Mind of a Serial Killer - MURDEROUS MINDS: Charles Manson & The Manson Family Cult Pt. 2
Episode Date: March 20, 2025In the summer of 1969, Charles Manson believed the world was about to descend into an apocalyptic race war he called “Helter Skelter.” But when his prophecy failed to materialize, Manson decided t...o start it himself… by convincing his followers in the Manson Family cult to commit some of the most horrific murders in true crime history. Murderous Minds is a Crime House Original. For more true crime content, follow us @crimehouse on TikTok and Instagram. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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We have an exciting update.
Mind of a Serial Killer is now Killer Minds, expanding beyond serial killers to cover cult leaders,
crimes of passion, spree killers, and more.
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Loyalty is a powerful thing. House.
Loyalty is a powerful thing.
The willingness to stick by someone's side through thick and thin creates a deep sense
of trust.
You know someone will be there for you, no matter what comes your way.
It's an unbreakable bond. And in the case of Charles Manson, he used that bond to deadly effect.
Charles' followers were so loyal, they obeyed his every order without question.
They left their families, took all kinds of drugs, had sex with whoever he said, and of course, committed
murder.
But that wasn't all Charles asked of them.
In the end, he wanted them to take the blame for what he asked them to do, even if it meant losing their own lives.
The human mind is fascinating.
It controls how we think, how we feel, how we love, and how we hate.
And sometimes the mind drives us to do something truly unspeakable. think, how we feel, how we love, and how we hate.
And sometimes the mind drives us to do something truly unspeakable.
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I'm Vanessa Richardson.
And I'm Dr. Tristan Ingalls.
As Vanessa takes you through our subject stories, I'll be helping her analyze what drove them
to commit their crimes as we try to understand how someone can do such horrible things.
This is the second of two episodes on Charles Manson.
Some call him a cult leader,
some call him a serial killer.
Some wonder if he can even be considered a killer at all.
Because even though he went to prison for murder,
Charles didn't deliver the fatal
blow to any of his victims.
His followers were his weapon of choice.
Last time we went through Charles' early life and the road that led him to form the
notorious Manson family cult.
Today we'll follow Charles' obsession with fame, his descent into madness, and the tragic
murders that still haunt society today.
And as always, we'll be asking the know about the Happy Face killer? He's my father.
It's so good to see you, Missy.
Experience the thrilling new series.
He said he killed another woman.
Inspired by a true life story.
If I don't deal with him, he will never leave us alone.
You don't see how the words sing to you.
Anna Lee Ashford and Dennis Quaid star.
I am not responsible for what my dad did.
It's going how you hoped. Happy Face, new series now streaming exclusively on Paramount+. By the time Charles Manson was 32, he'd spent half his life in a correctional facility,
from abusive reform schools to federal prisons, he used that time to become an expert manipulator,
using psychological techniques, religion, and his natural charisma to bend people to
his will.
After being released from prison in March 1967, Charles headed for the San Francisco
Bay Area, where he started building the cult known as
the Manson Family.
Surrounded by the love and devotion of his followers, he was showered with the attention
he'd always wanted.
But that wasn't enough for Charles.
He had big dreams of becoming a famous musician, and that wasn't going to happen in the Bay. So in November 1967, he and a handful of followers bought an old bus and drove it down to LA.
We talked about his many failed attempts at breaking into the music scene in part one,
but let's break down why, despite this, he is still so dedicated to making it big.
Obviously, he's seeking fame, he's seeking notoriety.
But remember, he was fascinated by the Beatles, and he was primarily attracted to them because
of the cult following that they had.
They had an intense fan base that was worldwide.
The footage of Beatlemania showed women in a frenzy, even fainting at the sight of them.
This is what Charles is attracted to.
He wants that scale of devotion.
And even though he has been told by people in the industry he's essentially not what
they're looking for, and maybe not as talented as he might believe he is, Charles is extremely
grandiose.
He believes he can control people's minds.
He started his own cult and his own religion, so to speak,
and he is simply not capable of rational thinking.
Well, unfortunately for Charles, no amount of self-belief
could make up for his lack of musical talent.
Even with the backing of his friend,
Beach Boys drummer Dennis Wilson,
nobody was willing to give Charles a record deal, including an influential producer named Terry
Melcher. His move to LA wasn't a total bust, though. Within a year of getting to LA, the family had
grown to about three dozen people. To keep the group together, Charles moved them to an old western
movie set outside the city called Spawn Ranch in the fall of 1968.
The days were filled with ranch working in the morning, LSD trips in the afternoon, and
group sex at night. But it wasn't all fun and games. Charles used these activities to remind everyone that he was their undisputed leader, selecting
work assignments, overseeing the drug trips, and choosing who slept with who.
Throughout it all, he continued to preach the same New Age philosophy that he'd developed
in San Francisco.
And as winter approached, Charles added something new into the mix.
He'd recently become obsessed with the Beatles' latest record, known as The White Album.
He was fixated on one track in particular, Helter Skelter.
Charles was convinced the song foretold an apocalyptic revolution triggered by a massive
race war.
Of course, he had a plan to keep his family safe from the violence.
They would move to Death Valley, a stretch of unforgiving terrain in California's Mojave
Desert.
There, he believed they'd find shelter in an underground city of gold, outside of
time and space. And by early 1969, there were signs that his prophecy would actually come
true. Violent protests erupted in LA and all around the country, fueled by racial tensions
and the Vietnam War. Charles told the family that the apocalypse
would be upon them by the summer. For some time now Charles has been exhibiting signs of delusions.
The earliest delusion is the delusion of grandeur, and that is when someone has an inflated sense of
self and believes that they are superior to others and they often have unrealistic wealth or power in their
mind. Often, delusions of grandeur manifest with a religious theme, which we have definitely seen
here. But his belief that he can control the thoughts of others is also a delusion of grandeur.
Now he's exhibiting possible delusions of reference, which is when someone believes that
ordinary events have personal significance.
The fact that he believes he's getting a message of an impending apocalyptic revolution
only to him from the song Helter Skelter is an example of a delusion of reference.
Now, does he really believe that the message he is getting is actually true,
or is he using
that as a means to instill fear into his family to control them?
That's the question.
Charles has been a very difficult individual for professionals to diagnose because he is
such a master manipulator.
And it's been very difficult with Charles to discern what is a genuine psychiatric symptom
from manipulation for
secondary gain. Dr. Engels, how much of this can be chalked up to the massive
amounts of drugs they were taking? Can LSD affect our psychology so much that it
leaves us susceptible to delusions like this? That's an excellent question and
the fact that their drug of choice appears to be LSD, which is a hallucinogen
in terms of its classification,
it is very possible and very likely that the substance has been inducing persistent psychosis.
Substance-induced psychosis happens very frequently, and it is a condition recognized in the Diagnostic
and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.
There are cases in which someone may have a predisposition to a psychotic disorder,
and the use of substances awakens that.
And then they end up having a psychotic disorder, and the condition itself can become fixed
or settled as a result of persistent substance use.
Whether or not Charles actually believed any of this, he was certainly acting like it.
To prepare for helter-skelter, he taught the family how to fight with knives.
He also took them out on what he called creepy crawling expeditions, where they practiced
breaking into people's homes without getting caught.
He even found a place for them to stay in Death Valley for when
the apocalypse started. It was an isolated property in the middle of the Mojave Desert
known as Barker Ranch. The place was completely off the grid. Charles sold it to his followers
as the ultimate spot to ride out the apocalypse while they found the fabled underground city. Conveniently, it would also make them completely reliant on him with nowhere else to go, especially
if they started to have second thoughts about their plan.
Or maybe it's not so convenient.
But Charles seemed to be all in.
Down in LA, he got a cheap dune buggy and told his followers to get it ready for
more rugged terrain. He made them gather extra supplies and even taught them desert survival
techniques. However, all of this cost money. Money Charles and the Manson family didn't
have. Most of the time, they got by with panhandling around LA and scavenging around grocery stores.
But if Charles' plan was going to work, they needed a lot more.
So he turned to a more reliable income stream.
Drug dealing.
To do this, Charles connected with a biker gang called the Straight Satans.
They were happy to help him get the drugs he wanted,
as long as they could come to the ranch and enjoy them. Before long, the Straight
Satans were a constant presence at Spahn Ranch, and so were their drugs. But the
bikers used substances more potent than marijuana and LSD. They especially liked amphetamines, and they gladly shared them with the family.
Charles didn't seem happy about it. These new drugs made his followers moody and tense,
harder to control. But with helter-skelter on its way, he was willing to put up with
it.
So let's remember that Charles first learned how to groom, recruit, and maintain women
from the pimps he was incarcerated with, and that he spent most of his life in and out of institutions
learning how to be very criminally versatile. So it's no surprise that he would bring in a biker
gang to help them make money. And it wouldn't be surprising if that also meant sort of trafficking
his own family to these men in exchange for payment.
And although he is struggling to control their behavior while on methamphetamine,
he can still keep them dependent on him for the substances in the meantime.
And I think that he feels this is an easier risk than cutting off the supply altogether. He is a career criminal, after
all, and he will continue to show criminal versatility to get his way."
However Charles felt about what was going on at Spahn Ranch, it's possible he was starting
to doubt his prophecy, because even with an apocalyptic race war to worry about, he was
still trying to get himself a record deal.
Charles had stayed in touch with Terry Melcher, the producer who was friends with The Beach
Boys drummer Dennis Wilson.
Terry came by Spahn Ranch sometimes, mostly to fool around with some of the women.
Charles was all too happy to oblige him, as long as Terry gave his music another chance. And in March of 1969, Terry finally
agreed to come over and listen to some of his songs.
Charles was certain this would be his big break. But the day of Terry's visit to Spawn
Ranch arrived, and he never showed up. Charles was furious. This was supposed to be his moment, and Terry
had blown him off. On March 23rd, he headed to Terry's house to give him a piece of his
mind. The house was atop Cielo Drive, a winding road in L.A.'s Benedict Canyon. But when
Charles got there, Terry wasn't home, because he'd moved out months
earlier. Eventually, Charles did get a hold of Terry, and the producer promised to come
back out to Spahn Ranch on May 18th. This time, he showed up, but it was clear he wasn't
interested in signing Charles to a deal, and nobody else was either.
There would be no music career for Charles.
His dream was officially dead.
Let's explore how he might have handled this news,
given that we've outlined how he might deal
with disappointment, especially if there's a delusion there.
And let's break down what a delusion is.
A delusion is a fixed belief that is unchanged.
It cannot be challenged even with evidence that suggests that the delusion is incorrect
or the belief is wrong.
If you challenge the delusion, you can immediately become part of the delusion, especially if
there is paranoia.
But more importantly, you lose all rapport and trust. So this was a big letdown for Charles
and his delusions of grandeur,
not only for the reasons I've already highlighted,
but on some level, I think he worries
that whenever his grandiosity is challenged,
his family will start to challenge him too.
And losing the cult following like I've talked before
is very monumental for him.
That would be the
biggest loss he could ever endure. So when dealing with self-centered people
or narcissists, are they ever capable of learning from a reality check like this?
Or do they tend to double down and only get worse? Yeah, so of course I've seen
individuals with delusions learn to reality test appropriately and regain
rational thought, but this takes a
combination of therapy and medication in addition to abstinence from all substances, and it can be
done. However, I've also seen individuals with the same severity of thought disorder as Charles,
who have not been responsive to medication or therapy as well. It really is a case-by-case basis and it depends
on a number of variables including the age of onset. Someone with an early onset of psychosis
or delusions has a much less successful prognosis in the long term than someone with a more standard
statistical age of onset. Well it seems like Charles dealt with the disappointment by
refocusing on his helter-skelter prophecy. As the summer of 1969 began, the 34-year-old
pushed his family even harder to prepare for the upcoming apocalypse. Their creepy
crawling expeditions turned to outright thievery, and his LSD-fueled sermons focused primarily
on death.
Before long, Charles started asking his followers if they'd die for him.
They assured him they would.
But as the days crept by with no sign of a society-ending race war, the family started
to get antsy.
Charles knew he had to do something.
If the apocalypse didn't happen, then his followers might lose their faith in him. That's
when Charles realized, if the apocalypse wasn't going to happen on its own, maybe he needed
to start it himself.
As the summer of 1969 began, 34-year-old Charles Manson decided he wanted to kickstart the
Helter Skelter apocalypse himself.
Inspired by a track from the Beatles' White Album, he was certain that an impending race
war would drive the world into chaos.
But so far, it had failed to materialize, and Charles was going to do something about
it.
Like I've previously mentioned, Charles Manson has always been such an intriguing case to
so many experts, because it's been very difficult to tease out what
is manipulation and what is a genuine psychiatric condition.
I have never met Charles Manson and nor have I ever evaluated him even though I had been
working at the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation at the time of his incarceration.
I never worked at his institution though.
So what I'm sharing is based on what
was made public, and it's obviously for education and entertainment purposes only. But with
that being said, there have been a number of diagnoses over the years of Charles Manson.
And in 1997, he was reevaluated by a team of psychologists. I have taken lectures from
one of the forensic psychologists
who was part of this reevaluation,
and the results of this were made public after his death
with his permission and with the permission
of the California Department of Corrections
and Rehabilitation.
And in these results, the objective testing indicated
that he had likely a primary diagnosis of a mood disorder, something like
bipolar disorder, but he had chronic hypomania, not mania.
And they also found that he had antisocial personality disorder, but it was so severe
when assessed with psychopathic traits.
Remember psychopathy is not a diagnosis, But his score on an assessment of psychopathy
indicated that he was severe enough that it was the 98th percentile for male prison inmates
and the 99th percentile for male forensic psychiatric patients.
Could this desire of his to fulfill a prophecy like that himself be an indication that he
never really believed in it
in the first place?
This is the thing where experts have largely
been sort of divided.
But the way I see it, given that he had a mood disorder
as a primary diagnosis based on this reevaluation,
and a mood disorder is considered episodic in nature,
and he also had a personality disorder, and that is not episodic in nature. And he also had a personality disorder,
and that is not episodic in nature, that's chronic.
And that's where the manipulation was really driven from.
Manson wanted fame and notoriety, this much we know.
And I am not convinced,
given the most recent assessments done on him
and given all of the things that had been made public,
including his own interviews, that he really believed in the apocalypse.
I am not convinced that he did.
I'm more convinced that he needed something for his followers to believe in, and that
something has to be big enough for them to believe in him, too.
And I think that's what he was believing in, in terms of that. He'd promised his followers that they'd escape to an underground city of gold in the middle of Death Valley.
But if they were going to survive in the desert long enough to find the city, they needed money,
and their drug-dealing operation wasn't cutting it.
To get the funds they needed, they'd have to steal it.
After cycling through a few options, Charles landed on Gary Hinman, a music teacher and
drug dealer he'd met when the family first moved to LA. Charles believed Gary was flush
with cash. He had a couple of cars, and Charles knew he had a big vacation to Japan coming up. Plus, one
of Charles' best friends, a guy named Bobby Beausoleil, had it out for Gary. He apparently
sold Bobby a bad batch of a hallucinogen called Mescaline, and Bobby was happy to help Charles
shake Gary down.
On the night of July 25, 1969, Bobby and three of Charles' most loyal followers went over
to Gary's house.
The group included Charles' first recruit, Mary Brunner, the first male family member,
Bruce Davis, and Susan Atkins, who joined the family in that first summer in the Bay
Area.
When they showed up at Gary's door, he didn't suspect a thing.
He invited them right in.
But Bobby didn't waste any time.
He demanded Gary pay him back for the bad drugs.
Gary swore he didn't have any money to give them.
And that made Bobby angry.
But even after he beat Gary to a pulp, he swore he didn't have the kind of money they
were after.
When Charles found out, he told the group to keep working on Gary until he gave everything
up.
For almost three days, Bobby Beausoleil beat Gary within an inch of his life.
Eventually, Charles told Bobby to kill him.
So this is the first time that Charles Manson was able to get another person to kill at his command.
And this is a level of power and superiority that he has not yet had. A line has been crossed now
with his family
where they've shown their loyalty
and now they're further trapped in his grip,
especially knowing that they could become a target themselves
if they disobey or challenge him.
They are now sort of further entrapped
in this cycle of psychological and physical abuse
that is the Manson family cult.
However, Charles felt at that moment, by killing Gary, he realized they had an opportunity
to get more than money out of the situation.
It was the perfect moment to begin helter-skelter.
Remember, Charles was convinced the apocalypse would start with a massive race war.
After Gary Hinman was dead, he had Bobby draw
a paw print on the wall with Gary's blood, along with the words, political piggy. It was the symbol
of the Black Panthers. Charles hoped it would seem like the Black Panthers viciously murdered
an innocent white man, and then the uprising would start. Gary's body was discovered three days later on July 31st, but the race war didn't materialize.
Charles' plan was falling apart.
A few days later, Bobby was pulled over while driving Gary Hinman's stolen car.
The police searched it and found a bloody knife in the wheel well.
And Bobby matched a fingerprint they'd pulled from the crime scene. He tried to make some excuses,
but the cops weren't buying it. Bobby was arrested and charged with murder.
When Charles found out, he knew time was of the essence.
Bobby wasn't a patient guy, and if Charles couldn't get him out of trouble, there was
a good chance he would talk.
To get the heat off of Bobby, Charles decided they would do some copycat killings to make
it seem like the real killer was still out there, and Charles had the perfect target
in mind.
Terry Melcher's old house on Cielo Drive.
Now there's some disagreement over why Charles chose Cielo Drive as the target.
Some people think it was a way to get back at Terry Melcher for refusing to give him
a record deal, but others have pointed out that Charles likely
knew Terry wasn't living there by that point. So maybe he chose it just because it was a
house he knew. It was secure, hidden behind a gate, so there was little chance of getting
caught in the act or anyone escaping. Either way, whoever was in that house would have
a lot of money for them to take to Death
Valley.
For Charles, that was as good of a reason as any.
On August 9, 1969, Charles put a follower named Tex Watson in charge of the operation.
He was joined by Susan Atkins, who'd been a part of the Gary Hinman murder, along with
Patricia Krenwinkel and Linda Kasabian. All were fiercely loyal to Charles and willing
to kill in his name.
We've talked about the various ways Charles was able to lure followers and how he maintained
them. And just to recap on that, he preyed on young, vulnerable women who were looking
for love, looking for belonging, and he gave them what they needed to on that, he prayed on young, vulnerable women who were looking for love,
looking for belonging, and he gave them what they needed to feel that while also isolating
them from their family and the world.
So how could he get them to be so dedicated that they would kill for him?
Well, fear, isolation, and substance dependence is certainly a way to distort their reality
and open them up to undue influence.
Now imagine you've been made to believe that there was an impending apocalypse that you needed money to prepare for
so that you could survive, and you're motivated in that survival because you want to protect each other as a family.
That certainly could amplify their motivation, on top of which you're isolated from anyone
who could provide any reality testing and perspective against what Charles has been
teaching.
And when you add in the regular use of hallucinogens and stimulants, that could exacerbate paranoia
and it could absolutely cause impairment in judgment and rational thought.
The details from the murders at Cielo Drive are well documented, so there's no need
to go over all the grisly details here.
For those who are interested in more specifics, check out The Life and Times of Charles Manson
by Jeff Gwynn.
But just like the Gary Hinman murder, the crimes at Cielo Drive were violent and bloody,
and by the end of it, five innocent people were dead.
Jay Sebring, Wojciech Frykowski, Abigail Folger, Stephen Parent, and most famously, the house's
current resident, actress Sharon Tate, who was pregnant.
Even though Charles didn't get any money out of it, he did get something else he wanted
– publicity.
After the bodies were discovered the next morning, it was all over the news.
The sheer violence of it was staggering, and there was the celebrity aspect. Along with being a
famous actress, Sharon Tate was married to the director, Roman Polanski. But there was
one thing missing. Even though they left the Black Panther symbol, nobody picked up on the
attempt to link the murders to the Black Panthers, which meant Bobby Beausoleil would stay in jail,
and the race war wouldn't start. Charles decided they needed to try again, immediately.
He sent the group out again the following night, and this time, Charles went with them.
In order to trigger his race war, Charles wanted to keep going after wealthy white people,
so he decided to head to the upper middle class neighborhood of Los Feliz.
Charles had partied at a house there a few times, so that's where the group went.
When they got there, Charles noticed the place next door.
It was pretty nice, and Charles spotted an
older man sleeping inside on his couch. His name was Lino LaBianca. Charles had his followers
break in. Then they killed Lino and his wife Rosemary in the same violent fashion as their
other victims.
After the bodies were discovered, the murders were linked to the victims at Cielo Drive,
but the attempted connection to the Black Panthers went unnoticed once again.
There was no denying it.
Charles' plan was a failure, and eight innocent people had paid for it with their lives.
But Charles didn't spin it that way to the family.
He used all the press coverage as proof that it was a success.
The true apocalypse might not happen immediately, but the process had begun.
That meant it was time to get out of town.
The family packed their things and in early September,
he and over two dozen followers drove north to Barker Ranch out in Death Valley.
To keep the helter-skelter story alive, Charles sent his followers out into the desert.
Their job was to go on foot to look for the entrance to the underground city of
gold. For the time being, the family was still devoted to Charles, though it was split between
true believers and those who were just too tired from searching the desert to question
him.
I think at this point we really need to start exploring the impact of trauma on his followers. He recruited people who already had pre-existing
familial trauma.
This is well documented in their own interviews
on the matter.
Most of them lacked family or family support.
They had come from dysfunctional homes
and the majority of them were women
who were quite oppressed in that time.
Now they are experiencing varying degrees of witnessed and experienced violence, coercion,
and some of his followers have even since admitted
to having been sexually assaulted during their time
with the Manson family.
And when it comes to trauma reactions,
many people are aware of the fight, flight
and freeze response, but very few are aware of the lesser-known
response known as fawning.
And that was certainly not something that was identified back then.
Fawning is a coping mechanism that is usually developed in childhood and predominantly experienced
by women due to societal norms and pressures.
It's a series of people-pleasing behaviors that are used to avoid conflict and any perceived danger.
People who experience fawning are overly agreeable.
They have difficulty saying no or setting boundaries.
They're overly reliant on others,
and they do not know how to prioritize their own needs
over another person's.
All of these behaviors are done out of fear or conflict or disapproval and to appease
their aggressor.
They are no doubt living in fear of Charlie, fear of being caught, fear of being retaliated
against by the Black Panthers or others, and of this impending doom of an apocalypse that they
themselves have started.
And I think it's important to consider that their loyalty has also become a form of psychological
and physical survival.
Does it seem like Charles' followers felt like they had no other choice?
Or was there some glimmer of hope that his prophecy could still be true?
I think it's very likely that it's a combination of both of those things.
But given all the trauma that they have experienced and continue to experience,
the only real way for them to see what is happening clearly is to remove themselves
from the situation and place themselves into a safe one.
But even then, that will take a lot of time for them to process first to realize what's
really going on.
Well, naturally, the City of Gold was nowhere to be found.
And surviving in the middle of the desert was a lot harder than scrounging for food
around the city.
Many of his followers remained fiercely loyal, but Charles finally started to lose
his grip on some of them. People started slipping away in the middle of the night, risking the
difficult walk into the nearest town in order to escape.
And even though the desert was isolated, it wasn't empty. Locals took notice of the strange
things going on at the family's new ranch. Eventually,
the police started poking around and realized that Charles and his followers were driving
stolen cars.
On October 10, 1969, the authorities raided the Manson family's ranch and took most of
them into custody. Charles wasn't home at the time.
He was down in LA trying to round up some food. But when he came back to Death Valley
a couple days later, he was arrested too.
Charles had gotten out of scrapes with the law before. But there was no talking his way
out of this one. Some of the defectors were eager to tell the police about the murders,
and that Charles had ordered them to do it. After some questioning, the police realized the
leather cord Charles used as a belt had belonged to Lino LaBianca. The pieces fell into place from
there. On December 9, 1969, he was charged with murder in what was being referred to
as the Tate and LaBianca killings. All four of the family members involved in the crimes
were charged as well.
Charles finally had what he'd always wanted. Fame. Stories about him were plastered over
every newspaper. Any time he entered a courtroom,
hordes of onlookers were there to see him. The more people learned about Charles, the
more fascinated they became. It just seemed inconceivable that such a diminutive, unassuming
guy could be capable of such atrocities. Not only that, he somehow got other people to do them for him.
The question was, who would be punished for it?
Do you love stories about con artists and scammers?
People pretending to be someone they're not?
I'm Javier Leyva, the host of Pretend,
the podcast where I interview real con artists
and uncover why they do what they do.
Like the family who claimed that they were being stalked
only to find out that the messages
were coming from their own house.
Yeah, they were the stalkers.
It's ridiculous when I get death threats
about him wanting to go and blow my husband's
head off and then I get accused of having a split personality and maybe you're doing
it and you don't realize it.
That's ridiculous.
Or the true crime author accused of harassing the very same victims that she was writing
about.
I am being honest with you.
I am not.
Fetish master. I don't know what to say,
but I am being completely honest with you.
I don't know what's going on.
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In December 1969, real people pretending to be someone else.
In December 1969, Charles Manson and his followers were charged with murder.
The trial began a little over six months later in June 1970.
The whole thing was a huge spectacle, not just for the murders, but for the people accused
of committing them.
People couldn't understand what made Charles so special that his followers would kill for
him.
So we've already talked about how fear, how the abuse cycle, how grooming, substance
dependence, and trauma really played a role into why he had this following and why they
may have been willing to do this for him.
But I also think that people have a hard time understanding that because they don't understand
the complexity of who Charles is and the environment he created to get to that level of devotion.
Everyone from the outside looking in is seeing it rationally.
They are seeing a man who is not rational and
wondering how someone as seemingly unwell as him could be so persuasive of others. But they
haven't been isolated from their loved ones. They haven't been living in survival mode for years,
so it's hard to really grasp this. Manson has been learning to control people since he was a child.
He spent more than half of his life in institutions, and this is how he perfected his ability to
control others.
In fact, a former colleague of mine from the Department of Corrections here in California,
they actually did work at the institution where Manson was held. And they had told me that he was so persuasive,
he had to be housed on the top tier of his unit
at the very back end so that no one would
have to walk past his cell.
He was so persuasive that he was successful in smuggling
in drugs more than once during his incarceration, which
means he had help twice, whether he was convincing enough to get people to assist on the outside,
or employees on the inside, or both. But I think it's likely both, given his fan base
and how very little the Department of Corrections wanted him interacting with other incarcerated
individuals and staff alike.
The institution had to take precautions to prevent him from influencing others for the safety and
security of the institution and everyone in it. All that to say, he knew how to identify a person's
insecurities and vulnerabilities, exploit them, instill fear, and gain control through manipulation,
drug dependence, and abuse.
It seemed like everyone was paying attention to the Manson trial.
The trial was so captivating, it even caught the attention of President Richard Nixon.
He was so invested, he made comments about it during a speech on August 3rd, 1970.
Which Charles surely loved, having the president speak about you on national television was
as close to Beatlemania as he was ever going to get.
Oh yeah, no doubt.
It certainly seemed like everyone wanted to weigh in on the Manson trial.
Which was why the judge had the jury sequestered so they wouldn't be influenced
by any more media coverage or presidential speeches.
There was a lot to consider, especially given the nature of the charges against Charles.
Along with conspiracy to commit murder, he was charged with the murders themselves, which
was hard to prove when he didn't lay a hand on any of the victims.
And his followers were definitely willing to take the fall for him.
In fact, three of them weren't allowed to testify for that very reason.
Their lawyers likely didn't want them to take all the blame while Charles got away
scot-free.
In the end, the jury didn't either.
When they reached their verdict on January 25, 1971, Charles was found guilty, along
with the three followers who'd committed the murders on his behalf.
But Charles wasn't ready to give up, not by a long shot.
There was still a lot at stake.
The trial was now in the penalty phase, which meant guilt and innocence were no longer in
question.
It was time to determine punishment.
And the defendants were facing the death penalty.
Charles and his followers were all free to plead their cases for a lesser sentence.
It was a pivotal moment, the last chance for the Manson family to turn on their leader.
If they argued that he'd brainwashed them or made them do it, they might be able to
save their lives.
Instead, they did exactly what Charles wanted and chose to sacrifice themselves.
And it wasn't just Charles' co-defendants speaking up for him either.
At least eight members of the Manson family who weren't involved in the murders came
to his defense.
They all claimed he had nothing to do with the murders.
I'm glad you mentioned brainwashing in here
because I think it's really time to highlight that concept.
And for anyone who's not really familiar,
brainwashing is the systematic effort
to persuade a non-believer to accept a certain allegiance,
command, or doctrine.
And it's designed to psychologically
manipulate human thought or
action against the desire, the will, or the knowledge of the individual.
The fact that this has been done systematically over a very long period of time makes it unsurprising
to me that his followers maintain their support of him.
And not simply because of the brainwashing, but because technically speaking,
he did not lay a hand on anybody. They did it, right? But for anyone who is brainwashed,
for them to undo the effects of that, they need to deprogram it. And this is not something that
comes fast. It takes time, and that time will vary based on the individual.
But it takes intensive long-term psychotherapy, psychoeducation regarding
what coercive control is and what boundaries are. Medication is warranted
in some instances to help manage the intensity of anxiety or depression
symptoms associated with that deprogramming, and they need to
be able to rebuild their own self-esteem.
And this can take years for some people.
And at this point, none of his followers have even started the deprogramming process, let
alone had gained insight into the fact that they'd been brainwashed.
And in the end, their devotion didn't really matter.
The jury had already determined that Charles was guilty, and nothing they heard from Charles'
followers changed their minds.
When they were sent to deliberate on March 26, 1971, it only took them a few hours to
come to a decision.
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Even with Charles behind bars, the world didn't forget about him. He received hundreds of letters
a day. They contained all sorts of messages — admiration and love, but also death threats.
For someone on death row, that wasn't exactly something to worry about. But about a year
later on February 18, 1972, the state of California abolished the death penalty, and Charles'
situation suddenly changed. He and his followers' sentences were all reduced to life in prison.
Not only that, under California law, he would be granted a parole hearing in seven years,
which meant he had a chance of becoming a free man again, if he could survive that long.
Charles' fellow inmates didn't like how much attention he got.
He was moved around different facilities for his own safety, eventually ending up at the
notorious San Quentin Prison, north of San Francisco.
He spent a lot of time in isolation, away from the general population.
But just because Charles was out of sight, didn't mean he was out of mind.
In 1974, the lead prosecutor on his case, Vincent Bugliosi, published a book about Charles
called Helter Skelter. It was a massive hit, and so was the TV miniseries it inspired.
All of a sudden, Charles wasn't just a notorious criminal.
He was a bona fide celebrity.
Just what he wants.
Mm-hmm.
Well, when we continue to explore what made Charles so fascinating, we would be remiss
to not also consider the era that this happened in as well. It was the peak of the counterculture
movement where hippies were rejecting mainstream
values and were wanting to embrace peace and free love and psychedelic drugs, which is exactly what
Manson and his family appeared to be doing. And this was also a time of cultural and political
change and music was at the epicenter of a lot of that because it really shaped these decades.
of a lot of that, because it really shaped these decades. And Charles Manson not only convinced people to follow him, masquerading as a form of a
guru, but as you share it already, he also managed to become friends with Dennis Wilson
of the Beach Boys, who once referred to Manson as the Wizard.
If we recall from the story, Dennis even opened up his home to Manson and Manson's
family. And he connected him to other industry people, including Neil Young and Terry Melcher,
who I don't think we mentioned was the son of Doris Day and obviously a very high producer at
Columbia Records. So if all of these highly influential people believed Charles was a likable and talented
individual, that can be hard to reconcile with the individual that the public got to
know throughout the trials.
Even actress Angela Lansbury's daughter Deirdre had fallen victim to Charles Manson.
So from the outside looking in, a known- name ex-convict was able to befriend
and influence some of the most influential people of that era. And seeing this can certainly
fracture a person's false sense of security. And then naturally they want to understand
how did this happen? But more importantly, how can I feel confident that it would never
happen to me? And the irony is when you're being brainwashed,
you lack the insight to see that as it's happening.
Whatever it was that made people so interested in Charles,
he was firmly in the zeitgeist
and has remained there ever since.
And he also spent the rest of his life in prison.
He knew just as well as anyone that there was no chance he'd be released on parole.
It's been a half century since the Manson family murders.
Even though Charles has been dead since 2017, he continues to have a powerful grip on our
imaginations.
From TV shows like Mindhunter, or movies like Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, people can't
help but be fascinated by him, or try to understand the crimes he committed.
But that's easier said than done.
The Manson murders were violent, random, and indescribably tragic.
Innocent people lost their lives because of his so-called prophecy, which was nothing
more than the ravings of a madman.
A couple months after Charles' trial ended in the 1970s, John Lennon was asked for his
thoughts on the Manson murders, especially since they
were inspired by his song, Helter Skelter.
Lennon was baffled by the whole thing.
He didn't understand why Charles thought the song predicted some kind of apocalyptic
race war.
In fact, he didn't understand how Charles got anything from it at all. According to Lennon, the lyrics
of Helter Skelter were totally meaningless. And in the end, maybe Charles Manson was too.
Thanks so much for listening. Come back next time for a deep dive into the mind of another murderer.
Killer Minds is a Crime House original powered by Pave Studios.
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Killer Minds is hosted by me, Vanessa Richardson, and Dr. Tristan Engels, and is a Crime House
original powered by Pave Studios. This episode was brought to life by the Killer Minds team, Max Cutler, Ron Shapiro, Alex
Benedon, Lori Marinelli, Natalie Perczowski, Sarah Camp, and Sheila Patterson.
Of the many sources we used when researching this episode, the one we found the most credible
and helpful was The Life and Times of Charles Manson by Jeff Gwynn.
Thank you for listening.