Stuff You Should Know - The Manson Family Murders Part II
Episode Date: January 30, 2018Listen in today for the conclusion of the story of the Manson Family Murders. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy informati...on.
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On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
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We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
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Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
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or wherever you get your podcasts.
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know
from HowStuffWorks.com.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Clark.
There's Charles W. Chuck Bryant.
There's Jerry Rowland over there,
and this is Stuff You Should Know
about the Manson family, part two.
And that's right.
If you're listening to this one first
and you're doing it wrong, so no need to recap.
Just go listen to part one.
And we'll pick up with The Beatles' wide album,
which was a very big deal in how this figures in.
Great, great album, obviously, as a Beatles fan.
I know you're not super into them,
but I love the wide album.
It's arguably their weirdest album.
And it spoke to Charles Manson for sure,
because he really became pretty obsessed with it
in diving into deconstructing the album.
It's a very dense, long album anyway,
and there's a lot to it, so it's no wonder
that Charles Manson with a head full of acid
would think that The Beatles are speaking to him.
Right, and he definitely did.
So he apparently had a history already
of deconstructing Beatles' lyrics,
but before he was deconstructing lyrics
to like Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band,
which compared to the wide album
is decidedly upbeat and positive, right?
So while he was in prison, he was super into The Beatles.
When he gets out, The Beatles released the wide album.
He's already obsessed with them,
but now he's on tons and tons of acid.
The wide album is kind of a downer
compared to Sergeant Pepper's.
And the fact that it's speaking to Charles Manson
like really made things turn dark, it seems like,
as far as him and the people in his orbit are concerned.
Yeah, so they're hanging out.
They're lightin' bonfires.
They're doin' drugs.
They're listening to Charles Manson
stomp around with his tiny feet,
and his redneck voice,
talking about Heltr Skelter,
which is a great, great Beatles song,
and basically sort of renamed his vision
for this race war and impending Apocalypse Heltr Skelter.
He kind of stole that from The Beatles,
as Bono would later go on to say.
Yeah, he stole it from The Beatles,
but he also took it, again, as like a message
that The Beatles were sending him a sign
that he needed to prepare his family for this,
because they were the chosen ones, basically,
who should wade out the race riot in Death Valley.
So, there's this whole idea
that all of the Tate-LaBianca murders took place
to further this idea of Heltr Skelter,
to strike the match that would set it off,
to get things going, right?
And this idea apparently is the creation
of the prosecutor in the case,
a guy named Vincent Bugliosi,
who wrote a book called Heltr Skelter,
like a 600-page book, basically the definitive
true crime book on the Manson family
and the Manson family murders.
And so, most of what we said in part one,
and most of what everybody knows
about the Manson family murders,
are come through this lens
that was established by Vincent Bugliosi,
who is the lead prosecutor in the case,
was privy to tons of information,
to confessions, to interviews,
under questioning, to all this stuff,
but he's the one who pieced together the idea
that the Manson family committed these murders
to start Heltr Skelter, that was his whole jam.
Yeah, well, I mean, some of the Manson family
co-operated?
Co-operated?
It's in there somewhere.
Co-operated?
That's a dark time with that word.
Co-operated. Co-operated.
I don't have to say it much, luckily,
because I'm not in a life of crime.
No, but some of them back that up
in saying that, you know, at one point,
he wanted them to throw a wallet of a victim
in a black neighborhood,
so that people would think it was, you know,
black panthers that did this.
Yeah, but if you- So there was some evidence
that that was probably the case.
If you talk, though, to Manson,
and you, or if you listen to some of this stuff,
he says some of these explanations,
because over the years, people have said,
what about this part?
What about this part?
And they've basically presented him
with every aspect of the whole case against him.
You know, a lot of the stuff he has no explanation
for are nothing good.
But that wallet is a sturdling example
of where it becomes obvious that,
wait, we're basically hearing one point of view
about this, and we've never, that's all we've ever heard.
Which if you're doing any kind of reporting,
which you and I are not, but if you were inclined
to do any kind of reporting,
you never want to just stick to just one source.
And with the Manson family case,
it's basically one source,
and it's Vincent Bugliosi, the prosecutor.
But Manson explains that as he told,
I think it was Linda Cassabian,
to just get rid of that wallet,
that he wasn't in a predominantly black neighborhood,
and that he told her to get rid of the wallet
because it was hot.
And she hid the wallet actually in the tank of a toilet
in a women's bathroom in a gas station,
which is hardly where you'd put it
if you wanted a black person to find it,
to use the credit cards inside,
and to tip off the cops that a black person
was behind the Tate LaBianca murders.
So when you kind of dive into stuff like that,
you see that there actually are two competing explanations
in some aspects of this case.
Yeah, but I think Cassabian herself said that too,
though, didn't she?
Yeah, the thing is, is if you are, if you listen-
I believe Charles Manson.
Right, I know, that's the thing,
is there's a terrible realization when you're like,
actually, wait a minute,
I understand what Charles Manson is saying here.
The, with stuff like that, when you look at the testimony,
these were people who were on trial for murder,
who had every incentive to go along
with the lead prosecutor's theory
that it was all Charles Manson's fault.
They could have maybe immunity.
They could have charges dropped against them.
By saying, yes, this is the case,
or having their testimony jibe
with what Vincent Bugliosi's case was,
they had an incentive to do that.
Whether Charles Manson is right or correct or lying,
from an objective perspective,
the people on Charles for Murder had an incentive
to agree with Vincent Bugliosi.
All right, so the way they got caught
was actually pretty interesting.
Unrelated to these murders,
police raided Spahn Ranch because it was,
sort of became known that people were living there.
They were out on these creepy crawls doing these crimes.
And so that's why they were originally fingered,
as they say in the biz, and they went there
and they raided Spahn Ranch,
and a lot of the family were arrested at that time
for like car theft and burglary and stuff.
They were released on a technicality
and then went to Death Valley to that weird ranch.
If you've ever been to Death Valley,
it's not a place you wanna hang out.
No, it's not.
Especially in the summertime.
Is that where Joshua Tree is?
No, that's at Joshua Tree.
But that's not in Death Valley?
No, those are two different places.
But is it close by?
Is it the same type of terrain kind of thing?
Yeah, I mean, I've been to both.
Are they similar?
Well, I mean, Joshua Tree is the desert for sure,
but it's very lovely.
Like, I don't remember much about Death Valley that was,
I think it was not very hospitable for me.
It's appropriately named?
Yeah, I think so.
Okay.
And of course, now people are gonna say,
Death Valley's the best.
You know what you're talking about, heavy sweater.
So they go to Death Valley,
then there were a bunch of raids at the Death Valley camp
between October 10th and 12th of 1969.
And eventually they ended up rounding up
the people responsible for these murders
without knowing that they were responsible for these murders.
So they were in jail,
kind of luckily already in jail
when they sort of decided they could pin or not pin,
like legitimately pin these murders on these people.
So this being the second time,
there's something that I've ran across in research, Chuck,
that never gets talked about,
but is I think really significant.
At both of those raids,
the Spawn Ranch raid and the Death Valley raid,
the state took children from this.
Like there were kids, babies, toddlers,
little kids running around growing up,
like at the Spawn Ranch and at the Barker Ranch,
which is extraordinarily troubling.
And some of them have been,
are thought to have possibly been Charles Manson's kids.
Like he may have had some,
there's just so much free love going on
and so many pregnancies that were the results
of this free love.
It was difficult to say whose kid was whose,
but they think that it's possible
at least one or two of those kids
was Charles Manson's kids.
And they were taken by the state
and later adopted by people.
But it's like, you know,
it's one thing to think of a bunch of hippies
just out in the desert taking acid,
just being idiots, you know,
and then eventually it's turning dark and murderous.
But the idea that there were kids around
at any part of this is really,
I find that very troubling.
Yeah, for sure.
I mean, all those cults had kids roaming around.
They just weren't murderous cults, you know?
Yeah.
So Susan Atkins for her part,
she agreed to testify initially against Charles Manson
to avoid the death sentence,
which for a few years more was still a thing in California,
I think in 1972 they reversed that.
But at the time the death sentence was a threat
at the time of the crimes.
So she had a grand jury testimony.
It basically led to Manson being arraigned
for these murders in December of 69.
She recanted that testimony.
The deal was revoked by the prosecutors.
It was kind of too late at that point.
Linda Kasabian, who you might remember was,
I think the getaway driver and then the one who
would not knock on the right apartment door to kill the actor.
So she'd actually didn't commit any murders at all,
was not in any of the houses.
She was granted immunity for testifying.
And I think she was the only one granted immunity.
Right.
Although I think, yeah, they just took the death penalty
off, like you said, for Susan Atkins.
And I don't know if you said this or not,
but Susan Atkins is the reason the case broke open
eventually when they rounded up all of the Manson family
and had them in jail for the Death Valley raids
for, you know, burglary and theft and stuff like that.
The way that they found out that the Manson family
was responsible for the Tate and LaBianca murders
was Susan Atkins bragging about it
and a couple of her cellmates going and telling the cops.
And that's originally how the case began
against the Manson family.
That's how the authorities originally found out.
Big mouth.
Yeah, I guess so.
All right, so let's take a break and we'll come back
and talk a little bit about one of the weirdest,
most sensational trials in American history, right after this.
We're going to use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
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friends, and nonstop references to the best decade ever.
Do you remember going to Blockbuster?
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No, it was hair.
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or you're at the end of the road.
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All right, Chuck, so on December 11, 1969, Charles Manson,
who the public had just been acquainted with, I think,
just in the last few months, was finally
arraigned for the murders of Tate LaBianca murders.
And I think that, did they get him for his role
in the Hinman murder at that point?
I'm not actually sure about that.
Definitely the Tate LaBianca murders,
which was plenty enough.
And he, it's kind of an understatement
to say that he did not offer any public contrition.
He actually went the opposite way.
Yeah, for sure.
He was, well, the whole trial was chaos.
And he incited chaos at every turn
to make it just a circus and was quite successful at doing so.
Initially, he wanted to represent himself
and did for a little while.
But the judge denied that, Judge William Keen,
and said, you have to work with a lawyer because of the fact
that you're just making this into a circus.
Basically, we need this to stay on track.
And he actually was successful, though.
Manson was getting Judge Keen oustered as judge.
And Judge Charles Older eventually would oversee the trial.
Yeah, and I read a 2013 interview with Manson.
And the thing that seemed to still get him the most
was that he was denied the ability
to represent himself in court, like he
felt like he never got to have his say in court.
And that was the thing that got him more than anything else.
Not being locked up for his whole life or anything like that.
It was that he didn't get to open his big mouth in court
as much as he wanted to.
So I guess we could go over some of these things
that happened in court that led to this circus atmosphere.
And by the way, if you want to see it yourself,
there's a pretty good dramatic recreation
in the movie Helter Skelter that was based on Mugliosi's book.
Nothing better than dramatic recreations.
Yeah.
Lots of yelling and screaming, lots of shouting and cursing,
lots of disrespect to the judge and the American flag.
They threw a copy of the Constitution
in the garbage at one point.
Very famously, Charles Manson carved an X into his forehead,
which later became a swastika, saying
that he was X'd out of the world.
And then his family members would do the same,
and they would shave their heads,
and generally just try and disrupt things at every turn.
Right.
And they did.
I mean, they were quite successful,
but the trial kept going on and on.
I think it went on for a couple of years
based on news articles I was reading about it.
So it turns out, though, that Richard Nixon supposedly
had the most disruptive effect on the trial
by saying, while the trial was going on, quote,
here's a man who was guilty directly or indirectly
of eight murders without reason.
He was the sitting US president commenting, saying,
unequivocally, that this guy was guilty of a trial that
was going on, which is you just don't do that.
It doesn't matter what the case is.
Not for any compassion for Charles Manson or anything
like that, but just because even on the other side,
you could have blown the case, and he legitimately
could have created a mistrial there,
just because the president said something
and everyone reported on it.
I can't imagine that happening today.
I totally can't.
It was a very Trumpian move.
So we talked.
I think we covered the Helter Skelter thing enough, don't you?
We did, but I think there's a big thing
that all this hinges on is that the prosecution said,
and you said earlier, you even had a quote from Tex Watson
that Charles Manson told him to go and just destroy
the people in that house gruesome as you can.
And the prosecution said that Charles Manson
was trying to spark the Helter Skelter race war that he
believed was going to happen.
Manson's whole thing was this.
This is Charles Manson's explanation for what happened
and why he's innocent.
He said, yeah, I believed in Helter Skelter.
Yes, I believe there's a race war coming.
I talked about it at night around bomb fires
with everybody on acid.
I also talked about death of the ego
and all sorts of other stuff.
And if you ask me, what happened was my friends just
took things and went, it took it to literally and went too far.
And that it all hinged on this Bobby Boussa lay thing, right?
And even before that, there's lots of poppy things.
So Tex Watson rips off Bernard, lots of poppy crow.
And he's got a problem with lots of poppy who
wants to kill him now.
And Manson goes over there to help
Tex Watson solve his problem by shooting lots of poppy.
So now, as far as Manson and Tex are concerned,
Tex owes Watson a debt, any kind of debt.
Well, Manson's Manson a debt.
Now Manson's friend, Bobby Boussa lay,
who is one of his tightest family members,
gets arrested for murder, the murder of Gary Hinman.
And Manson says, well, you know, I mean,
you should do something to help my brother, Bobby Boussa lay.
And you know, Tex says, well, what should I do?
And apparently Manson flew off the handle
and said, don't ask me what you should do.
You know what you should do.
And that was that.
And the next thing Manson knows, Watson and Crenwinkle
and Atkins are over at the Tate residence, carving up
Sharon Tate and the rest of the people in the house.
He didn't say anything about going to kill anybody.
He didn't direct them anywhere.
He didn't say anything like that.
He just said they took all the other stuff
that he'd said too far.
And that really what they were doing
was trying to cover up, cover for Bobby Boussa lay
to get him out of prison.
That's Manson's explanation for the whole thing.
Well, yeah, and for the part, well,
I guess we should go ahead and say
that all of these people went to prison.
And Susan Atkins, Patricia Crenwinkle, Leslie Van Houten,
they all were still so under his spell
that they were fully ready and did take the blame
for these killings.
But when it comes to parole, it was in January 1971
that they were all convicted on all the counts, murder,
conspiracy to commit murder.
But years later, as parole hearings
would come up for all these women in Tex Watson
and Manson himself, the reason why
they were continually denied, even like Tex Watson became
a Bornegan Christian and supposedly turned his life
around, but none of them would take responsibility
all these years later.
They would all still say that it was Manson, it was Manson.
And from what I understand, a big part
of getting your parole approved is
to finally take full responsibility for what you had done.
And none of them would do it.
And they were all denied over the years.
Susan Atkins eventually died of brain cancer in 2009.
And then just a few days ago, well,
Leslie Van Houten in September of last year
was actually recommended for parole.
And just a few days ago, as of this recording,
the governor of California, Jerry Brown, denied that.
Oh, really?
And said, no, she still isn't taking responsibility.
And I think these cases are just so loaded still
that it would be really tough, even though parole was
recommended for the governor to approve that.
So we'll see.
Apparently, they're going to keep pursuing that.
And I'm not sure what the next steps are,
but they're going to fight that ruling by Jerry Brown.
And we'll see where that goes.
So I think then Patricia Crenwinkle is still in prison.
And I think now that Susan Atkins died,
she is the longest-serving female in the California prison
system.
Yeah.
Oh, and we should say, too, that Squeaky
From tried to kill Nixon.
That's where she gained later fame.
Oh, that was Ford.
Oh, what did I say, Nixon?
Yeah.
Yeah, Gerald Ford.
And she's out of prison.
She lives in upstate New York.
And I think the last I've seen of her
was someone took her picture in a Walmart parking lot
and she, like, smacked the camera down.
Yeah, so she's an interesting case.
Squeaky From was out.
She wasn't indicted for any of the murders or any role
in the murders, but she was the number two person
to join the Manson family, remember?
Yeah.
And she still, to this day, refuses to denounce Manson.
It's still very much all about Charles Manson
and just as much as she was before.
And she went to, I guess, I'm not sure what
she was doing with the gun and Gerald Ford,
but she aimed a gun at Gerald Ford.
It was the gun wasn't loaded, but it still
had the effect of sending her to prison for decades
for an assassination attempt on the president, right?
That's probably she ever got out.
I am, too, but she was paroled eventually.
But she still never denounced Charles Manson.
All of the other ones denounced Manson.
She's the only one who has it.
And supposedly, one time, she escaped in the 80s
because she heard that Charles Manson was sick.
So she broke her way out of prison
to try to get to him, I guess.
Yeah, she was a Manson family member who tried to kill
the president and escaped from prison
and she earned parole.
Yeah.
Hard to believe.
But I think it's like you said, I think those at the case
that Tate LaBianca murders were so politically charged
and so loaded that it just didn't,
they just weren't going to get out.
The people who actually committed the murders.
Yeah, yeah.
Manson had an interesting time in prison, too.
He had a guy try and kill him by lighting him on fire
at one point and like 20% of his body was badly burned.
And he had a string of relationships with people
from pen pals, which we'll kind of cover at the end,
to a woman that he, did he actually marry that woman recently?
I don't know.
She was in that 2013 article that I was reading.
And I don't know if they got married.
And we should do, I don't know what we would call it,
but an episode on generally women who marry serial killers.
We totally should.
In prison.
Let's do that, but first let's take a break.
How about that?
Yeah, let's do it.
OK.
We're going to use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
It's a podcast packed with interviews, co-stars, friends,
and nonstop references to the best decade ever.
Do you remember going to Blockbuster?
Do you remember Nintendo 64?
Do you remember getting Frosted Tips?
Was that a cereal?
No, it was hair.
Do you remember AOL Instant Messenger and the dial-up
sound like poltergeist?
So leave a code on your best friend's beeper,
because you'll want to be there when the nostalgia starts
flowing.
Each episode will rival the feeling of taking out
the cartridge from your Game Boy, blowing on it
and popping it back in as we take you back to the 90s.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s, called on the iHeart radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast, Frosted
Tips with Lance Bass.
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when
questions arise or times get tough,
or you're at the end of the road.
Ah, OK, I see what you're doing.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice
would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands
give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place,
because I'm here to help.
This, I promise you.
Oh, god.
Seriously, I swear.
And you won't have to send an SOS, because I'll be there
for you.
Oh, man.
And so will my husband, Michael.
Um, hey, that's me.
Yep, we know that, Michael.
And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander
each week to guide you through life, step by step.
Oh, not another one.
Kids, relationships, life in general, can get messy.
You may be thinking, this is the story of my life.
Just stop now.
If so, tell everybody, yeah, everybody,
about my new podcast, and make sure to listen,
so we'll never, ever have to say bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart
radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
OK, Chuck, we're back.
We were talking about, so Manson's in prison.
For a while there, this is just mind blowing to me.
For a good decade, he enjoyed actually more than that.
He enjoyed the limelight.
He, he could get interviewed by huge names.
Like you said, Diane Sawyer, Charlie Rose,
Geraldo Rivera very famously did an interview
with Charles Manson, where apparently Manson,
you were saying how much poise Diane Sawyer showed
during her interview.
Supposedly Manson just owned Geraldo during that interview.
It just totally took control of the whole thing.
But these were things that were televised,
like on national, national news.
And these people were giving these networks,
were giving Charles Manson a platform
to talk about himself, to talk about his philosophy,
to show the world how crazy he was to keep him in the public,
in the public eye, in the public mind,
until finally, after the Diane Sawyer interview,
they not only pulled the plug on his interviews,
they said, you couldn't televised interviews
with any inmates from in California
because of Charles Manson, basically.
So it's just really strange to me,
especially these days, looking back,
that he had a platform for so long
to stay that boogie man that just scared
the bejesus out of America.
Yeah, I think those last like, whatever,
like 23, 25 years in prison with no limelight
was that had to have been like the darkest time of his life.
Cause he wanted, he clearly wanted to be a singing star
and in a weird way, he ended up kind of getting
what he wanted because some of his music ended up
being recorded by the Guns N' Roses and the Lemonheads
and he became this kind of weird cult figure
and not as in Jim James cult, Jim Jones, not Jim James.
Like cult movie type cult?
He's my morning jacket, Jim Jones.
But yeah, like a cult figure
and revered by some people weirdly.
It just is so strange that people would look at him
that way, you know?
So one person who revered him later on in life
was a woman, I believe he named Star
and she moved from her parents' house in Mississippi
out to California to be just down the street
from where Manson was held.
And she was the woman who was supposed to marry him.
And she was a follower of his,
she said she didn't care anything about 1969.
So Manson later in life became really interested
in preserving the environment.
He came up with this thing called ATWA,
air, trees, water, I can't remember the last A.
Air? Yeah, air again.
That would be ATWA, right?
So she became very interested in him
for his ecological stance, right?
And she moved out to be close to him
and would visit him on weekends
and they became very close.
And I guess to kind of demonstrate to the world
that he still had it, I still got it world.
He asked her to carve an X in her forehead and she did.
So she was also big time into collecting
and selling Manson memorabilia.
And Ed points out in this article,
I think he's referring to her
that the whole marriage thing may have been a ploy
to get at Manson memorabilia,
but I don't believe that's the case at all.
So she actually ran a website
and still does called mansondirect.com.
And it's like up to date.
So I think she had not abandoned him
after some big score with memorabilia.
Like she seems to have been the real deal follower,
like an early Manson family girl reincarnated.
Weird.
So there were a bunch of other,
I saw an article, whether at least 10 other weird deaths
related to the Manson family
that some people say could have been them
or maybe not, I looked into a few of them.
And there was his original, or at least this guy was
originally going to represent Manson.
He's an attorney named Ron Hughes.
He ended up representing, I think, Leslie Van Houten.
But she, he disappeared while on a,
there was a 10 day recess in the trial.
So he goes camping with another couple and the couple left.
And he's like, I'm gonna stay on here in the woods.
He was never seen again.
So that was a little weird.
They never found a body or anything, I don't think.
It wasn't they, even though he was one of their defense
attorneys, they had a huge grudge against him
because like you said earlier, Van Houten,
Crenwinkle and Atkins were all, or not Atkins,
I can't remember who the third one was,
were all going to incriminate themselves.
So as Leslie Van Houten's defense attorney, he said,
I'm not, he rested after the prosecution rested.
He never presented a defense
because he knew that they were gonna incriminate themselves.
And he refused to take part in it.
So they had a grudge against him.
So it's possible.
Possibly.
There was a spawn ranch worker that disappeared
and they were actually convicted,
some other family members of his murder.
His name was Shorty Shea, Donald Shorty Shea.
There was this one dude, Joel Pugh,
who was married to Sandra Good, who was a member.
And he was found dead in his London hotel.
He had, it was ruled a suicide,
but his wrist had been slashed
and his throat was slashed twice.
And there was something written in blood on the mirror
that was erased, you know,
it was one of these shoddy jobs,
I think by the London cops,
but some say it said Jack and Jill.
Other people say they don't remember what it said.
But that was definitely one of those that was like,
hmm, could he have been killed by a Manson family member?
Yeah, well-
And the list goes on.
One of those Manson family members
who was convicted of killing Shorty Shea
had made a couple trips to the UK while Joel Pugh was there.
So there's even more,
there's, it's definitely weird that he died like that.
Yeah.
You know, having your throat slashed in a London hotel,
it's weird no matter what.
And so like we said, you know, you said at the beginning,
it was definitely the end of the Peace Love movement
and sort of put a pin on what the,
what people thought about,
what a lot of people thought about the counterculture
and like, this is, these are the hippies,
they're not peace and love,
they can murder people on drugs.
And this is what acid can do to you.
So that was mainstream media.
You had other alternative media or places like Rolling Stone
that was still a pretty young magazine
that would not say things like that,
would not kind of buy into the mainstream media portrayal.
But it captured and still captures a lot of people's
imagination, you know, it was a part of the zeitgeist,
but it just endured for decades after, you know?
For sure.
And Rolling Stone actually did a tremendous amount
of reporting on Charles Manson.
That was really good at the time.
That 2013 article I read was really good.
That was from Rolling Stone.
You can get into a Manson rabbit hole
just going onto Rolling Stone's website.
And that 2013 article I read, Chuck,
the author, I think he kind of summed up
Charles Manson better than I've seen it anywhere else.
But he said this, he said,
sometimes he can be so transparent,
which makes him look like nothing more
than a goofy, klutzy, small timer
who made some bad decisions
that led to more bad decisions that led to murder
and who then got caught up in an ambitious D.A.'s dream
about a mastermind saying golly
with demonic visions of world domination.
Some crook, some outlaw, some gangster, some desperado,
probably the worst ever.
But in the end, a tiny redneck.
I mean, that definitely falls in there too, yeah.
So as far as these kids go,
it's kind of hard to get good information
because I read a bunch of different things,
but from what I can tell,
he had three sons for sure.
One with Candy Stevens, named Charles Luther Manson.
One with Mary Brunner named Valentine,
or Valentine Michael Manson.
Those two guys are impossible to find anything on.
I'm sure they have probably changed their names.
There was a Charles Manson Jr. who killed himself
in the, I think, early 90s?
Yeah, 93.
And then there's this dude.
Did you see this Matthew Roberts guy?
I ran across his name, but I don't know anything about him.
Well, he claims to, that his mother said,
you know what, Charles Manson was your dad.
We had sex in an orgy in San Francisco in the late 60s.
And I believe that he is probably your father,
although given that it's an orgy, you know how those things go.
So that is the last thing you ever wanna hear your mom
tell you, that whole story.
The whole story from beginning to end
is just bad news for you, the kid.
Yeah, so just look this guy up,
and if he doesn't look like Charles Manson incarnate,
then I don't know what to say.
But the dude looks exactly like him.
Here's the deal though, as he ended up,
he tried to get DNA from the prison,
tried to smuggle it out, but it got contaminated.
The test didn't work.
He ended up taking a DNA test to match with
who we know was Charles Manson Jr. son,
a dude named Jason Freeman,
who was the grandson of Charles Manson.
And there was no match there.
But Matthew Roberts says, well, that doesn't prove anything
because we've never seen the DNA match
from Freeman and Manson.
Oh, I see.
So he's still claiming to be a son,
and I mean, the guy looks so much like him.
It's a little creepy.
So it's hard to not say, you know,
why would his mom make up the story?
The guy happens to look just like him, but who knows?
And in the end, his will,
and supposedly his estate is worth money.
I don't know how much, but they say, you know,
there could be a lot of dough there.
And right now there's a legal battle going on
between Jason Freeman, who was the grandson,
and then this pen pal that Manson had for like decades,
named Michael Channels,
who he scribbled out a will to this guy.
And he's saying, hey, look, he wrote this will.
He wants me to have this money.
Jason Freeman's saying it's mine.
For their part, they're both saying what they want to do.
His body's on ice still as they want to,
they both want to scatter his ashes just where no one knows.
So it doesn't become like some weird shrine.
Yeah.
But the ongoing legal battle for his will,
we'll see what happens there.
So in that star lady weighed in saying,
if anybody who says he has a will is lying,
that he purposefully said he was not going to leave a will.
Right.
But it would just, it would be just like Charles Manson
to scribble off a will, deny that he ever did it,
and just leave a big mess behind afterwards, you know?
Yeah.
Just one more mess for everybody to sort out.
So strange.
So strange and sad, absolutely.
In the 60s, there was some,
I know we talked about the,
who was that one cult that I saw the documentary
with Father Zod or whatever.
I mean, that was a crazy documentary.
I mean, just that whole time was so, so strange.
It really was just people looking for something
to belong to or something, some meaning
that wasn't their parents' meaning, you know?
Yeah.
Well, all right, Chuck.
They found it, by the way.
They found it.
They all became stockbrokers in the 80s.
If you want to know more about the Manson family,
well, like I said, there's rabbit holes
all over the internet.
And in the meantime, you can also read this great article
by Egg Grabbunowski by typing the words Manson family
and the search bar at How Stuff Works.
And like I said, it'll bring up this great Grabbster article.
And while I said that, it's time for Listener Mail.
I'm gonna call this Confederate Monuments,
well, not Confederate Monuments,
but Removal of Monuments, follow up.
Nice.
So we got a lot of great email about that podcast.
I don't know how many of those you read,
but people roundly said we did a good fair take
on this tricky subject.
Yeah, I saw that too.
Which always makes me feel good.
And a shout out, this is not from her,
but one of the people who wrote in was
an artist named Kara Walker, who just look up her work.
She is amazing.
She's, I think, the second youngest person
ever received a MacArthur Genius grant.
She does these great, she does a lot of stuff
in a lot of mediums, but what she's known for,
I think, of these room-sized silhouette,
like black cut-out silhouettes,
depicting statements on race and gender and civil rights,
and she's just like a rock star in the New York art scene,
and she went to my high school.
Yeah, I saw that.
Did not know that.
She introduced herself.
She graduated two years ahead of me at Redance,
so I wrote back to her and just told her
how proud I was to be an alum.
Nice.
So anyway, go check out Kara Walker's work.
That's a mouthful.
It is.
But this is from someone else.
Hey, guys, thanks so much for the podcast.
I'm a big fan.
Especially enjoyed the Public Monument episode.
I'm writing to clarify a small point
about the Georgia State flag that Chuck discussed
in that episode.
I got this thing wrong, by the way.
You pointed out that Georgia,
like some other former Confederate states,
included the familiar Confederate battle flag
with the X pattern in its state flag from 56 to 2001.
However, that flag is not the stars and bars.
The stars and bars was the official national flag
of the Confederacy and is the flag
after which the current Georgia flag is patterned.
Turns out that the flag Georgia used until 1956
was modeled after the national Confederate flag
and the state switched to the Confederate battle flag in 56.
In other words, while the most familiar Confederate flag
was removed in 2001, it was replaced with another one.
That's so Georgia.
I thought we did the right thing.
No.
So I thought you guys would be interested, by the way,
in Mississippi is the only state that still uses
the Confederate battle flag and its official state flag.
Keep up the great work and I don't have a name on this one.
Well, thanks a lot.
I don't have a name on this one.
That was some good info and we appreciate that.
And Chuck, that was big of you to say, hey, I got it wrong.
You got it wrong.
That's all right, man.
That's all right.
If you want to write in to tell us we got something wrong,
lay it on us, that's fine.
You can tweet to us.
I'm at JoshumClark.
I also have a website called RUSeriesClark.com.
There's also an official Twitter for Stuff You Should Know
called S-Y-S-K Podcast.
Chuck's on Facebook.com slash Charles W. Chuck Bryant.
And there's also an official Facebook.com
slash Stuff You Should Know.
You can send us all, including Jerry, an email
to StuffPodcast at howstuffworks.com.
And as always, join us at our home on the web,
StuffYouShouldKnow.com.
For more on this and thousands of other topics,
visit howstuffworks.com.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called, David Lasher
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