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Charles Manson & Parole

April 6, 2012 by · Comments Off on Charles Manson & Parole 

Charles Manson & Parole, Charles Manson has yet another parole hearing set next week, but his prosecutor Vincent Bugliosi told a meeting in Wichita Falls, Texas that he believed the infamous murderer would never be paroled.

Bugliosi said during his speech in this city within a stone’s throw of the Red River that Manson was a very unusual murderer in that “he sent other people out like robots to do the actual murders.”

Bugliosi said the difficulty in prosecuting the case was that it was Manson’s minions who did the actual murders. He had to prove Manson was the evil mastermind behind the brutal murders that took the lives of famed movie actress Sharon Tate and several other celebrities.

Manson told his right hand man Tex Watson to take other Manson Family Members and destroy everyone in the Melcher mansion as gruesome as they possibly could.

New Charles Manson

April 6, 2012 by · Comments Off on New Charles Manson 

New Charles Manson, It is a mug shot for the ages. Charles Manson, the most notorious mass murderer imprisoned in California and perhaps the nation, stares glumly at a camera, holding his booking number in front of him.

In the latest photo released by the California Department of Corrections, the 77-year-old Manson is gray-haired and gray-bearded, a shadow of the shaggy haired, wild-eyed killer whose visage glared from the covers of magazines in 1969.

He was a cult leader back then, the domineering force behind a rag-tag family of followers who said they killed for him.

Next Wednesday, Manson faces his 12th parole hearing. It could be his last because state law now allows a denial of parole for up to 15 years. The chances that he will be released are nil and he has told his jailers that he doesn’t plan to attend the hearing. But California Department of Corrections spokeswoman Terry Thornton said he could change his mind at the last minute.

Manson has not attended a parole hearing since 1997, when he rambled on for hours, denying that he had killed anyone and espousing the beliefs that guided his cult.

“I’m not saying that I wasn’t involved. I’m saying that I did not break man’s law nor did I break God’s law. Consider that in the judgments that you have for yourselves. Good day. Thank you,” he told the parole board.

Now, 43 years after the world learned his name, Manson is an old man living among a few other notorious killers whose lives would be in jeopardy if released into the general population at Corcoran State Prison, Thornton said. They are in a protective housing unit and can go outside into a yard.

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