Los Angeles Times

Newsom will weigh parole for Manson family killer

Panel yet again favors release of Leslie Van Houten, twice denied by Gov. Jerry Brown.

- By Matt Hamilton

Leslie Van Houten, the youngest member of Charles Manson’s “family,” convicted in the 1969 killings of a Los Angeles couple, was recommende­d for parole Wednesday by a panel of state commission­ers in Chino.

It marks the third time that Van Houten, 69, has been recommende­d for parole. Twice before, Gov. Jerry Brown denied her release, finding her “an unreasonab­le danger to society.”

Now, the decision heads to newly elected Gov. Gavin Newsom in his first highprofil­e parole decision.

Van Houten’s attorneys have long emphasized that she was only 19 when she took part in the grisly slayings of Rosemary and Leno LaBianca, and argued that she has been a model prisoner. But release has been strongly opposed by the families of the victims as well as prosecutor­s and many others.

State officials will begin a 120-day legal review before the decision goes to Newsom’s desk. He could uphold, reverse or modify the decision, according to the state Department of Correction­s and Rehabilita­tion. Newsom could take no action, thereby allowing the decision to stand, or he could direct the full Board of Parole Hearings to consider it.

A former homecoming queen from Monrovia, Van Houten did not participat­e in the 1969 killings of Sharon Tate — Roman Polanski’s pregnant wife — and four others at the couple’s Benedict Canyon home.

But the next day, she joined Charles “Tex” Watson and others as they burst into the LaBiancas’ Los Feliz residence and killed the husband and wife.

After Watson stabbed Rosemary LaBianca with a bayonet, he handed a knife to Van Houten. She testified to stabbing LaBianca in the back at least 14 more times. The blood of the victims was used to scrawl messages on the walls, as had been done at the Benedict Canyon home.

Van Houten, Manson and three others were convicted and sentenced to death, but after the California Supreme Court struck down the death penalty their sentences were commuted to life in prison.

An appellate court overturned Van Houten’s conviction in 1976, and a second trial the next year ended in a hung jury. At her third trial, in 1978, she was convicted of two counts of murder and one count of conspiracy, and sentenced to seven years to life in prison. Starting in 1979, Van Houten has gone before the parole board regularly.

At parole hearings, Van Houten’s attorneys characteri­zed her as a model inmate, who earned a bachelor’s degree in English literature and a master’s in humanities while running self-help groups for incarcerat­ed women.

“I take responsibi­lity for the entire crime. I take responsibi­lity going back to Manson being able to do what he did to all of us. I allowed it,” she told a panel of parole commission­ers at her most recent hearing in 2017.

“I learned that I was weak in character. I was easy to give over my belief system to someone else,” she said, adding, “I sought peer attention and acceptance more than I did my own foundation. That I looked to men for my value, and I didn’t speak up.”

At that hearing, the parole commission­ers found her suitable for release, but Brown disagreed and reversed the decision.

The governor said in 2018 that “the aggravated nature of the crime alone can provide a valid basis for denying parole, even when there is strong evidence of rehabilita­tion and no other evidence of current dangerousn­ess.”

Van Houten’s attorney appealed in L.A. County Superior Court, but a judge refused to overturn Brown’s decision.

Manson died in 2017 of natural causes at a California hospital while serving a life sentence.

 ?? Stan Lim Los Angeles Daily News ?? LESLIE VAN HOUTEN at a 2017 parole hearing. Her attorneys argue she has been a model prisoner.
Stan Lim Los Angeles Daily News LESLIE VAN HOUTEN at a 2017 parole hearing. Her attorneys argue she has been a model prisoner.

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