CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 2019 OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 2019 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“BOBBY BEAUSOLEIL POSES FIRST PAROLE TEST FOR NEWSOM”
Not
many Californians under 60 can recall just who is the 71-year-old Bobby
Beausoleil and what evils he did back in his youth.
But the
onetime Charles Manson “Family” member will now provide a first test of how new
Gov. Gavin Newsom will treat paroles for the most heinous criminals among
California’s prison population.
It’s
almost impossible that Newsom, born in late 1967, could personally remember the
Manson Family murder spree of summer 1969. The then-toddler Newsom resided
hundreds of miles away at the time, unlike predecessor Jerry Brown, who lived in
the Laurel Canyon section of Los Angeles and likely felt the same fears as
other Angelenos after the Mansons’ brutal Sharon Tate murders two canyons to
the west.
It’s an
open question whether an old crime like this could have the same impact on him
that Brown’s memories did on his actions and words.
Because
the state Parole Board only days before Newsom’s inauguration granted
Beausoleil’s 19th request for prison release, Newsom now faces a choice
that could cost some of the popularity that gave him a 62-38 percent election
margin last fall.
It’s
hard to find a killer more brutal than Beausoleil or one more manipulable by
another criminal plotter.
Even
though Beausoleil has behaved well in prison and is now almost 50 years older
than when he committed at least one of the Manson murders, Newsom would be wise
to follow Brown’s reasoning for refusing parole in 2014 to another Manson
murderer, Bruce Davis: “In rare circumstances,” Brown wrote, “a murder is so
heinous that it provides evidence of dangerousness by itself.”
Here’s
how Beausoleil put himself into that category:
The
killer told a magazine reporter 12 years later that before the Manson gang
became notorious, while they were still mere squatters on the Spahn Movie Ranch
near the Santa Susanna Pass between Los Angeles and Ventura counties, he
unknowingly supplied a batch of bad mescaline to the Straight Satans motorcycle
gang which then operated in western Los Angeles County.
The
drugs came from Gary Hinman, a Malibu musician. When the Satans demanded their
money back, Beausoleil went to Hinman’s house to get it, along with two fellow
Manson acolytes, Mary Brunner and Susan Atkins. They demanded cash to appease
the Satans. Hinman said he had none; Beausoleil phoned Manson on the Spahn
Ranch. Manson ordered Beausoleil to hold Hinman at his house until Manson could
get there.
Upon
arrival, Manson sliced off one of Hinman’s ears with a sword, an incentive to
come up with cash he’d said he did not have. Brunner and Atkins, later convicted
in other Manson crimes, sewed the ear back on with dental floss. Manson then
told Beausoleil to kill Hinman and make it look like part of a race war he
would later call “Helter Skelter.” After Manson left, Beausoleil fatally
stabbed Hinman, then wrote the words “Political Piggy” on a wall in Hinman’s
blood. He also left a bloody cat-like paw print.
Beausoleil
fled. He was arrested after falling asleep while parked in Hinman’s car along
U.S. 101 between San Luis Obispo and Atascadero.
Newsom
now has until late May to decide among several choices on Beausoleil: He can
uphold the parole, reverse it or send it back to the Parole Board for further
review. If he does nothing, the parole moves ahead.
Few in
the early 1970s doubted that Beausoleil, Manson, Atkins and others in their
grisly crew deserved the death sentences they first received, later changed to
life in prison.
There
are some other geriatric imprisoned killers whose crimes could also fit the
Brown “dangerousness” description, including Edmund Kemper, the Santa Cruz
area’s “Coed Killer” of the 1970s; Juan Corona, who killed 25 farm workers near
the Feather River in the 1970s, or Lawrence Bittaker and Roy Norris, who raped,
kidnapped, tortured and murdered five young women in 1979 in Southern
California.
But
Manson Family members remain the most notorious of California killers, so what
Newsom does with Beausoleil will symbolize his attitude toward serious crime
and possible forgiveness or redemption.
-30-
Email
Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough:
The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch
It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net.
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