Murder, Mystery & Makeup - Fan Favorite & **UPDATE** The Charles Manson Cult Killings
Episode Date: April 8, 2025Hi friends, happy Tuesday! I have always gotten suggestions to pleaseee cover this story and here we are. My brain got turned into mush watching all the interviews and reading all the articles, I sti...ll dont even fully understand what the heck was going on! Also, let me know who you want me to talk about next time. Hope you have a great rest of your week, make good choices and I'll be seeing you very soon. xo Bailey Sarian I sometimes talk about my Good Reads in show. So here's the link if you want to check it out. IDK. lol: https://www.goodreads.com/user/show/139701263-bailey ________ FOLLOW ME AROUND Tik Tok: https://bit.ly/3e3jL9v Instagram: http://bit.ly/2nbO4PR Facebook: http://bit.ly/2mdZtK6 Twitter: http://bit.ly/2yT4BLV Pinterest: http://bit.ly/2mVpXnY Youtube: http://bit.ly/1HGw3Og Snapchat: https://bit.ly/3cC0V9d Discord: https://discord.gg/BaileySarian RECOMMEND A STORY HERE: cases4bailey@gmail.com Business Related Emails: bailey@underscoretalent.com Business Related Mail: Bailey Sarian 4400 W. Riverside Dr., Ste 110-300 Burbank, CA 91505 _________ Right now, listeners of this show can get an extended 30-day free trial! Just go to https://www.dipseastories.com/makeup to start your free trial. Can you unmask the truth? Download June’s Journey for free today on iOS and Android. Personal styling for everyone—get started today at https://www.stitchfix.com/makeup.
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Hi friends, how are you today? I hope you're having a wonderful day so far.
My name is Bailey Sarian and welcome to the Murder, Mystery, and Makeup Podcast.
Today we're going to revisit one of the most infamous true crime stories I've ever covered.
The story of Charles Manson and the horrific murders carried out by members of his cult
in the summer of 1969. Now I want to reshare this with you guys because there's a new documentary
that just came out on Netflix that offers some very intriguing theories on what could have been up with old Charlie and his
followers. It's called Chaos, The Manson Murders. Did you watch? It's crazy how after five decades,
people are still so fascinated by Manson and his cult. Something about Los Angeles in the 60s,
the eeriness of his devoted followers, the brutal murder of a, you know, pregnant movie star, it's equally as
captivating as it is terrifying. So let's have a little refresh on the story of the Manson murders
and then stick around to the end of the episode and I'll fill you in on the theories from this
new documentary and if I think there could be any truth to them. Sound good? Okay, circle back you
guys. Let's get into it.
Hi friends, how are you today? I hope you're having a wonderful day so far.
My name is Bailey Sarian and today is Monday,
which means it's murder, mystery and makeup Monday.
If you are new here, hi, welcome.
My name is Bailey Sarian and on Mondays I sit down and I talk about a true crime story
that's been heavy on my noggin
and I do my makeup at the same time.
If you're interested in true crime and you like makeup,
I would highly suggest you subscribe
because I'm here for you on Mondays.
This week I fell down a huge rabbit hole with this story.
My brain has turned to mush.
I never wanna talk about Charles Manson ever again,
ever again.
There are so many layers to this damn story.
There is so much to this story.
I am so,
I felt like I was losing my mind at some points,
but I'm here.
So, I don't know how long this is gonna be.
I'm gonna try and keep it short
because editing is a bitch,
but I did like simplify it as much as I could.
There's a lot of names that are gonna be thrown your way.
So get ready, get ready to catch them.
You get it.
I had to simplify it a little bit as best as I could
without losing the overall story.
Charles Manson, here we go.
Charles Maddox was born November 12th, 1934,
so he's a Scorpio, in Cincinnati, Ohio to his mother, Kathleen Maddox,
who was just 15 at the time of his birth.
Charles wouldn't have a relationship
with his biological father.
His mother, Kathleen, she ended up marrying a man
by the name of William Manson
about four months before she gave birth to Charles.
So Charles took the name Manson.
Then when the couple separated in 1937,
Charles kept the last name, tarnished that name.
That's for sure.
As a way to make money, Kathleen worked as a sex worker
and participated in petty crimes.
It was said that Charles' mother
wanted nothing to do with him.
That at one point when he was a baby,
his mom tried to sell him, as a baby,
to a waitress in return for a pitcher of beer.
To some people, that's considered a fair trade.
In 1939, Kathleen was sent to prison for five years for armed robbery.
And during this time, Charles was sent to live with his aunt and uncle in West Virginia.
If I call him Charlie and Charles, just know it's the same person, whatever.
Charlie seemed to bounce around a lot.
He didn't really have a stable home,
but he would visit his off the grid uncle
who lived in the Kentucky mountains from time to time.
This uncle seemed to have like a lasting impression
on Charles, okay?
This uncle, he was an outcast and would tell Charles not to go to those schools
because they brainwashed kids and stuff.
You know, that uncle.
But Charlie said that he really liked him.
He was different, he was off the grid, man.
When Charlie was nine, he tried to set his school on fire,
and that's when they sent him to reform school.
Between 1942 and 1947, Charles' mom,
she was out of prison and he would stay with her,
which he said was like one of the happiest times
from his childhood.
Then she couldn't and she wouldn't take care of him anymore,
and then she was arrested again.
She wasn't able to put him in a foster home,
so the court stepped in and placed him
in a school for boys in Indiana.
The school was very strict and often abused the boys.
And after about 10 months, he ran away to find his mom.
But she really wanted nothing to do with him.
And when Charles found her, she was like, shit, you found me, damn it.
So as you can probably gather, pretty loveless childhood.
Okay, great.
He spent a lot of his childhood in different schools for boys.
He went to the famous Boys Town,
which we could do like a whole story on this place alone.
Okay, but not today.
But he went there and Charles would run away.
He would commit a robbery.
Then he would be sent back.
He would go to a different school for boys and repeat.
Like it was just this cycle. Then he got sent to another terrible place,
it was the Indiana Boys School,
where Charles said that he would be beat and raped by people in charge.
He was heavily abused throughout these schools he attended.
He tried to run away here, but same thing.
He would run away, commit a crime, like armed robbery, theft,
he robbed a gas station, he was caught a couple of times trying to run away, commit a crime, like armed robbery, theft, he robbed a gas station,
he was caught a couple of times
trying to rape or molest boys,
then he would get arrested
and get sent back to a different school.
It was just like a hot mess.
When Charles reached 20 years old in 1955,
he married a 17-year-old waitress named Rose.
Not long after, she was pregnant.
The two of them stole a car and drove to Los Angeles.
When he was there, he was caught,
and he was sentenced to three years in prison.
While Charlie sat in prison, Rose, she had her baby.
She moved in with her family in Los Angeles.
Then she met another man and moved on, and they separated.
Charles Manson had a baby,
which is super sad because later on in life,
I think he committed suicide.
So when Charlie got out of prison,
he just found odd jobs like pimping 16 year olds,
stealing cars, forging checks, stealing where he could.
He ended up getting another 10 year sentence
for violating his probation.
This time though, he would only serve seven and a half years.
So this time though, when he was in prison,
he learned how to play guitar
and that's when he started to become
really into playing music.
Music is my passion.
Prison was rough, but it was like a home to Charlie
and he was raised in there,
and it's really where he formed his outlook on life.
I mean, based off of what he said.
He refused to be programmed by the world
or go along with the expectations
of what was considered being a functioning, normal adult.
Instead, he would just sit in his jail cell,
play his guitar, and write music.
That's not me trying to make him sound all peaches and cream.
Nay nay.
Rumor has it, prison is like super rough,
and you don't play around there, okay?
There are rules to be followed.
So growing up in prison and being in constant fight or flight mode,
I think just really like made him freaking psycho, I'm sure.
I mean, how do you come out normal in this situation?
In 1967, Charles was released from prison
and he actually asked if he could stay.
He didn't wanna go.
I mean, what the hell was he gonna do?
But this time when he left prison,
it was actually a lot different for him, okay?
He was in San Francisco in the mid 1960s.
Babe, things had changed.
Things had changed. It was the time of the flower child. Hippies were thriving in the Haight-Ashbury district of San Francisco.
Tons of young adults were coming from all over the place, just coming out to the area to advocate for
peace and love, grow their hair out long, join a commune, and just like go on a spiritual journey, man.
But then LSD was introduced to the scene,
and now people were not only going on their spiritual journeys,
but they were just straight up tripping balls.
That's when it started to turn more aggressive,
because drugs and money,
and there was just like lots of journeys happening.
Anywho, so Charles enters the scene
and he actually liked this because these people
were all about peace and love, we don't need the system,
sleep on the streets, play music, do drugs.
He had long hair and a guitar.
It was just like Charles' cup of tea, he fit right in.
He would play music on the streets,
people would gather around.
Anyone who met him said that he had this charisma about
him. He just knew how to talk to people and make them feel special, important, and like heard.
So Charles, he really just started making friends. One of his first followers was Lynette Fromm,
and she met Charlie early on and said that he was just easy to talk to, and his mind just really intrigued her.
Then soon after that, he met Pat Krenwinkel
at a mutual friend's house.
Charlie was there playing guitar,
people came over to hang out,
and Pat and Charlie ended up like really hitting it off
and involving in some sexual relations.
She said that she just felt very loved by him,
the way he gave her attention was fulfilling,
she was young, she ran away from home,
she was desperate for love and attention,
and Charlie just gave that to her.
And he seemed to do that with a lot of different women.
So Charlie also had a man named Tex Watson
who joined the growing family,
a way to get a man to stay with the group
and join in on the fun.
Charlie would offer women to the men in hopes to gain their trust and get them to stay.
Charlie would like round up more women, sell, trade them for sex.
He was really good at manipulating people,
and he mentioned that it's just something he learned or like picked up in prison.
The prettiest girls he called the front street girls.
And these were the ones that he thought
were the most attractive out of the bunch
and would lure others to join their group.
Like, hey, you should come meet my friend, Charlie.
He's super cool and like, you would really love it.
And then we can like do stuff.
Over time, Charles was attracting more and more people
into his group or what he called his family.
He gained their trust, gave them drugs,
had sex, played music.
It was just like somewhere all the lost kids wanted to be.
Most of the followers left home.
They had like nothing to their name,
in search of a new life, anti-system, peace and love.
So finding a family of people with similar interests
really kept people there.
I think that's how a cult starts.
In the summer of 1967, Charles and his family,
they left San Francisco, got too much.
They left San Francisco in a bus
and they drove up and down the coast,
just going from place to place, which kept everybody entertained.
You know, they weren't getting bored because it was like new location.
Cool.
Haven't seen this rock before.
Eventually, they made it to Los Angeles where they spent most of their time.
Plus, Charlie really wanted to like make a name for himself playing music.
In March of 1968, two of the family members, two of the girls,
they were walking along Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles.
I don't know what was going on, like what they were doing.
Maybe they were trying to find new family members,
but either way, they're just walking.
And they're hitchhiking because they're trying to find a ride
to where they were all staying at.
And Dennis Wilson ends up picking them up.
He's from the Beach Boys, who were a very popular group,
still pretty popular, right? You hear the Beach Boys, who were a very popular group, still pretty popular, right?
You hear the Beach Boys everywhere sometimes,
especially like when you're shopping,
they always have the Beach Boys playing,
but they were very popular.
So yeah, like, yeah, small world,
but he picks these two women up
who belong to the Manson family.
To make a long story short,
the women tell him about the man that they're staying with,
a spiritual guru of some sorts, you know?
Spiritual guru, his name's Charlie.
You should meet him.
And then Charles actually ends up going over to Dennis Wilson's home.
They really seem to hit it off.
I mean, they became like BFFs.
Okay, so then they end up spending like more and more time together,
and then soon the whole Manson family ended up moving in with Dennis Wilson,
in like his nice ass place.
They are living with him, doing drugs, playing music,
writing music, recording music together.
It seemed like Charles Manson was on his way to becoming a Beach Boy.
Dennis Wilson really wanted him to be a part of the group,
but some of the other Beach Boys, they just didn't like him.
They refused to work with him.
Some members of the Beach Boys were telling Dennis,
like, hey, you need to get rid of this guy.
Like, he's not good.
We're just getting all sorts of bad vibes.
You need to drop him.
All he wants to do is party, do drugs.
Like, he's just not good for you.
The Manson family ends up getting kicked out
of Dennis's house and they end up cutting ties
with one another.
It's more complicated than that,
but for the most part, that is what happened.
The Beach Boys' song, Bluebirds Over the Mountain,
was originally a song written by Charles Manson
that the Beach Boys recorded and didn't credit him on.
But Charles says that was his song, okay?
And they didn't credit him on it.
So Charles is pissed, obviously.
While they were living together,
Charlie met a well-known music producer named Terry Melcher.
Charles knew that this producer had altered his music
and honestly just hated him.
He hated Charlie because he just didn't like him.
They had issues and then he ended up stealing his music
and altering it and using it and not crediting him.
So Charlie is obviously very pissed off
and held a very nasty grudge against his producer.
And there really wasn't anything he could do about it.
Terry is important, so remember Terry.
August of 1968, Susan Atkins,
who was like a long time family member at this point,
found the family a new home.
It was an old Western movie set,
which had been turned into a writing stable. It was owned at the time by an 80 year old,
half blind man named George Spahn.
So they find this place, they think it's perfect.
Great, the whole gang moved in.
Great location for a cult, honestly.
So soon after, a woman by the name of Leslie Van Houten,
she joined the family and they all stayed
in that old torn down movie set, Spawn Ranch.
It was said to be all like fun and innocent,
they spent time play acting movie roles, kind of like summer camp with your friends.
So it was said when they were there, it was like time didn't exist, there was no time.
They were all just living in the moment, the now.
They would pretend every day was Halloween
and they would dress up in costumes, play different roles,
and it was just a way for them to get out of themselves,
let their ego go and their world views.
And by removing their egos,
it would allow Charlie in and change their views
on the world.
Charlie would tell family members that society was corrupt
and that they
needed to forget everything they've ever learned. If I can talk. Charlie would tell them that like
he was the noble one, the one with all the answers and only he knew the truth. So the family, they
would drop acid all the time and they would do different exercises together while tripping balls,
you know? He would make everyone sit around like in a circle
and he would be in the middle
and he would have everybody focus on him.
He was the focal point.
He would also tell them to get rid of their past,
forget their mothers and fathers
and that they needed to die in order to be rebuilt.
Some of the members said that, it's funny, we can laugh,
but it's not funny, but it is funny
because some of the members said that like he even reenacted the crucifixion while they were on LSD. And because they were tripping, it was like, oh my God,
Jesus is melting.
That's Jesus, bro.
So this group, they're cut off from society
in the middle of nowhere, doing drugs every day
with the same people.
Brainwashing seemed to happen.
Charles, his philosophy was the notion of oneness
and the power of love.
But over time, he started to realize that he was not alone. with the same people, brainwashing seemed to happen. Charles, his philosophy was the notion of oneness
and the power of love.
But over time, he got more and more paranoid.
His messaging would become darker.
There was no right or wrong in life.
Death and life were the same thing, not to fear it.
Death was actually a welcoming to a better life.
This is what he's telling them.
It was said it got to a point where like Charlie stopped
letting anybody leave the compound without his permission.
They weren't allowed to listen to any music
except for the Beatles, the Moody Blues,
or Charles's own music.
In 1966, there was like a bunch of riots going on,
protesting against the war in Vietnam.
So Charlie was following this,
but wouldn't allow his members to know
about what was going on.
But he seemed to be becoming paranoid
that there was going to be a race war happening soon.
Now this is where things get tricky
and people have different versions for what happened next.
There's the Helter Skelter version, which I'll explain.
And then there's like the drug deal gone wrong version
that I personally think is what really happened.
I don't think the Helter Skelter doomsday cult thing
was a thing.
I'll explain.
I know, controversial.
Oh my God.
So July, 1969, one of the followers was Tex.
His name was Tex, remember?
Okay, cool.
So he was also a drug dealer while living on the ranch.
It was said that Tex went to go to a deal
with another dealer named Bernard Crow in Los Angeles.
Tex was buying a lot of drugs from this guy,
like $1,200 worth.
Tex didn't have all of the money, but he told Bernard,
"'Hey, I'll take the drugs, get the rest of your money,
and then come back and pay you, because you know that always works.'" Bernard was hey, I'll take the drugs, get the rest of your money, and then come back and pay you.
Because you know that always works.
Bernard was like, how do I know you're going to come back?
And Tex was like, here's my girlfriend.
I'll have her stay with you.
She'll stay here with you as collateral.
He agrees, and then Tex takes off.
Tex never comes back.
Yeah, I know, what a douche.
So his girlfriend is probably like, yeah, don't worry, he's coming back.
He's a man of his word,
he would never just leave me here.
And then like 12 hours go by and she's like,
yeah, maybe he got sidetracked or something,
he loves me, he's coming back.
He's not coming back, is he?
No, okay.
So some time passes,
Bernard still has the girlfriend hostage, mind you,
and then he calls up Tex.
Now, Tex, his real name was also Charles,
but everyone called him Tex.
So Bernard calls the number to reach Tex
at the compound or whatever.
Bernard asked for Charles because he means Tex,
but it was actually Charles Manson
that was on the other end, yeah.
So Bernard is like, I want my money, where's my money?
Bernard then said that if he didn't get his money,
he was going to burn down the ranch and rape all his women.
So Charles Manson then decides
to take matters into his own hand.
He goes down to meet with Bernard, walks in, they fight.
Charles shoots him.
Charles grabs the girl and then he leaves him behind.
Bernard actually survives, but Charlie doesn't know that.
He thinks he's dead.
Charlie starts to get really paranoid
because he believed that Bernard belonged
to the group Black Panthers
and that they were going to come after him
and his family for what he did.
I mean, this guy Bernard was like a big wig drug dealer.
Once someone got word, it was like,
it was gonna be over for him.
So Charlie starts warning the family members that the Black Panthers are going to kill them
and that they need to learn how to fend for themselves.
But he's just getting really paranoid
and hopes that nobody finds out what he did.
He decides that he needs to get the family members
to commit crimes and then make them complicit
in the crimes that he had committed.
I feel like criminals always over complicate things.
That's just a personal opinion though,
but I feel like it's very true.
Due to his growing paranoia
that the Black Panther group was coming after him,
Charles enlisted a motorcycle gang
called the Straight Satans for protection over the compound.
In exchange for protection, Charlie promised him or them
all the girls they wanted.
Here's where I'm gonna throw some names at you,
but it's fine, just follow it.
So one day the biker guys wanted drugs.
They wanted to do some drugs.
And one of the family members, his name was Bobby,
he said that there was a guy named Gary Hinman
who would be able to supply them with some goods.
So the biker guys give Bobby some money
and he goes and he gets drugs from Gary.
So the biker guys, they do the drugs.
Afterwards, they're pissed.
They're pissed because the guys from the straight Satan's
said the drugs were bad
and they wanted their money back for being ripped off.
These guys were growing more and more angry,
threatening to kill people
if they didn't get their money back. So Charlie told Bobby and two other family members,
Mary Brunner and Susan Atkins,
to go with Bobby and get the money back from Gary Heineman
because he didn't want any problems with the biker guys.
Like, you didn't wanna be on their bad side.
Charlie already believed that the Black Panthers
were after him.
He didn't want
the straight Satans after him either. So the three of them head out and when they get to Gary's house,
they have like a gun and stuff. They're threatening him. They're like, we want our money back. The
drugs were fake, whatever. Gary refused to give them the money back saying that the drugs were
good and he didn't even have the money because he already spent it. And then things seem to escalate,
escalate, things escalated. and then Bobby, Mary and Susan
stayed at Gary's house for like two days.
They had him tied up.
They're trying to reason with him to give up the money
or give them something valuable
that he could give to the straight saints
in lieu of the money.
At some point there was like a bit of a struggle
that happened and one of the girls ends up calling
Charlie Manson
to let him know that Gary wasn't cooperating.
And then Charles was like, okay, I'll be right there.
Bobby regained control.
And then soon after, Gary agreed to sign over his cars,
which were worth about $1,000.
He could use the cars and the little money.
So they're making this agreement.
Cool.
Then, this sounds like a cheesy movie, but this is, yes.
Then Charlie comes busting through the door.
He has a Confederate knife, busts through the door,
cuts Gary across the face, starts threatening him.
Bobby was like, okay, that was really unnecessary, you know?
But what do we do now?
We can't just let him go.
He'll rat us out.
Bobby ends up killing Gary
because that was really his only option.
So he takes the knife and he just kills Gary.
So before leaving Gary's house, Bobby wrote on the walls in Gary's blood,
he drew a Black Panther paw print along with the words, political piggy,
and he did this because it was recommended to him by Charles Manson,
because he wanted to throw off investigators,
and make them believe that the murder was related to the Black Panthers.
Tying back to the Bernard Crowe shooting,
like maybe they would tie those two together.
Not long after though, Bobby was pulled over and arrested in one of Gary's cars,
and he was being charged with the Murdy, Murdy?
And he was being charged for the murder of Gary Heineman.
Because he did it, yeah, you know? So yeah, it makes sense.
Bobby was a family member though, okay?
The group stood up for their family members.
So when he was arrested,
Charlie started getting really paranoid
that things were gonna lead back to him.
He knew that they had to get Bobby out.
So the group decided to kill again.
They would stage it to look like a copycat murder,
leading in front of the police, and then they would go to the police station that things were gonna lead back to him. He knew that they had to get Bobby out. So the group decided to kill again.
They would stage it to look like a copycat murder,
leading investigators to believe whoever did it
also probably committed the Gary Hinman murder,
which meant Bobby wasn't involved because he was in jail.
So it would make them think that they had the wrong guy
and then Bobby would be set free.
Flawless plan, totally makes sense.
Nobody will know.
Again, criminals always overcomplicate things,
but this is what they're thinking.
So back at Spahn Ranch, Charlie and Tex,
they were like trying to come up with a plan.
Who do we hate that we can kill
and create like this copycat scene?
Hmm, Terry Melcher.
Remember the music producer?
Yeah, so Charlie had been to Terry's home at one point
when they were living with the Beach Boy.
So he knew where Terry lived.
August 9th, 1969, in a big old house on Celio Drive
in Los Angeles is where actress Sharon Tate,
who was eight months pregnant
and her movie director husband, Roman Polanski,
were renting Terry Melcher's home.
Talk about wrong place, wrong damn time.
Now on this night, Roman was in the UK,
and Sharon was at home with her friends,
having like a little get together, just hanging out.
Along with Sharon was her ex-boyfriend or fiance,
and friend, hairstylist Jay Sebring,
iconic hairstylist.
Also, coffee heiress, Abigail Folger was there.
Yeah, Folger's in your cup, queen.
Yeah, she's there.
Abigail's boyfriend was also there, Wojciech Frykowski.
He was there too.
There was also a man named Steven Parent
who was visiting the home, taking care of the property.
So the family members, Tex, Pat, Linda, and Susan
get into the car and they drive out to the home.
Charles tells them to do everything that Tex says,
but doesn't tell them like what it is they're doing,
except for Tex, he's the only one that knows.
When they arrive late at night,
Tex went onto the property first.
That's when he came across Steven Parent,
who was like literally in his car.
Like it looked like he was just put the keys in
or something, because he was about to leave and go home.
Poor Steven, he was shot by Tex four times.
So then after that, Tex goes back to the car
and told the girls like, come on, come with me.
We're going inside now.
Tex was able to get into the house through an unlocked door and let the others in.
And then in the living room, Tex was trying to deal with Jay Sebring,
who he came across first.
And he had him on the floor, he was trying to tie him up.
Tex asked Susan to go and check the back rooms
and like bring everyone into the living room.
So Tex and Jay are in the living room and they're starting to fight
because Jay's trying to run away, escape,
but sadly Tex shot him and killed him.
It was said that Tex was the one who killed most that night,
but like they all participated in their own ways.
It was just a really gruesome scene.
There was blood everywhere.
Everyone was brutally murdered.
It was just horrifying.
Then in Sharon Tate's blood,
there was the word pig written on the front door.
They were trying to tie it back to the previous murder.
In total, the victims had been stabbed 102 times
and they had gunshot wounds.
So it was like a little much, like they're dead.
We get it.
Now, many believe that this was some kind
of satanic ritual type of killing,
and when the media got a hold of it, it was a massive story.
Hollywood was terrified.
Celebrities were thinking that like, someone was gonna come to them and kill them next.
It's believed Charlie had the family members involved in the Tate murders,
to prevent them from talking to police about the Bernard and Gary murder, because now their hands were dirty too.
So they were hoping that back at the crime scene,
the police would be making the connection between the two murders.
Unfortunately, the police never made that connection.
They didn't connect the two, so great plan, worked great.
So the next night, another murder was in the works.
This time it would be at the home of a grocery company executive
named Leno and his wife Rosemary LaBianca.
Now this would be in like a very different section of Los Angeles.
This night though, Leslie Van Houten,
she went along to like prove her loyalty to Charlie and the family.
She said that before going, she knew people were gonna die,
but she like wanted to prove herself.
Charlie, Leslie, Pat, Tex, Linda, and Susan
all crammed into a car and they drove around for a while
before they stopped at the house
that they were gonna hit next.
Charles went in first and tied up the LaBiancas,
then he left.
So the rest of the gang, they came in,
they're struggling with the LaBiancas.
The two girls were going to with the LaBiancas.
The two girls were going to kill the LaBiancas,
but I think they chickened out and they asked Tex to come in, kill them.
So he killed the husband and wife.
And then the girls took the knives and stabbed them
and like cut them up and carved in their body
because Tex said that they needed to do something.
Again, it was a pretty brutal and awful scene.
Anything bad you can imagine, that was it, okay?
That was the scene.
It was not nice.
The LaPiancas had been stabbed a total of 67 times.
Once again, they used their blood
and they wrote death to pigs, rise,
and helter-skelter on the walls and the fridge.
Helter-skelter, which they spelled wrong, first of all,
great, was referencing the Beatles song,
Helter Skelter from the White Album.
The only thing that they were allowed to listen to
on Spahn Ranch.
Charles believed the music incited a race war and murder.
Because the Beatles were huge,
they thought that investigators would make this connection
because they are trying to make it look like a copycat murder.
So they wrote in the blood again, they'll connect it with the Sharon Tate ones.
Sharon Tate connects to the Gary ones, Gary one leads back to the drug dealer.
So it was said that the reason they killed again was because they didn't realize that the Tate murders
were going to become so big
because it wasn't supposed to.
It was just supposed to be Terry Melcher there,
but it was all over the news
and everybody was talking about it
and that wasn't the plan, so they needed to hit again.
The reason that Charlie picked the LaBiancas home,
because it may seem super random, but it wasn't random.
Not at all.
Nay nay.
Like mentioned earlier, Charlie, he held a grudge
and he never forgot when you did him wrong.
The LaBiancas, they lived next door
to a guy named Harold True.
We don't need to know him, but he was there.
Harold was a friend to Charlie and the family.
They actually stayed at Harold's house for a bit of time.
The family, again, they like moved in to Harold's house
and were living there for some time.
But I guess they were causing a bit of a ruckus
and the neighbors called the cops,
which led to Charlie and the family having to move out.
Who were the neighbors?
The LaBiancas, of course.
That's why he decided to kill them that night,
because he remembered that
and because they needed another copycat murder.
Also, Charlie remembered that the LaBiancas liked to gamble
and had lots of money.
Money that he needed to pay back the straight Satans.
That's his plan.
So over the years, Charlie had said that like,
he was never there at the LaBiancas
in interviews and whatnot,
but everyone said he was the one
who drove to the LaBianca house and that he went in for a bit
for a period of time.
Well inside, after tying the LaBianca's up,
Charlie went and grabbed Rosemary LaBianca's wallet,
then waited for the gang back in the car.
Once the murders were complete,
Charlie then took them to a house in Venice Beach,
which was right next to the Straight Satans clubhouse.
Mind you, it was like 4 a.m.,
and there's many speculation as to why they went there.
Some say it was to commit another murder,
but many believe it was actually
because Charlie went there to give the Straight Satans
the money owed and regain their protection over Spahn Ranch,
which makes sense because he just got the money
from the LaBiancas.
Back at Spahn Ranch, there was a ranch hand named Donald Shea,
who was a Hollywood stuntman actor, but also helped out around the ranch.
Now, he didn't like the family.
He thought they were trying, or they were taking advantage of the old man who owned it.
And on August 16th, 1969, 26 members of the family were arrested on suspicion of auto theft.
It didn't last long though, due to like some paperwork errors,
they were all released,
but because of this, Charlie thought that the ranch hand Donald
tipped them off to police,
and when they got back to the ranch,
Donald Shea was never seen again, just vanished.
Poof, gone.
Now that they're on police's radar, Donald Shea was never seen again, just vanished. Poof, gone.
Now that they're on police's radar,
they wanted somewhere else to live.
And the group ends up moving to Barker Ranch in Death Valley,
which was like an old mining property
that was pretty cut off from the world.
So they were there for a bit.
Then on October 12th, 1969,
officers raided the Barker Ranch
on suspicion of auto theft again.
24 members were arrested this time.
Now they didn't even know that these people were involved
with the murders going on.
They were just there, you know, auto theft.
You're arrested, auto theft, let's go.
Now this time though, while in jail,
one of the family members, Susan Atkins, she blabbed.
She told her cellmates that she and the family
were involved with the murder of Sharon Tate.
I don't know why I'm whispering, but I am.
She was kind of bragging about it,
like, oh, you're looking at her.
I'm the one who was involved.
Based off interviews with the cellmate.
Yes, I like went down a rabbit hole.
Anyways, the cellmate tells investigators this information
because hello, I want a lesser sentence.
I'm gonna rat on you, which they did.
And this, my friends, is where it all just falls apart.
Goodbye.
December, 1969, four months after the crimes.
Oh, a lot of things happened in between here,
but it's like nothing that really makes a difference.
It's just bullshit.
Charles Manson and five members were being charged with the Tate and LaBianca murders.
On June 15th, 1970, the trial starts.
Charles, Charlie, Mr. Manson, he asked for permission to serve as his own attorney,
but he was denied.
They should have let him.
No, they shouldn't have.
He was denied.
Susan Atkins gave a testimony and described in great detail
what happened the night of the Tate murders.
She had like little to no emotion
and showed not a lot of remorse.
It was very awkward.
They didn't wanna use her as a witness
because they thought it wouldn't help
the Helter Skelter story that prosecutors
were going to focus on, which we will get into.
So they ended up not using her.
They're like, you're a bad look, get out of here.
Now, the main problem was that Charles Manson
was not at the murder scene during the Tate murders
and did not participate in the LaBianca murders.
So they had to get him with circumstantial evidence
and by the law of conspiracy.
I know, confusing.
They didn't have any proof that he did a damn thing.
So prosecutors had to get creative
and come up with a storyline
that would convict Charles Manson.
Now, Hollywood was going crazy over this trial
and day after day, Charlie would come into court.
All of this was like being filmed for TV news
and he would just spew some wild shit.
He was playing to the courtroom.
He knew it was a circus and he was feeding into it.
Charlie would have like constant stare offs with the camera
because he knew that people would be like,
oh my God, what a fricking weirdo.
And then he would also do it to the jury members.
He would just stare at the jury
and it just made them feel extremely uncomfortable.
He was just aggressive, intimidating and very gonna go to the bathroom, and he would just be like, I'm gonna go to the bathroom,
and he would just be like,
I'm gonna go to the bathroom,
and he would just be like,
I'm gonna go to the bathroom,
and he would just be like,
I'm gonna go to the bathroom,
and he would just be like,
I'm gonna go to the bathroom,
and he would just be like,
I'm gonna go to the bathroom,
and he would just be like,
I'm gonna go to the bathroom,
and he would just be like,
I'm gonna go to the bathroom,
and he would just be like,
I'm gonna go to the bathroom,
and he would just be like,
I'm gonna go to the bathroom,
and he would just be like,
I'm gonna go to the bathroom,
and he would just be like,
I'm gonna go to the bathroom,
and he would just be like,
I'm gonna go to the bathroom, and he would just be like, I'm gonna go to the bathroom, and he would just be like, I'm gonna go all to stand up and hold hands and some symbols,
another day he wanted them to get up and scream, or he wanted them to sing his songs when they
were walking into court. It is creepy, it is weird, and I think he just loved that. It was
just a weird performance that nobody asked for. So the rest of the Manson family members were
banned from court proceedings for disrupting the court,
so they moved out to the hallways,
and they also kept a vigil outside to show their support.
Charles carved an X into his forehead at one point to symbolize his removal from society,
and then the three girls did the same as well.
Eventually down the line, he turned that X into a swastika,
so that's great, seems like a real hoot of a guy.
Wow.
So again, TV news went wild.
Everyone went wild.
Girls gone wild.
It was just all wild.
So here's where the Helter Skelter story came into play,
and is what Charles Manson is really remembered by nowadays.
They go hand in hand.
The prosecutor.
His name is Vincent Bugalowski,
whatever the hell.
Now Vincent was said to be a very great prosecutor.
He was a known womanizer and he loved attention.
He brought in another guy with him
during the court proceedings,
who everyone thought was like his assistant or extra help,
but really the guy was there to help Vincent
write a book on the case,
which he didn't mention to anyone until after the fact. So he brings in this guy,
this guy is taking notes, gonna help him write a book. The Helter Skelter story that was presented
in court was that Charles Manson formed a cult filled with people who didn't want to be a part
of society, okay, facts. Charles wanted to be a rock star. He was obsessed with the Beatles, the Beach Boys.
Through the Beach Boys is how he came to meet Terry Melcher,
who stole his music and represented the establishment to Charlie.
Charlie hated the establishment.
He believed that the Beatles were predicting a race war through hidden messages in their songs,
and he needed to prepare for this race war.
Charles brainwashed his members in needed to prepare for this race war.
Charles brainwashed his members
in believing that there was a race war about to take place,
ordered them to kill Gary Heineman,
then ordered them to kill white people
and frame black people by telling his followers
to kill whoever lived at Terry's house.
Then Charles picked another house at random to attack,
the LaBiancas, and ordered everyone to be killed.
The plot was to frame black people
by having his followers leave messages
and lines from the Beatles' White Album at the crime scene.
This would then lead to a race war.
Once the race war started,
Charles and his family would hide in the desert
until it was over.
Then Charles would come out of hiding and become leader of the Black Army
and rebuild the world.
This, in summary, is the story that convicted Charles
and gained Vincent fame and fortune for selling his best-selling book,
Helter Skelter.
But we'll get into that too.
This whole story was created,
which I think there are bits and pieces correct in there.
Like Charles Manson, do not be mistaken, he was super freaking racist.
Disturbed man.
This reason as to why Charles Manson committed these crimes made for a shocking story.
But most of all, it set Charles up for first degree murder and conspiracy under California law.
Without the Helter Skelter storyline, there was no evidence that Charles wanted
to make these murders happen or even participated in them.
So the only way to get him convicted
was by enhancing what happened.
Charlie's plan to start a race war
would make him responsible for all crimes committed.
If the prosecution mentioned to the court,
the auto thefts, the drugs, shit, the Bernard killing,
then the Helter Skelter story or whatever,
it just wouldn't make sense.
So they didn't even introduce any of that.
They didn't even try to explain
the whole Gary killing either.
They really didn't.
Because how does that fit in
with the doomsday cult mentality?
It didn't, which in court could lead to reasonable doubt.
Possibly leaving jurors to think,
hmm, maybe it had to do with a drug deal gone bad and not a cult. which in court could lead to reasonable doubt, possibly leaving jurors to think,
hmm, maybe it had to do with a drug deal gone bad
and not a cold.
Maybe Charlie technically didn't do anything.
And the prosecution did not want that.
Their job was to get Charlie arrested.
Plus he is a danger to society.
So they needed to like,
how do we make sure he gets locked up?
So this whole story just blew up.
Everybody was talking about Helter Skelter,
how terrifying it all was.
And then that became the story that really defined
this whole everything, Charles Manson.
And many believe that it wasn't even true.
The court hearings were a hot mess.
Just gonna glaze over it.
They were a hot mess.
In the end though, on March 29th,
Charlie was charged with seven counts of first degree murder
and one count of conspiracy to commit murder
for the deaths of Abigail Wojciech, Steve, Sharon, Jay,
Leno, and his wife, Rosemary.
Guilty, goodbye.
Pat, Leslie, and Susan, they were also charged with murder
and the jury had called for the death penalty
for all four defendants.
The three girls were like,
I'm not trying to say that there wasn't like brainwashing happening in a cult mentality,
Charlie's followers were like ride or die for him.
These girls were like loyal to him, they were like he is everything to us,
and they just did everything that he said.
I just don't want that to get lost, because I think that's very true.
So they go to prison, goodbye.
Now in 1972, the Supreme Court overturned the death penalty.
So sentences were turned into life imprisonment.
Charlie said at the end of the trial,
all they really accomplished was sending him
right back to where he started.
And he really wasn't wrong there.
Now throughout the years,
most of them have done interviews behind prison walls right back to where he started. And he really wasn't wrong there. Now throughout the years,
most of them have done interviews behind prison walls
or whatever, where they have showed great remorse
for what they've done.
Except for that one girl, she was like really weird.
Was it Susan?
I think it was Susan.
I think as they got older,
they just kind of came to their senses.
Not so much Charlie though.
He never, never owned up to his part
in the choices that they made.
He would say over and over again until his dying day
that he never told them what to do,
that they made their choices on their own
and he had nothing to do with any of it.
And I think that's why Charles Manson remains so infamous
because he never actually did anything.
He got these other people to commit the crimes for him.
He never got his hands dirty,
but he did shoot the Bernard guy.
So he did technically, sorry.
Also the whole like Helter Skelter,
doomsday cult story added to it.
People just love cults.
So it just took him to this iconic, infamous being, I guess.
In 1974, Vincent Bugloli, the prosecutor,
well, he was now an author
because he released his book, Helter Skelter,
which was based off of the Manson case.
And it became the best selling true crime book
in history, selling over 7 million copies.
So it brought him great success.
Vincent was just riding the wave.
A lot more things happened,
but this video is already super long.
So yeah, but everyone remained
and some still to this day remain in prison.
Leslie Van Houten, she was sentenced to life in prison.
She's 68 now and she's been denied parole numerous times.
Susan Atkins died in prison of brain cancer in 2009.
Pat Krenwinkel is now 73 and still in prison.
She's been denied parole numerous times as well.
Tex Watson, Tex was like the most fucked up
out of all of them, okay?
Like he was really crazy, but he's 75 now
and he's still in prison.
He's been denied parole numerous times as well,
but he has become a born again Christian
and runs a Christian outreach site from prison.
Linda Kasabian, I didn't really talk about her that much,
but she was involved.
I'm assuming that she came from money
because she got a good attorney, okay?
She was charged with nothing.
She was there the night of the Tate murders as the lookout.
And she also helped like clean and dispose of the weapons and whatnot.
But she was charged with nothing because she was considered a star witness
for the prosecutor's case against Charles Manson.
She told them everything they wanted.
And then afterwards she disappeared, changed her name.
She was like, bye.
Linda's done a couple of interviews since this whole thing,
like later in life.
And you can find them on YouTube.
And her face is always like blacked out
because she doesn't want anyone to know what she looks like.
She kind of has meth face.
And that's not me trying to be a dick.
I don't really blame her for doing meth.
Like, come on, just tell your truth.
It's been a hundred years. Bobby,
remember Bobby in the very beginning?
He killed Gary Heineman. He's 71
now, and he's still in prison. Yeah, he
was convicted for murder, for killing Gary,
so he's still in prison. Another family
member, Steve Grogan, we
didn't talk about him, but he was
charged for the murder of Donald
Shea, the spawned ranch hand that went
missing. Yeah, well, Steve was charged.
But Steve was granted parole after serving 15 years for Donald's murder.
He was allowed his freedom after telling authorities
where Donald's body had been disposed.
Lucky him, I guess, you know?
Charles Manson remained behind bars until the age of 83,
and then he died on November 19th, 2017 in prison.
Oh my God, not long after his birthday.
Like a full circle.
But he had a heart attack or something.
I don't know.
He needed to go.
Goodbye.
He was just, ugh, exhausting.
I watched so many interviews with this dude.
He just talks in circles,
but people find him absolutely fascinating.
He says nothing, really. He just talks. I, but people find him absolutely fascinating. He says nothing really.
He just talks.
I couldn't take it anymore.
Charles Manson wasn't a God or Jesus like figure.
He was just an odd little man
who was abandoned by his parents,
who wanted attention and validation
and was just filled with hate and did terrible things.
Charles Manson has so many fan girls and guys or did. I mean people love the guy and they
believe that he was 100% innocent and didn't need to be in prison but what I don't think these
morons realize is that maybe he wanted to be in prison. Maybe it was his home. I mean look what
happens when he's out. Nothing good. Like they were fighting so hard for him to be proven innocent.
It's like babe, babe, no we don't need that, no.
There are so many people out there who idolize this guy.
I just will never understand it.
It's so bizarre.
I've said this before and I will say it again.
Get better idols.
There are so many great people out there
who have done amazing things.
Why idolize someone who's just fucking weird
with a swastika on their forehead, you fucking morons?
I think it is fair to say that Charles Manson had a very difficult life and now he's dead.
The end.
That is the story about Charles Manson.
I told the other version, drug deal gone bad,
but there's a lot of people and a lot of stories
and versions about the Helter Skelter
wherein it involves a doomsday cult.
After this week of binge watching freaking everything
that had to do with Charles,
I just personally believe that the doomsday cult
wasn't the thing. I just personally believe that the doomsday cult. After this week of binge watching freaking everything
that had to do with Charles,
I just personally believe that the doomsday cult
wasn't the thing.
I think it was just a drug deal gone bad.
Either way, they needed something to prosecute him on
and they had to create some kind of story to get him.
Because if they didn't, then he would have been out.
And they didn't want that.
If they did do that, is that morally right?
I don't know.
Anyways, it's still all sad though, because they were't want that. If they did do that, is that morally right? I don't know. Anyways, it's still all sad though
because they were like really murdered.
Like really, really murdered.
If you made it all the way to the end, congratulations.
I love you and appreciate you.
You're the best.
Wow, you're my best friend.
I hope you guys have a wonderful rest of your day.
My voice hurts.
I think I lost it.
But other than that,
I hope you have a wonderful rest of your day.
You make choices.
And I'll be seeing you next week.
Bye.
Hi, friends.
It's me, Bailey, popping in here again.
Thank you for listening to today's podcast.
What a wild ride, right? Demands and murders have become so ingrained in American culture you almost forget
that it's not just creepy legend and like this actually happened okay now this new documentary
is based on Tom O'Neill's 2019 book it's called Chaos Charles Manson, the CIA, and the Secret History of the 60s. Now Tom wanted to find more
potential answers to the age-old question when it comes to the Manson murders. Just how exactly did
this little weirdo who had broken dreams of making it big as a musician manage to control the minds
of so many people and get them like get them to do his bidding no questions asked
so i guess tom did some digging and found out that when charlie was living in san francisco
he would repeatedly visit the same free health clinic often because his wives quote unquote
wives had a lot of pregnancies and you know different situations to take care of. Turns out that this clinic is where a psychiatrist named
Louis Jolly West was recruiting hippies to study their lifestyle and observe their drug use,
specifically LSD. And apparently this was all done for the CIA. Jolly described the office he
and his researchers set up as a laboratory disguised as a hippie crash pad.
Wow, groundbreaking.
And what was the big government program that Jolly was most known for being closely tied to?
MK Ultra.
Do you watch Dark History or listen to it at all?
We did a whole episode on MK Ultra, but the rundown.
It's a secret government program where the CIA experimented with different
drugs and mind control techniques in order to force like confessions from people but also they
I think they just want to see what it could do you know so in the documentary Tom O'Neill poses
the question could Charles Manson have picked up some of his mind control techniques from the CIA
I mean he was living in that exact
area where the experiments on the hippies were taking place, and constantly in and out of the
same medical clinic where they were finding their test subjects. Yeah, it could be possible he could
have been recruited, I don't see why not. It's also interesting because Tom brings up how Charlie
repeatedly violated his parole, and yet there were no consequences for him. And there
were also multiple raids done at Spahn Ranch. But again, Charlie just always seemed to get by
unscathed. Many believe like maybe he was getting this like get out of jail free card because he
was still under like maybe government observation? Maybe he was being protected
and he didn't even like know it?
I don't know.
People like mysteries, huh?
That's why we're here.
So yeah, these are some interesting ideas,
but is there any actual evidence?
No.
And at least Tom O'Neill seems pretty willing to admit that,
that this is just a theory
and there's no proof it really
it really even happened. Maybe Charlie was just super paranoid about the loyalty of his followers
and he wanted to like he wanted them to prove their devotion to him in the most extreme way
possible. Also everyone was on drugs so period. I think that says a lot. Well let me know your
guys's thoughts you know but that's all I got today. Thank you so much for hanging out with me.
I hope you have a good rest of your day.
You make good choices.
Please be safe out there.
Don't fall for these long-haired bad boys who are going to take you down a bad path
and ruin your life.
Don't do it, okay?
All right.
I'll be seeing you guys later.
Goodbye.