CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2015, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“MANSON FOLLOWER AGAIN TESTS BROWN ON PAROLE”
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2015, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“MANSON FOLLOWER AGAIN TESTS BROWN ON PAROLE”
If this seems like déjà vu, that’s
because it is. For the 29th time since he was convicted in two of
the nine gruesome killings conducted by the cult-like Charles Manson “Family”
in the late 1960s, 72-year-old Bruce Davis is up for parole.
Gov. Jerry Brown has until the end of
December to veto a late August finding by the state Parole Board finding Davis
eligible for release from prison. He’s now held in the California Men’s Colony
in San Luis Obispo.
Brown has demonstrated in the past
that he knows Davis and other followers of Manson – himself held in Corcoran
State Prison – should never go free.
When parole officials last found Davis
suited for release, Brown wrote a six-page ruling reversing the decision. He
made this salient point: “In rare circumstances, a murder is so heinous that it
provides evidence of current dangerousness by itself. This is such a case.”
Previously, Brown and other governors
declined to release Davis because he refused to accept any responsibility for
his role in the slice-and-dice murders of aspiring musician Gary Hinman and movie
stuntman Donald “Shorty” Shea.
Davis insisted for more than 40 years
that he had little to do with those deaths, saying about Shea’s murder that he
had inflicted only a “token” stab wound on Shea’s shoulder, while Manson
himself made the fatal stabs and cuts. Finally, in 2013, Davis admitted he
sliced Shea from armpit to collarbone.
Shea’s carved-up body was later found
in small pieces spread around the former Spahn Movie Ranch in the Santa Susana
Pass area between Los Angeles and Simi Valley, where cowboy stars like Gene
Autry and Roy Rogers once roamed. Many episodes of TV shows like Bonanza and The Lone Ranger were at least partially filmed there. But by 1969,
when the Manson group moved onto the ranch, owner George Spahn had become
elderly, frail and unable to resist the cult’s takeover of his land.
In Hinman’s slaying, trial testimony
by a former Manson follower revealed, Davis held a gun on Hinman while Manson
slashed his face with a sword and tried to extort money from him. Hinman’s dead
body was later found in his home, with the word’s “political piggy”
scrawled in blood on a wall.
There is no evidence, however, that
Davis was involved in the better-known Manson Family murders at the Beverly
Hills-adjacent residence of movie star Sharon Tate and the Los Angeles home of
grocer Leno LaBianca and his wife Rosemary. Other race-tinged messages were
written in blood within the LaBianca house.
It can be difficult for those not
involved in investigating or covering the Manson Family crimes to appreciate
the depth of their depravity and cruelty. The upshot was that not only were the
victims killed, but the murders were done in the most painful and vicious
manner conceivable, each concocted to serve some purpose linked to Manson’s
vain hope of spurring a race war to which he applied the name “Helter Skelter.”
While it’s true that in more than 40
years as a prisoner, Davis has married, fathered a child and earned a doctoral
degree in religion, the question of why he ever should be freed remains
unanswered given the lives he helped end abruptly in some of the bloodiest
possible ways.
While the many millions of
Californians either not resident here or not even born at the time of those
murders may not remember their impact, Brown certainly does. Back then, he
lived in Laurel Canyon north of the Sunset Strip and not far from Tate’s rented
house in Benedict Canyon. He may even have felt the fears experienced by other
canyon dwellers aware that the Manson killers cut power and telephone lines in
an era long before cell phones. Their impending victims could not call for
help or even see much as their executioners approached in the dark.
Brown’s statement when Davis last came
up for parole demonstrates he knows the depth of these crimes. The hope is that
this former Roman Catholic seminarian has not lost the understanding that some
crimes are simply too horrible ever to be forgiven, no matter how
goody-two-shoes their perpetrators may appear to have become years later.
-30-
Elias is author of the current book “The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It,” now available in an updated third edition. His email address is tdelias@aol.com
Elias is author of the current book “The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It,” now available in an updated third edition. His email address is tdelias@aol.com
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