In early August 1969, followers of the cult leader Charles Manson took the lives of seven people.
One of the victims was the pregnant actress Sharon Tate, the wife of director Roman Polanski.
More than 50 years later, a California appeals court ruled that one Manson family member should be granted parole.
The Manson murders closed out one era for the US, and heralded the arrival of another.
No more guaranteed innocence or safety. No more children playing on the streets late at night. From then on a shadow would hang over the counter-cultural movement. It was the end of the "flower-powered" 1960s.
Over two nights in August 1969, seven people were brutally murdered. The Manson "Family" killers were following orders from their cult leader, Charles Manson. One of the seven victims was pregnant actress Sharon Tate.
The effect of these murders continues to haunt the nation 50 years on. In 2019, three movies about the killings, including Quentin Tarantino's film, "Once Upon a Time in Hollywood," were released. And Vulture has a guide to all the books, films, and television series the story's been a part of.
But there's also the real story behind the killings that isn't on the big screen. This is what happened.
Charles Manson was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1934.
His father abandoned the family before his birth, and his 16-year-old mother struggled to raise him; at one point, she sold him for a jug of beer.
He began committing petty crimes when he was 12 and spent years in and out of reform schools where he was the victim of sexual assault attacks and also victimized others.
In 1954, at the age of 19, Manson was released from reform school and put in the custody of his aunt and uncle.
Soon after, he married and moved to Los Angeles with his new wife, seeking fame and fortune.
But just a few years later, in 1957, Manson was sent to prison for violating the terms of his probation. Manson would spend the next ten years in and out of prison for petty crimes and probation violations.
In 1967, divorced and ready for a change, Manson moved to San Francisco, then the center of the counterculture movement.
One of his youngest followers was Dianne Lake, who met Manson when she was 14 years old.
Lake's parents were hippies who encouraged their daughter to take drugs and have sex. She didn't participate in the murders but would serve as a key witness in the trial.
Lake would later argue that the counterculture movement allowed for widespread abuse of women and girls.
Manson had aspirations to be a famous singer and closely studied the Beatles.
In 1967 or 1968, he met a music teacher named Gary Hinman, who introduced him to Beach Boys drummer Dennis Wilson.
It was a fortuitous meeting: Wilson let Manson and the Family live in his house on Sunset Boulevard — and also lent him hundreds of thousands of dollars to record an album — in exchange for sex with the Manson girls.
In August 1968, Wilson finally kicked them out, and the Family moved to a gone-to-seed western movie set called Spahn Ranch near Chatsworth, California.
Manson traded sex with his followers to the owner for free rent.
Before their relationship had soured, Wilson introduced Manson to a record producer named Terry Melcher, who initially seemed interested in Manson's music.
But after completing some initial recordings, Melcher chose not to sign Manson.
At the time, Melcher lived with his girlfriend in a luxury home at 10050 Cielo Drive in Benedict Canyon. Manson visited him there several times before Melcher moved out.
Despite his conflicts with Wilson, the Beach Boys did decide to record a track of Manson's.
The song, called "Cease to Exist," eventually morphed to the Beach Boys B-side "Never Learn Not To Love."
Though Manson had initially been thrilled to have the band record the song, he found the end product markedly different from his initial track and was miffed that he hadn't been given a songwriting credit.
By the summer of 1969, after Melcher's rejection, Manson's Hollywood dreams appeared to be crushed.
And, although he knew Melcher had moved out, the Cielo Drive house remained in Manson's mind a symbol of Hollywood and the life he'd been denied. In May, the cracks began to appear when Manson shot a drug dealer named Bernard Crowe over a disputed payment.
In July 1969, Manson ordered his followers Bobby Beausoleil, Mary Brunner, and Susan Atkins, to force Gary Hinman to give him $20,000.
Manson also showed up with a sword and almost cut off Hinman's ear. After two days, Hinman was killed by Beausoleil. The family attempted to frame the black power group, the Black Panthers, for the crime by writing "Political Piggie" in blood on the wall.
Manson was an avowed racist and believed that a coming race war — which he referred to as "Helter Skelter" (from the Beatles song of the same name) — was on the horizon. In framing the Black Panthers for Hinman's murder, he was hoping to move it along.
On August 6, Beausoleil was arrested in connection to Hinman's murder.
Manson panicked, terrified that Beausoleil would implicate him in the crime (and the earlier murder of Crowe), and wanted to deflect attention away from the deaths.
So, two days later, Manson ordered four of his most loyal followers — Susan Atkins, Charles "Tex" Watson, Patricia Krenwinkel, and Linda Kasabian — to murder anyone in Polanski's house.
On that night, heiress Abigail Folger, hair stylist Jay Sebring, writer Wojciech Frykowski, Steven Parent, and Sharon Tate were killed.
On August 9, 1969, the following night, Manson went with his followers to the second round of murders to ensure they weren't as sloppy.
He accompanied Charles "Tex" Watson, Susan Atkins, Patricia Krenwinkel, and Leslie Van Houten to the house of supermarket executive Leno LaBianca and his wife Rosemary, where the Manson Family members bound and murdered them.
Manson ordered the group to "leave something witchy" at the crime scene, so they wrote "helter skelter" on the house in blood.
On January 25, 1971, after a seven-month trial and 10 days of jury deliberation, all of the defendants — Manson, Watson, Atkins, Krenwinkel, and Van Houten — were found guilty.
Four of the killers, including Manson, got the death penalty, but the following year, California abolished the death penalty. Their sentences were commuted to life in prison.
During his sentence, he was denied parole 12 times, accrued 108 disciplinary violations, and never showed any remorse for the murders.
Susan Atkins died in prison in 2009. Patricia Krenwinkel is in prison and will later be up for parole. In June 2019, Leslie Van Houten was denied parole but later released in July 2023. Charles "Tex" Watson will be eligible for parole in 2026.
Correction: February 20, 2024 — An earlier version of this story misstated that the resident of the Cielo Drive house. It was rented by Terry Melcher, not Gary Hinman. It also previously misstated who was meant to be in the Polanski house. Steve McQueen was not meant to be there. It also misidentified one of the locations where the Manson Family wrote "pig" in blood. It was Tate and Polanski's house, not the LaBiancas' house. This article has been updated to include recent and accurate information.
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