enough to
kill innocent people. At the trial we showed that Manson was
so serious about this that he went to a sporting goods store in
Santa Monica and bought expensive golden rope that he was going
to lower himself into the bottomless pit. He rented scuba
equipment because he thought the entrance to the bottomless pit
was under some underground river in Death Valley and he was
looking for the entrance.
He brought topographical maps because he felt that
he and the family were going to have to fight their way out of
L.A. from the Spahn Ranch to Death Valley to get to the
bottomless pit. He got an alliance with the Straight Satan's
motorcycle gang in Venice that they were going to help protect
him and lead him to the bottomless pit. He had one of the
Straight Satan's members, Danny OeCarlo, who ran a gun room out
in Spahn Ranch where he had machine guns and other armaments
and DeCarlo would pack bullets.
Now there are four separate occasions of murder
here. The first occasion of murder, the Hinman murder, was
tied into Manson preparing for war. He needed money because he
was buying armaments. He was buying dune buggies. He had his
own dune buggy. He had a machine gun mounted on the dune buggy
and he had a sheath for his sword that he kept on the side.
Well, he met Gary Hinman, who was a rock musician.
He met him at Dennis Wilson's house, the same place he met Tex
Watson. Dennis Wilson was the drummer for the Beach Boys.
Manson thought that Hinman had come into an inheritance and he
wanted his money and his property and he wanted Hinman to join
the family.
So he sent Beausoleil, Atkins and Brunner to Hinman ' s
house to get the property. Hinman was not interested in doing
this. He hadn't come into an inheritance and he didn't want to
join the family.
When he wasn't cooperating, Beausoleil called first
Bruce Davis - and I know there's been some misconception here
about who was Manson's chief lieutenant. Make no mistake about
it. Bruce Davis was Manson's chief lieutenant, not Tex Watson.
Tex Watson was certainly the major killer here, but when Manson
was not at the family -at the ranch in charge, Bruce Davis was
the one in charge. When Manson wanted somebody to study
scientology more - because that's how he used that a lot to
control people to get into their minds - he sent Bruce Davis
to London to the scientology headquarters to study scientology.
Anyway, Manson and Davis then went the second day
to Hinman's house and tried to force him to turn over his
property and when he wouldn't cooperate, Manson sliced his ear
off with Davis holding a gun on him. And then they left and
let Beausoleil know, get the property or else, and of course it
turned into, or else, with Beausoleil killing him on the third day
and Atkins holding a pillow over his nose so he - and his
mouth - so he couldn't breathe while he was dying from the
stab wounds.
Now Manson always felt that the blacks were going
to start the revolution. And when they didn't, he was very
impatient. And finally on the evening of August 8th, he told
his family members, the only thing blackie knows what to do is
what whitey shows him and I'm - that's a quote - and so we're
going to have to show blackie how to do it. Now is the time for
helter skelter.
And so he told Watson, Atkins, Krenwinkel and
Kasablan to go to the residence. Now the motive for the
murders, make no doubt about it, was helter skelter, but Manson
had an ulterior motive. He was very mad at the prior residents
of the Tate house. He had been there before. He knew the
layout. He and Watson had both been to a party there. But he
was very mad at Terry Melcher who - Doris Day's son and his
girlfriend Candice Bergen, because Manson wanted a recording
contract from Melcher and Melcher auditioned him and wouldn't
give him the contact.
So the reason that this particular residence was
picked out was because Manson wanted to send a message to
Melcher and Bergen that there but for the grace of God go you.
And he knew that they moved out. He knew that somebody else
lived there at the time. He didn't know who they were. He
didn't know any of these people at the residence. He knew that
somebody famous lived there.
And he told his followers that he wanted some
gruesome murders. He even talked at one point about gouging
eyeballs out and smashing them against the wall. And when they
left the ranch, he told the girls - he said, do what Watson
tells you to do because he knows the layout of the place and
leave a sign, something witchy.
Well, they followed his instructions because the
victims at the Tate house suffered 102 stab wounds. Sharon
Tate, who was eight and a half months pregnant was hung while
she was still alive. And I should tell you that Watson took a
long rope in there because Watson and Manson both knew the
living room had high beam ceilings that you could throw a rope
over and hang somebody. So that was planned from the very
beginning. Susan Atkins wrote in Sharon Tate's blood on the
front door, pig, the letters P - I - G. Now this wasn't good
enough for Mr. Manson.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Excuse me,
Mr. Kay.
MR. KAY: Yes.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: We're
retrying the case is actually what you're doing. We should be
talking about suitability on parole.
MR. KAY: Right. Yes.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: we know he
killed the people and we accept that -
MR. KAY: Right.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: - the
findings of the court. So I would like you to speak to
suitability, if you would, please.
MR. KAY: I will. I'm just about finished with
this area, but this goes to suitability, what he did in the
life crimes. That's a part of it, that's a part of your
hearing, and I just don't want people to forget what he did,
what he's responsible for. I'm not going blow-by-blow like I
would in the Watson hearing and in Van Houten. I mean, I would
do that, blow-by-blow there. I'm not doing it here. But I'm
telling about his directions.
On the La Biancas, he met in the bunkhouse on the
ranch and he scolded the people who were there at the Tate
murder and told them they had been too messy and that he was
going to show them how to do it this night.
And so they went - he led them on a four hour trip
around the County of Los Angeles, at one point even stopping at
a congregational church in South Pasadena and knocking on the
door trying to find the minister so that he could kill the
minister and hang the minister upside down to the cross in
front of the church.
Now in the La Bianca house, he went in by himself,
got the drop on Mr. and Mrs. La Bianca with a gun, tied them
up, tied their hands, assured them they were going to be okay,
that it was only a robbery.
He took one thing from the house when he went
outside. He took Mrs. La Bianca's wallet. And the reason that
he did this, because he had it later planted in what he felt
was a black area, because he wanted a black person to find the
wallet and to use the credit cards, Mrs. La Bianca's credit
cards, so that the blacks would get blamed for these murders
and that would start the revolution.
On the Shea murder, Shea was a ranch hand at Spahn
Ranch and knew that Manson and the family were up to no good,
but he knew that Mr. Spahn, who was 80 years old, was too old
to do anything about kicking Manson off. And so Mr. Shea
conspired with a neighboring rancher to kick Manson off the
ranch. That, and the fact that Mr. Shea who was white was
married to a black woman when Manson just couldn't understand
that. For those two reasons, he decided to take care of Mr.
Shea.
Now six of the nine victims who were murdered were
murdered in the supposed sanctity of their own homes, and seven
were complete strangers. Now what has Mr. Manson learned in
the 23, almost 23 years, that he has been in prison for these
murders? I thought Mr. Brown really hit the nail on the head
here.
In my estimation, Mr. Manson has learned nothing.
Other than physically aging, and Mr. Manson's going to be 58
this year, Mr. Manson is exactly the same person he was when he
was arrested at Barker Ranch in Death Valley on October 12th,
1969. He has no respect for authority, he has no respect for
society or desire to be part of it, and he has no remorse for
directing the murder of any of these nine victims.
His adjustment in prison has been horrible. His
record is replete with assaulting prison guards and staff,
including punching them, spitting in their face, throwing hot
coffee. And I thought Mr. Manson's talk here about spitting on
the guard, you would think listening to him that this was some
man that he spit on. It was a woman, that he spit in her face.
Mr. Manson doesn't like women. I think that's
pretty clear. His record's also replete with threatening staff
and guards, either that he's going to kill them or he's going
to have somebody else kill them.
His record is - also has in his possession of
contraband, he had L.S.D. in his cell in Vacaville and tried to
smuggle in a hacksaw blade when he was transferred to San
Quentin, and he was caught with escape plans when he was in
Vacaville.
Now, Mr. Brown said that he had 60 C.D.C. 115s. I
counted 571 but that's pretty close. But one of the important
things is that he has nine since his last hearing. And at the
last hearing, the Board directed him that one of the things
they wanted to see him do was to be disciplinary free. And
yet, what has he done? He's picked up nine C.D.C. 115s, the
same type of violations that he's had since he's been in
prison. He hasn't changed one iota.
What else has he done? He refused to cooperate
with the schedule of psychological evaluation and he refused to
appear at his 1982 and '89 parole hearing. I think that we
have to face the fact that based on Mr. Manson's words and
actions that he's really not serious about being paroled.
In 1981, he said that he did want to be paroled,
but since he hated people, he wanted to be paroled to Death
Valley so that he could live with his friends, the spiders and
the snakes or in the alternative, be paroled to space. Here
this time he told Correctional Counselor . . .
[OFF THE RECORD]
DEPUTY BOARD COMMISSIONER BROWN: This is Tape No.
3 in the hearing for Charles Manson 04/21/92, California State
Prison, Corcorcan. Proceed.
MR. KAY: This year in the Board report, he told
Correctional Counselor Montero - and I'd like to say about
that that this Board report by Correctional Counselor Montero-
- this is the forty-fourth parole hearing I've been to for
Manson, Watson, Atkins, Van Houten and Krenwinkel -is the best
Board report I've ever read. This is a cracker jack Board
report.
Anyway, he told Correctional Counselor Montero
that, "he has no plans for the future, that he was not
interested in paroling and that he would be lost in our
society." Well, I can tell Mr. Manson that our society feels
the same way about him. We don't want him back. The Board has
received over the years over 352,000 cards, letters, petitions
signed by individuals, all directed and sent to the Board in
Sacramento asking you members of the Board not to parole Mr.
Manson or the other four defendants convicted of the Tate-La
Bianca murders.
Charles Manson told his followers that Adolf
Hitler was his hero and he tried to emulate him. We can see
even today he still has a swastika on his forehead. Can we
ever risk setting a man like Charles Manson free in society, a
man who, in essence, tried to destroy our society? I think
not.
I would respectfully ask the Board to find Mr.
Manson unsuitable for parole and to give him the maximum five
year denial. Thank you very much.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Thank you,
Mr. Kay. Mr. Manson, would you speak to your suitability for
parole, please?
INMATE MANSON: Is there any way that we could take
a recess where I could use the restroom?
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Certainly.
We'll recess at this time. The time is now 1507 hours.
[OFF THE RECORD]
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: We've
reconvened the panel hearing on Charles Manson after a brief
break as requested by the prisoner. All participants are
present now who were present prior to the recess. The time is
1515 hours. Go ahead Mr. Manson with your closing statement
regarding suitability.
INMATE MANSON: You're going to limit me to
suitability?
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: I'll let you
ramble a little bit, but I'd like you to stick to suitability.
INMATE MANSON: Is that what you call it, rambling,
huh?
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Well, no, I
didn't mean it that way. I will allow you to talk about what
you would like to talk about, as long as you don't stray too
far from suitability, please.
INMATE MANSON: As long as I don't say anything,
it's okay if I talk?
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: No. I'll
allow you to say -
INMATE MANSON: You see nine dead people. That's
just - that's not even the tip of it. That just set one
little blaze to this thing that you call helter skelter that
you created for Rambos movies, so all the Italians can move
over from New York and move into the District Attorney's office
and this anglo-Christian girl don't seem to know which
whorehouse is - got the red light on it.
The law in my perspective is a [inaudible] like
the - there's a court on the inside, like an inmate court.
We've always held a court in the inner sanctum of the prison.
Peace officers are servants to the will of everyone, the Bible,
the church has a chapel and a preacher in it and we abide by
the rules and regulations. It goes into the courtroom to do
the same. If I abide by the rules and regulations I can walk
in harmony with God. If I don't abide by the rules and
regulations, sooner or later I have to fall short and go
through a lot of changes.
It's best you look into my mind now while you got a
chance while I'm still here. I know a lot about law. I know
the judge's bench. I know crime and school and doctors and
reports and I know bad and good and money and the economy and
gambling, prostitution. I see the world from the underworld
up .
So I go out in the desert when I get out in '54 and
I see birds and I see bees and bugs and trees and then I get
locked up. Well, when I get back out again, all these bugs and
birds and trees are gone. There shopping malls where the lake
used to be. You're using up all the water. The creeks is over
there where the freeway is and you can't swim there anymore,
there's no more fish there. And civilization has moved out and
it's choking all the life off the earth.
So it's none of my affair. I just got out of jail.
I don't know that much about it. A couple of old men I met in
Mexico City, we used to deal mushrooms and talk about the
planet and the earth and the balance of the earth, and all
these kids come around me and I'm playing music. And they ask
me, how do I know these things, and where do these things come
from? And I said, well, the only thing I know is what I
learned in jail, man, you know. My brother's in jail
[inaudible] you know, my brother's like, he's God, you know, he
lives in jail, you know. And that's all I know is what I've
done, you know.
I said, but I'll tell you, if you don't stop
cutting them trees down, there's going to be nothing of them
left, you know. And a lot of the kids never met anybody that
told them the truth. They never had anybody that was truthful
to them, you know. They never had anybody that wouldn't lie or
snake on them or play old fake games.
So I did was I was honest with a bunch of kids and
they used to come to me and say, we ain't got no place to stay
and I said, well, I ain't got no place to stay either. And
they say, well, can we stay with you? I said, can you stay
with me? They'd say, well, we want to be a family. I said,
don't put no tags on my toes, man. Don't give them people
nothing to identify them with. If they can come back and put
me back in the penitentiary with.
I know what conspiracy is. I got an intelligence,
I'm not that stupid. I can understand that bugs communicate.
I can understand that trees can hear you. I understand that
there are other life forms on this planet besides myself, you
know. And conspiracy, I understand the law.
And a lot of things that people have said in the
court is [inaudible] the game that they're gaming whether I'm
suitable for this planet earth or not probably will outlast
what the court's doing for money, because my principle is not
locked up in a bank and my soul is not locked up in a
government. And my life is not locked up in a penitentiary.
You've got my body in a cell, but that's only today, you know.
That don't count for no eternity. I'm walking in forever, man.
And this little game that we're playing here on
this level, there is more things that are important to you than
my parole and there's a whole lot more important to me than my
parole. If you want to give me a parole, I might consider
taking that and letting you live in my world. If you deny my
parole, you go off in your world. Don't come back at mine.
If I can get some trees growing over here and C.C.
camp and I can work with these guys in a uniform and I can work
and do a job in here like I don't get paid for the job that I
do in here. But if I'm honest with what I do in here, maybe
the preacher will let me out and hoe in your garden again.
And I was helping the kids over there in the
visiting room in Vacaville and then people wanted to use me
again and play some more politics and tell some more lies,
because they wanted to bring Bingham back from France, because
he's responsible for killing six people over there when San
Quentin came down from death row and Jackson got killed. But
we'll cover that up. We won't look at that because he's got
the money to get away with things like that.
So we got the juvenile running wild and we're
saying, where does the juvenile come from and where does he get
his principle from, the old winos that live in the county jail
or the retired veterans that were outcasts? And we dig into
their hearts and we see how real they are and how comes they
got up on the railroad train because they couldn't even get the
dog in the house, because she wouldn't let him do anything
except what the Queen of England said, and she's fighting
against Spain and that's still going into languages and it's so
abstract that someone has to carry insanity. Someone's got to
be insane. Someone's got to be the bad guy. How can we be
good guys?
There's another letter in there that you didn't
read about how Manson was burned up and how people threw fire
at him, they should've killed him. They didn't tell you that
they tried to kill me at least 30 or 40 times. But they hadn't
been able to kill me, because you ain't got nobody bad enough
to kill me, [inaudible] handcuffed. No two or three of you.
Because I'm right with my God and I'm right with myself. And I
didn't break the law. I didn't break God's law and I didn't
break man's law.
What you're doing in the political arena with
Hollywood to make your Rambo movies with my machine gun, the
machine gun was a World War II relic. It would only shoot one
bullet at a time. It wouldn't even go pop, pop, pop because it
was all worn out, it was so old.
But I liked it because I liked World War I, because
that was my father. I didn't worship Hitler any more than I
liked MacArthur. MacArthur and Truman was the same father figure
to me like the kids look up to Vietnam veterans as their father
figure, so I looked up to my grandfather in the first World War
and my father in the second World War.
And wherever there is a man, I am there also. In
the truth, I walk with all men. I'm bad. I'm as bad as I got
to be when it comes down. I deal. And I can deal from the
bottom, just as easy as I can deal from the top and I'd cheat
if it comes to where I need to cheat. And I steal if I need to
steal if I'm too hungry and I can't feel it any other way, I'll
do whatever I can do to survive, just like I've always done.
And if I have to pick up steel and roll it down to - do
whatever I got to do, that's what I got to do and that's what
I'll do.
I seen this, and this is the reality. The air in
L.A. basin is dying. Where there used to bees, the bees can't
live. Where there used to be butterflies, the butterflies
can't fly. I said to Blue - I said, girl I'm going to call
you Blue. I said, you see that sky? I said, that's sky's
dying. If we don't do something about that sky, nobody cares.
If you don't care, there's going to be no life left on this
planet. I said, do you see that water over there? I said,
they're dumping tons of junk in that water. So you're Blue for
the sky and the water and I -
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Mr. -
INMATE MANSON: Now wait - I set those people's
minds, like he said, I set their minds back on the track with
Jesus on a rebirth movement. I set it with a guy called Frank
Costello in the Horseshoe Pits. I set it with the Pope in the
Vatican. I set it with the Mafia and the gangsters. I set
it with every man I'd ever met in my life all the way back to
Creepy Carpis when he did the Ma Baker gang
with J. Edgar Hoover and the F.B.I. Because wherever's there's
been a man walking in the underworld from Cook County jail in
Chicago to the super chief that rides to L.A., from
Leavenworth, Kansas to [inaudible] Section 8, the Navy down to
the Coast Guard, wherever there's one walking, I've been
walking there with it.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Mr. Manson,
talk about suitability, please.
INMATE MANSON: I don't know what else I could be
if I couldn't be suitable to be your leader, I ain't nothing.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: All right.
INMATE MANSON: I 'm your president at least three
times. That's through Reagan up through [inaudible].
[Inaudible] was only his appointee and he only got there
because he was riding on me. That was my horse, that was my
divorce court to come back from Nixon, and the only reason J.R.
got up out of Texas was because I went across to Africa with
two [inaudible] from [inaudible] in 1960.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Mr. Manson-
- Mr. Manson, excuse me. Would you please talk as to why you
should be paroled? If you have nothing to say in that area,
then we're going to recess and we're going to deliberate.
INMATE MANSON: Okay. If I'm not -
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: [Inaudible]-
INMATE MANSON: - if I'm not paroled, and I don't
get a chance to get back up on top of this dream, you're going
to lose all your money, your farms ain't going to produce,
you're going to win helter skelter. You're going to win your
reality. You're going to get everything that you want right
from the pages of that court. That's going to be your reality
and you're coming. You're growing up and you're going to be
there, just like you want him to be there, that's where he's
coming because that's what you're making for yourselves.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: All right.
We're going to recess for deliberation. We'll call you back
after we make a decision. The time is now 1525 hours. The
prisoner will leave please.
INMATE MANSON: I don't need those papers.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: All right.
R E C E S S
D E C I S I O N
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: We've
reconvened the panel's hearing on Charles Manson. All
participants are present who were present prior to the recess
and the time is 1545 hours.
The panel reviewed all the information received and
relies on the following circumstances in concluding that the
prisoner is not suitable for parole and would pose an
unreasonable risk of danger to society if released at this
time.
The [inaudible] offense was carried out in an
especially heinous, atrocious and cruel manner. The offense
was carried out in a manner which exhibits a callous disregard
for the life and suffering of another. Multiple victims were
attacked, injured and killed in the same and separate
incidents. The victims were abused and defiled and mutilated
in the offense.
These conclusions are drawn from the Statement of
Facts wherein the prisoner [inaudible] participated in the
torture, mutilation and killing of nine victims. Seven of the
victims were strangers who were selected by the prisoner at
random. The murders were senseless, brutal, directed by the
prisoner to satisfy his idealistic vision of a race war.
The prisoner has a record of violent and assaultive
behavior, an escalating habit of criminal conduct and violence.
He had an unstable social history. He's failed to profit from
society's previous attempts to correct his criminality. These
included juvenile probation, juvenile camps, C.Y.A. commitment,
three prior prison terms and county jail and parole violation.
As to the unstable social history, the prior
criminality included beginning criminal conduct at an early
age, sent to juvenile boys school as a juvenile involved in
burglary, stealing vehicles, convicted of the Dyer Act and sent
to the National Training School in Washington, D.C. Adult
convictions included G.T.A., forgery, theft, interfering with a
peace officer, attempted escape from prison - attempted
escapes from prison, three prior prison terms, probation and
parole violation, extensive involvement in drugs and was under
federal parole at the time of the instant offenses.
The prisoner has programmed in a limited manner
while incarcerated. He's failed to develop a marketable skill
that can be put to use upon release. He's failed to upgrade
educationally and vocationally as previously recommended by the
Board and he's not participated to any extent - has not
participated in beneficial self help and therapy programming.
He failed to demonstrate any evidence of positive
change. Misconduct while incarcerated included 60 115s from
1971 to 1992, nine 115s since his last hearing, many for
threatening staff, the latest was on 2/11/92 where he received
three of a serious nature for spitting on a correctional
officer, threatening staff and resisting staff.
The psychiatric report authored - dated January of
1992 authored by Christopherson is unfavorable. He also
refused to attend a 1992 appointment for a psych evaluation.
The panel makes the following finding: that the
prisoner needs therapy in order to face, discuss, understand
and cope with stress in a nondestructive manner. Until
progress is made, the prisoner continues to be unpredictable
and a threat to others. Also therapy, although the panel feels
that therapy is needed, we question motivation and amenability.
In view of the prisoner's criminal history,
continued negative behavior and lack of program participation,
there is no indication that the prisoner would behave
differently -
INMATE MANSON: How can I participate? You've got
me locked in a hole, man.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Okay. Listen
to me -
INMATE MANSON: You guys get trapped up in all that
illusion and it keeps building up and making it worst.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Please listen
to what [inaudible].
INMATE MANSON: You've got to live in it.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: The
prisoner - the hearing panel, according to Section 3041.5©
of the Penal Code, the hearing panel finds that it is not
reasonable to expect that parole would be granted at a hearing
during the following five years.
The specific reasons for these findings are as
follows: No. 1, the crime itself. The prisoner committed the
offense in an especially heinous, atrocious and cruel manner
and that he participated in the killing of nine victims, most
victims selected at random to fulfill his idealistic dream of
helter skelter. As a result a longer period of observation and
evaluation is required before the Board should set a parole
date.
No. 2, the prisoner has a prior criminal record and
spent most of his life prior to the instant offense in and out
of correctional facilities.
No. 3, a longer period of time is required to
evaluate his suitability. In view of the prisoner's long
history of criminality and misconduct, these include 60 serious
115s, nine since his last hearing and three serious within the
last year.
No. 4, a recent psychiatric report dated January of
1992, authored by Christopherson, indicates a need for a longer
period of observation and evaluation.
And No. 5, the prisoner has not completed the
necessary programming which is essential to his adjustment and
needs additional time to gain such programming.
Recommendations to you, Mr. Manson, that you become
disciplinary free, that you work to reduce your
custody level so that the program opportunities will become
more available, that you upgrade when - and that's when you
can, upgrade vocationally and educationally and you participate
in self help and therapy programming.
This concludes the panel hearing. The time is now
1552 hours. The prisoner may leave. Good luck to you, Mr.
Manson.
INMATE MANSON: Good bye.
PRESIDING BOARD COMMISSIONER KOENIG: Here's a copy
[inaudible].
PAROLE DENIED 5 YEARS.
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