Bangkok Post

Reporter recalls surreal trial spectacle

Linda Deutch tells of legal proceeding­s that were almost as bizarre as the crime

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The first time I saw Charles Manson being led into a courtroom at the old Los Angeles Hall of Justice, I was shocked — not because of the mythology that preceded him, but because of how small he was.

The cult leader, accused of the most notorious murders in decades, arrived amid stories of mystical powers and hypnotic eyes. Now, he was shuffling down a hallway in handcuffs, wearing fringed buckskins, surrounded by deputies. His shaggy brown hair hung across his face, and he appeared dazed by the hysteria surroundin­g him.

Photo crews galloped down the hallway, jockeying so fast to get near him that they knocked a water fountain off the wall, flooding the corridor.

“This is crazy,” I said to another reporter. Little did I know how crazy it would become.

The gruesome murders of actress Sharon Tate and six others had stunned the world — a celebrity case like no other that plunged me into the world of high-profile trials that would become my profession­al calling. The Manson case shadowed my life for nearly half a century as I covered parole hearings and anniversar­ies and saw a new generation become transfixed by the horror.

To this day, the name Manson can make people shudder as they recall the cult leader who ordered the killings of a group of Hollywood’s beautiful people, as well as husband and wife Leno and Rosemary LaBianca, who were slain across town from Tate’s elegant home.

The trial of Manson and three female followers lasted from late 1969 into 1971, a surreal spectacle punctuated with grotesque images of death, bloody scrawlings and tales of a “family” of disaffecte­d youths living in a backwater commune.

The aura of celebrity permeated the case. Tate’s husband was the movie director Roman Polanski, and Manson had hung out on the fringes of the music business.

The focus was squarely on “Charlie” and the extraordin­ary power he exerted over his followers, leading them into a world of sex, drugs and murder.

On the witness stand, his young followers spoke of orgies presided over by Manson _ designed to rid them of society’s convention­s, and the use of hallucinog­enic drugs to break down their resistance to his ersatz philosophy.

He had delusions of being a rock star and a fascinatio­n with the Beatles song Helter Skelter, which the killers scrawled in blood on the walls of Tate’s home.

Manson was an ex-con who had spent most of his life in prison. He held sway over his mostly teenage devotees with a promise of acceptance they had not found at home or in the countercul­ture havens that dotted 1960s America. They were special, he told them.

Inside the courtroom, spectators sometimes had LSD flashbacks and were dragged out shouting. Outside, a ragtag band of women camped on the sidewalk day and night. They were Manson’s “family”, who worshipped him and compared him to Jesus. They became a tourist attraction and were always available for media interviews.

One day, they showed up in saffron robes threatenin­g to immolate themselves if Manson was convicted.

As I watched from my front-row seat, Manson took the stand outside the jury’s presence to explain himself in a riveting monologue.

“These children that come at you with knives, they are your children,” he pronounced. “You taught them. I didn’t teach them. I just tried to help them stand up ... I am just a reflection of every one of you.”

In court, Manson choreograp­hed a spectacle that included his three co-defendants jumping to their feet and singing songs mocking the judge. At one point, he propelled himself across the counsel table, brandishin­g a pencil and shouting at the judge: “Someone should cut your head off, old man.”’

Manson’s power over the women was obvious. When he showed up with an “X’’ carved in his forehead saying he was “Xed out of society’’, the women mutilated their own foreheads the next day. He later changed his carving to a swastika.

When the women eventually confessed to murder, they absolved him of any blame. Their lawyers said they had been brainwashe­d.

All four were convicted of multiple murders and sentenced to die in the gas chamber, but their sentences were commuted to life in prison when the death penalty was briefly outlawed in California.

For the journalist­s who covered the trial, those months felt like a plunge into horror. If the story had been put forward as a Hollywood script, no one would have bought it. It was just too unbelievab­le.

 ?? AP ?? In this file photo, Charles Manson is escorted to his arraignmen­t on conspiracy-murder charges in 1969.
AP In this file photo, Charles Manson is escorted to his arraignmen­t on conspiracy-murder charges in 1969.

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