Houston Chronicle

Two wills surface for Manson’s estate, remains after his death

- By Nancy Dillon NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

There’s a battle brewing over the remains and estate of mass murderer Charles Manson.

Reports of two unverified wills surfaced Friday, with each leaving the killer’s estate to a different person.

Manson’s friend Ben Gurecki told the New York Daily News he obtained a January 2017 will from Manson and passed it along to Manson’s self-proclaimed “son” Matthew Roberts in March.

He said Roberts was named as the main beneficiar­y.

“I can assure you Matthew will be handling this,” Gurecki told the Daily News on Friday.

“Matthew and I will be there next week in person,” he claimed. “Charlie will be given a headstone, a proper burial where people will be able to grieve, or deface it as they see fit.”

Meanwhile, TMZ.com said Friday it obtained a February 2002 will from an unidentifi­ed Manson pen pal that disinherit­ed all Manson relatives.

The mysterious pen pal said he is the sole beneficiar­y and plans to claim Manson’s body before a 10-day deadline expires next week, TMZ reported.

Gurecki said he doesn’t know who the pen pal is but that the more recent will allegedly signed this year supersedes any that came before it.

The Chicago resident, who has posted recent prison calls with Manson on his YouTube channel, said he plans to meet Roberts in Kern County, Calif., next week.

“There are plans for Charlie’s remains to be handled with dignity and not by the Kern County coroner,” Gurecki told the Daily News. “(I) will absolutely not let this continue to be a circus.”

Manson, 83, died of natural causes at a hospital in Bakersfiel­d, Calif., on Sunday.

He spent most of his life in prison for the murders of nine people in 1969, including pregnant actress Sharon Tate.

Roberts, 49, is a Los Angeles musician who looks like Manson and was adopted as an infant. When he found his birth mother in 1998, she told him Manson was his father, according to CNN.

Gurecki claimed he and Roberts have a Tuesday appointmen­t with Hillcrest Memorial Park in Bakersfiel­d. He said they hope to transfer Manson’s remains from the Kern County coroner to Hillcrest for a “respectful and dignified” cremation paid for by him.

He said calls to coroner fell “on deaf ears” this week.

He said they plan to inter Manson’s ashes somewhere the public can visit. “This is my personal last attempt to help a friend have the proper resting place that he deserves.”

Beyond the two alleged wills, Manson’s grandson Jason Freeman told the Daily News earlier this week he also is interested in claiming Manson’s remains. A GoFundMe account set up this week to underwrite his efforts was shut down Thursday.

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