РефератыИностранный языкChCharles Manson Essay Research Paper On Saturday

Charles Manson Essay Research Paper On Saturday

Charles Manson Essay, Research Paper


On Saturday, August ninth, nineteen


sixty-nine, all hell broke loose with more than six dozen plunges of a carving


fork and knife, and the peaceful dyll was shattered. Out of the chaos caused by


the senseless, horrific murderers, Charles Manson emerged as one of the most


feared notorious criminals of all time. In the twenty-nine years since the


so-called "Tate-La Bianca" murders, many people have speculated about


what caused Charles Manson to become the monster he turned to be. To be able to


fully comprehend what could cause an innocent child to evolve into a ruthless


calculating cold- blooded killer, one must completely examine the events of his


life. Charles Manson was born Charles Milles Maddox, the son of an unwed mother,


in Cincinnati Ohio on November twelfth, nineteen thirty-four. His father, he


stated in his autobiography, was a "young drugstore cowboy", a


transient laborer who abandoned Charles’ mother when he learned that she was


pregnant. Shortly after Charles’ birth, Kathleen Maddox lived with a man named


William Manson, and they eventually got married. William Manson gave his new


stepson his name, although the marriage dissolved shortly thereafter. Raised in


a strict, religious home, Kathleen Maddox- Manson rebelled after the breakup of


her marriage. She reveled in her newfound freedom by drinking a lot and loving


freely. Like many young mothers, Kathleen was not yet ready for the


responsibilities that go along with the raising of a child. She had fled a


stifling home life and rushed into marriage, and she had a lot of living to do


before she settled down. Charles was passed from relative to relative to


baby-sitter, and was soon sold to a waitress in a restaurant in exchange for a


pitcher of beer. An uncle tracked him down and took him home several days later.


When Charles was five years old, his mother and a man were convicted of robbing


a service station in Charlestown, West Virginia. They’d used a Coke bottle to


knock the attendant unconscious. Caught and sentenced to five years in


Moundsville Prison, her work assignment was near death row. West Virginia was a


hanging state at that time, and part of Kathleen’s job was to clean the area


that included the scaffold. One day as she was cleaning, she saw a man being


escorted to the scaffold. Normally on hanging days, nobody except the person to


be executed and the prison officials were allowed near the hanging area, but on


that day, by accident or oversight, the prison officials neglected to inform


Kathleen of the day’s plans. Afraid she might be in trouble for being in the


vicinity, she hid in a nearby broom closet. When the trap sprung, the inmate’s


weight and sheer velocity caused the rope to sever his head, and as Kathleen


opened the door to get a glimpse of the hanging, it promptly rolled to


kathleen’s hiding place. She told Charles years later that mans eyes were still


wide open and death literally stared her in the face. Twenty-seven years after


that incident, Charles Milles Manson was placed on Death Row. In his


autobiography, "Manson: In His Own Words", he explained a sobering


moment."I looked at the gas chamber. The rooms two viewing windows looked


like two huge eyes of death. Instantly my mind flashed to my mother, and I had a


vision of her looking into the eyes of death. During that moment, I understood


more about my mom than any other time in my life". Charles’ mother was


released from prison when he was eight years old, and again he was either being


passed from relative to relative, or they moved around a lot. Eventually, when


Charles was twelve years old, his mother found a steady boyfriend. He soon tired


of having Charles around and gave Kathleen an ultimatum: him or Charles. Charles


was placed in the Gibault Home for Boys in Tierre Haute, Indiana. It was a


strict Catholic religious-oriented school, and the punishment for even the


tiniest infraction was either a wooden paddle, or a leather strap. Eventually,


living at Gibault got to be too much for Charles, and he ran away. He slept in


the woods, under bridges, and wherever else he could find a place. He finally


reached Indianapolis where he burglarized a grocery store for something to eat.


He found the cash register change in a cigar box under the counter. It was


slightly over a hundred dollars, and the first thing he did was rent a room in


Skid Row, and eat as much as he could possibly handle. A few days later he was


broke and tired so he’d steal whatever he could to accumulate a little extra


money. One day he stole a bicycle and was eventually arrested, the police


realized he was a runaway and located his mother. Unable to provide a stable


home life, Charles was placed in Father Flanagan’s Boy’s Town. Four days later,


he and another boy ran away. They stole a car and wrecked it, followed by


committing a few robberies resulted in their arrest, and they were placed in a


juvenile home. Charles’ stay there was a repeat of his stay in the previous


homes, and he was placed in a bonafied reform school. It was at the Indiana


School for Boys at Plainfield that Charles Manson was beaten and raped


repeatedly for over three years. He finally escaped successfully when he was


sixteen years old. Headed towards California, he and a friend stole cars and


robbed stores along the way. Again he was arrested, and during the next


thirty-eight months he spent time in four different institutions. In May of


nineteen fifty-four, at the age of nineteen, he was finally paroled. Shortly


thereafter he was married. Working at a race track at the time, he stopped by a


card room and played a few hands of poker. He racked up quite a pile of winnings


and was surrounded by a group of girls. Paying them no attention, he caught the


eye of a girl across the room. She was with her father, a coal-miner. Later,


Charles managed to speak a few words to her. They started dating, and married


shortly thereafter, in January of nineteen fifty-five. She became pregnant


almost immediately. Desiring to head to California but needed a car to take him


there, Charles stole a ‘51 Mercury. Predictably, he was caught. He was sent to


the Federal Penitentiary at Terminal Island, San Pedro. He was, by then,


twenty-one years old. Those first fe

w months in prison, Charles had a positive


outlook on life, with thoughts of leading a straight, crime-free life when he


was paroled. Before the baby-little Charlie-was a year old, Charles’ wife


stopped visiting. He heard from his mother that his wife had left the state with


her new boyfriend, a trucked. Devastated, he wrote her several letters begging


her to return, but to no ovail. In his autobiography, Charles Manson states,


"when I gave up on her, my attitude of wanting to be Mr. Straight left me.


I went back to being bitter and hating everyone". Shuffled from home to


home as a child, knowing his prostitute mother never wanted him, being in and


out of juvenile homes and adult jails, Charles Manson was becoming the Charles


Manson we’ve all heard about and feared. He was released from Terminal Island


and served several years. Paroled in nineteen sixty-seven at age thirty-two, he


asked if he could stay. "You know what, man, I don’t wanna leave! I don’t


have a home out there! Why don’t you just take me back inside? I’m serious man!


I mean it! I don’t wanna leave". He did, however, leave Terminal Island


that day. It was March twenty-first, nineteen sixty-seven, and the last time


he’d pass through those doors. Charles Manson headed to San Francisco. Once


there, he liked to hang out at the University of California-Berkeley campus and


play his guitar. One day, while doing so, he was sitting on the grass when a dog


started sniffing his feet. He raised his foot as if to kick it, and it’s owner


appeared. Her name was Mary Theresa Brunner, and she would become the first


member of his "Family". She was tall and thin, a straight-laced


redhead. Charles convinced her to let him stay with her, but there was to be no


sex involved. Eventually, however, the situation changed. Charles somewhat


changed Mary’s personality. She let her guard down and became more open-minded.


She quit her job as the University of California-Berkeley librarian and she and


Charles stole a car and traveled. They slept at waysides and such and they’d go


to beaches where occasionally they would find a homeless girl. The girl would


then join the group. Thus began the Manson family. The family soon grew to more


than thirty people. They moved into Spahn’s Movie Ranch, just outside of


Chatsworth California. Few of the Family members actually held jobs, so they had


to scrounge for food in the dumpsters at local supermarkets. Their only other


needs or desires were sex and drugs, both of which were readily available in the


nineteen sixties. Charles Manson and the Family lived at the ranch until the


arrests and convictions of those hideous crimes in August of nineteen


sixty-nine. Los Angeles Police Department officers were called to 10050 Cielo


Drive in Bel Air. They were met with a crime scene so horrible and bloody that


it might well have come from a Hollywood movie. There were five victims, all


viciously slain. They were Abigail Folger, Voytek Frykowski, Jay Sebring, Steven


Parent, and Sharon Tate-Polanski. On the door to the home where they lost their


lives, a word was written on the door: PIG. It was later established to be


written in the blood of Sharon Tate. The Family members physically involved in


the killings were Charles "Tex" Watson, Patricia "Katie"


Krenwinkle, Susan Atkins, Leslie Van Hueten, and Linda Kasabian. As the five


about-to-be killers started to walk up the driveway, they saw headlights. A car


appeared and the killers crouched down in the shrubbery. When the car stopped,


Tex Wattson approached the driver, Steven Parent. Watson pulled out his


twenty-two caliber Buntline revolver and shot Parent. They then pushed the car


back off the driveway. Assured that the shots fired hadn’t alerted neighbors or


authorities, they entered the house. A man, Voytek Frykowski, had fallen asleep


with the lights on. Shouting "wake up", Tex Watson approached him and


shot. Susan Atkins, meanwhile, had been exploring the rest of the home. Tex


ordered her to bring the rest of the occupants of the house to the living room.


Folger, Sebring, And Tate herded into the room. Tex ordered Susan Atkins to tie


a rope around the prisoners’ necks, and the Sebring lunged at Watson, Tex


stabbed her and she fell to the floor. Susan was adding more bonds to Frykowski


when she was ordered by Tex, "kill him" she stabbed away, while he


struggled. Somehow he escaped and Watson chased him into the yard, delivering


the fatal thrusts. Reentering the house, he hit Folger on the head with his


revolver. Dead she fell to the floor. Sharon Tate was still frozen with fear and


stupefaction. Remembering her, Tex Watson and Susan Atkins ignored her pleas for


her unborn child’s life and stabbed her to death. The killers then scribbled


messages such as "HELTER SKELTER" and "PIG" everywhere,


using their victims blood. The next night, the grisly horror was repeated at the


home of Leno and Rosemary La Bianca. Leno La Bianca was dead as a result of


twenty-six stab wounds. A fork protruded from his stomach, and a knife from his


throat. When his body was discovered, Rosemary La Bianca had been found stabbed


forty-one times. Again messages were scrawled on the walls in the victims blood:


"DEATH TO PIGS", "RISE", and "HELTER SKELTER" A


couple of months later, all of the hands-on killer’s, plus Charles Manson were


arrested. Ultimately tried and convicted, all spent many years in prison, with


the exception of Linda Kasabian. She became the prosecutions star witness and


was given immunity in exchange for her testimony. The rest of the killers were


sentenced to death. Shortly thereafter, however, the state of California revoked


the death penalty and their sentences were communed to life. To date, one of the


women has been released, the remaining two are still in prison, and of course ,


so is Charles Manson. Even now, twenty-nine years after the terrible tragedies,


people still speculate as to why Charles Manson turned into such an inhumane


monster. His past speaks for itself but all I have to say is, parents: take care


of your children. Stand up for them, lead them, teach them, and don’t turn away


from them, maybe that way, you won’t be responsible for what might happen to


them.

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