CA v. Charlie Manson - 1992 Parole Hearing Part 1

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  • Опубликовано: 12 май 2024
  • (1992) Cult leader #CharlesManson was found guilty of a series of brutal murders that occurred in 1969, including the slaying of pregnant actress Sharon Tate. Manson followers Bruce Davis, Patricia Krenwinkel and Leslie Van Houten were also found guilty in 1971. Over the following years, each convicted murderer attempted to make parole.
    #CourtTV #TrialsOnDemand - MANSON FAMILY PAROLE HEARINGS - www.courttv.com/trials/manson...
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Комментарии • 4,3 тыс.

  • @COURTTV
    @COURTTV  2 года назад +69

    #CourtTV #TrialsOnDemand - MANSON FAMILY PAROLE HEARINGS -
    CA v. Charlie Manson - 1992 Parole Hearing Part 2 - www.courttv.com/title/2-ca-v-manson-1992-parole-hearing-pt2/
    CA v. Charlie Manson - 1992 Parole Hearing Part 3 - www.courttv.com/title/3-ca-v-manson-1992-parole-hearing-pt3/

    • @vallisdaemonumofficial
      @vallisdaemonumofficial 2 года назад +5

      What was the exact date of this hearing?

    • @johnceglick8714
      @johnceglick8714 Год назад +1

      Well , who fart cares ? The a- holes deserve to be laboratory guinea pigs for radioactive , biological , and chemical experiments . They would've been useful in that role for science , and medicine , and making use of tax payors $.

    • @fairlyvague82
      @fairlyvague82 Год назад +12

      Why does the guy at 01:40 say that date is 1971??

    • @ZZZZ-jk5pp
      @ZZZZ-jk5pp Год назад +2

      Mark ‼️‼️

    • @joeygarcia6783
      @joeygarcia6783 Год назад +2

      tight

  • @curtislong1987
    @curtislong1987 9 месяцев назад +267

    It was just a formality, they never intended to let him out,ever.

    • @bevdavidson8634
      @bevdavidson8634 6 месяцев назад +10

      He got lucky. He was given the death penalty. Then, California temporarily got rid of the death penalty, and all those, including Manson and the Family, had their 'death penalty' sentences commuted to 'life in prison ' . So, he was lucky he ever even got to go to a parole hearing, he was supposed to have been 'fried' loooonnnng ago !!

    • @WalkOutTV
      @WalkOutTV 5 месяцев назад +32

      Whole life in a cell. From 9 years old. He definitely didn't get lucky

    • @KickstandzDown
      @KickstandzDown 4 месяца назад +21

      @@WalkOutTVfacts he was a victim too lost his last 4 decades to prison being the scapegoat for a bunch of drugged up kids who thought blaming him would set them free he never killed anybody and is known as one of the greatest murderers of history all he did was claim innocence til he died without ever changing his story unlike every single one of the kids who actually killed people

    • @bobbbbysacamano
      @bobbbbysacamano 3 месяца назад

      @@KickstandzDown he killed gary hinman, the labiancas, and donald shea. sorry your hero is a serial killer.

    • @Sharon-Carrell
      @Sharon-Carrell 3 месяца назад +4

      SOME things Are worse than death, I suppose but this man deserved Nothing!!

  • @charliejackson2491
    @charliejackson2491 9 месяцев назад +213

    “I sit in a cell staring at the wall for 2 or 3 years to see you guys and when I get here you can’t give me 5 minutes”

    • @logandouglas6236
      @logandouglas6236 2 месяца назад +18

      Yeah they didn't get anyone killed

    • @mhmorris2018
      @mhmorris2018 2 месяца назад +40

      @@logandouglas6236he didn’t kill anyone and he didn’t order the killings

    • @lordofleaves257
      @lordofleaves257 2 месяца назад

      ​@@mhmorris2018crazy statement. Are you going to Discount those who have said he ordered / authorized the killing of shorty Shay on the ranch? What about Bernard crow, who he admitted to shooting and assumed was dead? Or what about cutting gary hinmens ear off? Yall have to stop this bullshit reasoning of "omg he sounds so smart, he must be innocent"

    • @waynechappell3263
      @waynechappell3263 2 месяца назад +30

      This man NEVER let the system break him! RIP Charlie…..🙏🌎♥️🦅☀️

    • @lordofleaves257
      @lordofleaves257 2 месяца назад +12

      @@mhmorris2018 what are you basing your hearsay on? Because you listen to a couple of interviews and thought oh wow gee he's such a cool guy there's no way he ordered people to murder

  • @sverrg
    @sverrg 29 дней назад +12

    LOL, he got a parole hearing? I feel like that would be just like: "Is your name Charles Manson?" "Yes." "OK, we are finished here."

  • @itsverynice
    @itsverynice 3 месяца назад +44

    @28:48 "You don't have a southern accent, do you?
    -"Only when I need it"

  • @guntrader5652
    @guntrader5652 2 года назад +677

    The guy who’s running this hearing doesn’t seem to know what day or year it is. He can’t even read the paperwork coherently. Whatta disgraceful situation

    • @kenrodriguez7237
      @kenrodriguez7237 2 года назад +77

      Hahaha literally I thought I was the only one, he said: todays date is April 1971. And I was like wtf this guy is saying. Probably he was nervios or anxious or some sh*t like that

    • @mrques2x115
      @mrques2x115 Год назад +102

      Charlie spelled his name M-A-N-S-U-N. Commissioner didn't notice. I wonder if that was deliberate.

    • @classique4654
      @classique4654 Год назад +13

      Yeah he is a joke.

    • @songbirdy
      @songbirdy Год назад +12

      @@mrques2x115 He spelled Manson. As in son of man when he was passing himself off as Jesus Christ back in the day. People being taken in by him like he has been an innocent victim his whole life will never get it I guess.

    • @wisdomseeker3362
      @wisdomseeker3362 Год назад +34

      @@mrques2x115 He certainly did! Great ear❗ I bet anything Charles did that on purpose to prove how noone listened or actively gave a shyt !

  • @namangaur3105
    @namangaur3105 Год назад +164

    Panel: manson do you have any corrections?
    Manson: Well we can correct the whole thing 🤣

    • @carlomure
      @carlomure 10 месяцев назад +4

      haha what minute?

    • @namangaur3105
      @namangaur3105 9 месяцев назад +5

      ​@@carlomuresee at 12:55

    • @carlomure
      @carlomure 9 месяцев назад +4

      @@namangaur3105 haha fantastic

    • @dawnkincaid5845
      @dawnkincaid5845 15 дней назад

      Hahaha

  • @tomboytwig
    @tomboytwig 3 месяца назад +73

    Listening to him speak, I've never been able to tell whether Manson was a mad genius, or just mad.

    • @helencharnock3436
      @helencharnock3436 2 месяца назад +11

      Sort of both. He was said to be very charismatic and he used the young and vulnerable to do his dirty work.

    • @d3maccus
      @d3maccus 2 месяца назад

      @@helencharnock3436 yea, you dont have to be that genius to manipulate drugged up kids, though....but he was certainly mad and certainly clever. Genius though? nah. they had no coherent plan it was just sloppy erratic, emotional behavior. he had been slighted (regarding his music) at the same address Sharon Tate lived. He simply used his weird constructed false reality to manipulate those lods. One of them said he was dosing them daily with powerful [ psychedelics and she never saw him actually partake. combined with isolation, sex manipulation....You could convince a person a car is an elephant on enough doses.

    • @JohnnyAppleseed-yl6fo
      @JohnnyAppleseed-yl6fo 2 месяца назад +6

      @@helencharnock3436 He didn't use them to do his dirty work. Tex and the girls did plenty of dirty work on their own, including the murders. Manson wasn't even at the ranch on the night of the Tate murders. He was in San Diego, he got a traffic ticket. That's on record.

    • @RappersDelight808
      @RappersDelight808 2 месяца назад

      He was set up by the government and kasabian to obviously wanted to save her own self. It is all hearsay. Tex was the instigator

    • @RappersDelight808
      @RappersDelight808 2 месяца назад +5

      He was neither. He was brought up on the streets and that will consume anyone. Yet he still took all this without breaking. He didn't drastically change his story. That tells you a lot.

  • @RobertDixon-sw3dz
    @RobertDixon-sw3dz 5 месяцев назад +139

    It is amazing to see how articulate he was.

    • @beeeb7747
      @beeeb7747 4 месяца назад +34

      Obviously people such as yourself are easily amazed.

    • @chello70
      @chello70 4 месяца назад +11

      @@beeeb7747 “My principles are not locked up in a bank, and my soul is not looked up in a government, and my life is not locked up in a penitentiary” - Charles Manson.

    • @user-ri2be8ww8q
      @user-ri2be8ww8q 4 месяца назад +5

      He is very crazy talk

    • @CherokeeBird
      @CherokeeBird 3 месяца назад

      Intelligence can't be taught. Our current college students prove that.

    • @msaintpc
      @msaintpc 3 месяца назад +13

      @@user-ri2be8ww8q Believe me, he was a million times more intelligent than you are or will ever be.

  • @JamesOsyris
    @JamesOsyris Год назад +593

    His story hasn't changed. The people who did commit the murder have all changed their stories many times.

    • @user-yw7hz7lo1s
      @user-yw7hz7lo1s Год назад +82

      Yep. He’s insane but did not commit the murder

    • @JamesOsyris
      @JamesOsyris Год назад +28

      @@user-yw7hz7lo1s He became less sane after years of solitary confinement and drugs. His first long interview was years into his sentence and the court footage was never released.

    • @sharongulley5209
      @sharongulley5209 11 месяцев назад +42

      ​@@user-yw7hz7lo1s, no, not directly, he got his demented, deranged, mentally ill followers that thought Charlie was the Mesiah, God, to do it for him. If they didnt do what they were told, their fate would be just as bad. So Manson is just as guilty, even more so since he was the 1 that came up with.the ideas and made sure they were followed through by whomever he could get to do his dirty work for him. In doing it that way, he thought he would not get into.trouble for it. Instead his wiling participants would be punished, but not him (this is what he thought anyway). He just got p'd cause it did not work out that way.

    • @johnallright6847
      @johnallright6847 10 месяцев назад +45

      All of you people that say he is insane should spend a night or a week or a year in jail and should have false charges brought against them that they cannot refute because 1 they are locked up and 2 nobody is listening and 3 they have an ulterior motive for making sure he stays insane. How could he ever overturn the injust trial he had to enjure when it's seems all the legal system was totally dedicated to find him a devil .

    • @johnallright6847
      @johnallright6847 10 месяцев назад +38

      And I loved how he bollacked that speaker who tried to hurry him when he said I have had to wait 3 years for this hearing and you will not give me 5 minutes 😮

  • @WilliamViets
    @WilliamViets Год назад +82

    Memo to my clients: Never carve a swastika into your forehead before your parole hearing.

    • @Plektrud
      @Plektrud 2 месяца назад

      Never trust 👃 ideology

    • @reneevoydatch3713
      @reneevoydatch3713 Месяц назад +2

      he had way before he went to jail

    • @neilmac991
      @neilmac991 Месяц назад

      He converted to Buddhism inside

    • @reneevoydatch3713
      @reneevoydatch3713 Месяц назад

      @@neilmac991 so, his dead. Shameful still trying to make money off of him🧐

    • @georgeedward1691
      @georgeedward1691 Месяц назад +1

      It's a acar!! He put that there back in 1978...smh

  • @marcpadilla1094
    @marcpadilla1094 5 месяцев назад +62

    What a bureaucratic circus.

  • @Atomic419
    @Atomic419 Месяц назад +9

    Anyone else think we were lied to about Manson?

    • @user-qj8kf3kb7s
      @user-qj8kf3kb7s 12 дней назад +2

      no

    • @skyfall0158
      @skyfall0158 11 дней назад +1

      no bro😂

    • @Atomic419
      @Atomic419 11 дней назад

      @@skyfall0158 you think he had powers, huh? Powers so dangerous he couldn’t testify cuz he’d put the jury in a trance. You believe that, is that right? Probably not. You’re probably just unfamiliar with what I’m talking about.

    • @skyfall0158
      @skyfall0158 11 дней назад +3

      @@Atomic419 No I dont believe he had powers. When you say we were lied to about Manson what do you mean? Cause when I read that im thinking you believe the guy is a good man that didnt do nothing wrong.

    • @crimsondeath7468
      @crimsondeath7468 2 дня назад

      I KNOW we were lied to. The guy did NOTHING. In 1969 with the cold war idea about brainwashing "CIA actually trying to make mindless killers trough LSD and mind controll and also beliving the soviets had such powers" they could sel the ridicicoluse Helter skelter story, Today the fairy tale the system trough the media gave would have been trown out as a crazy conspirasy. They protected high profile hollywood and media peoples from the drug they were involved with by creating a fantasy. Tex Watson was a drug dealer along with others and he had a beef with those dope fiends. Manson had nothing to do with it. Not to mention what a fantastic scapegoat to serve the people, such a big scary story so people would not focus so much on the SICK vietnam war and those real scandals emergin

  • @justinmix143
    @justinmix143 Год назад +53

    Couldn't they find someone who was actually able to read above a 6th grade level that could've led these proceedings?

    • @billbailey1511
      @billbailey1511 10 месяцев назад +5

      I know right??? I have literally heard 6th graders read far better than the man leading the proceedings. I'm so shocked he was able to get to that position in the first place. 😱

    • @justinmix143
      @justinmix143 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@billbailey1511 Right. I mean, they're in Corcoran, California, in the San Joaquin valley. It's not like they're in some Arkansas backwater in the Ozark Mountains, where a high school diploma is equal to a doctorate from MIT. My 9 yr old can read better. And that's not a brag. He's smart AF, so I'd be one hell of an awful failure if that weren't true. But if he were his age now back in 1992, they could've just asked him, he'd have done it for free.
      As far as the salary that guy was pulling down ...WHATEVER it was, it was only hair away from robbing the Treasurey Office of King's County, California with an 8-bit Nintendo Duck Hunt pistol, spray painted black w/ the cord cut off.

    • @samhain3824
      @samhain3824 10 месяцев назад +1

      Maybe they didn’t want anyone competent; maybe he is more nervous than Mansun.

    • @justinmix143
      @justinmix143 10 месяцев назад

      @@samhain3824 Why on God's green earth would you think The California Dept. of Corrections could ever possibly want someone they found to be INCOMPETENT to lead a parole hearing for the most high profile prisoner in its entire history? That is the literal opposite of a logical rationale. Besides the fact that ManSON doesn't seem the tiniest bit nervous to me. I mean, you do understand he led a cult for decades, right? Mostly from prison, as his followers were fanatical about carrying out every order of his, no matter how ridiculous or insane, including the murdering of Sharon Tate, Jay Sebring, Abigail Folger, & at least 6 others).
      What I'm saying is, if you know anything about Charles Manson, you'd know he was never the kind of guy to be shaken by the spotlight in the least bit there, fella.
      It's where he was always the most comfortable. 60 Minutes interviewed him a few times, & he basically takes over the segment from the interviewer. A parole hearing was just another chance for Reverand Charlie to preach to the gallery. And he loved every second of it.

    • @davemcelhinnie5790
      @davemcelhinnie5790 3 месяца назад

      Pathetic really.

  • @propagandatechniques
    @propagandatechniques 5 месяцев назад +38

    The fact he survived the joint with others gunning to make a name for themselves is in itself amazing.

    • @roddyboethius1722
      @roddyboethius1722 4 месяца назад +8

      It's possible they feared him. He probably had a lot of protectors in prison through his powers with words

    • @ricksilveirachristcrew8046
      @ricksilveirachristcrew8046 4 месяца назад +16

      Just so you know, he was in protective custody, everybody he was with was also scared for their lives in PC. He was not a tough man. I was on the mainline in Corcoran when he was there in 1994, he was protected. That's the only reason no one hurt him or killed him. He did have a lot of money on his books, though I worked in the canteen on the mainline. I filled his bag with food, and things, every month. He had a lot of money and a lot of followers. One year for Christmas he bought everybody in the protective custody unit, he was in, a brand new color TV for Christmas. True story. I was on the mainline there for about a year, after I got out of SHU, which is lockdown. I happen to be in at the time but I praise God today, that I am a free man, I've been free for over 30 years and I thank Jesus Christ, day and night...

    • @propagandatechniques
      @propagandatechniques 4 месяца назад +3

      @@ricksilveirachristcrew8046 kool bro

    • @roddyboethius1722
      @roddyboethius1722 4 месяца назад +3

      @@ricksilveirachristcrew8046 what was your impression of him based on your personal interactions with him?

    • @libtardedworld
      @libtardedworld 4 месяца назад

      God bless you brother. I glad you made a success back out in the real world.@@ricksilveirachristcrew8046

  • @michellecrawbuck1198
    @michellecrawbuck1198 5 месяцев назад +10

    😂😂 the first guy can't read 😂 I'm dying

  • @shereesetz6690
    @shereesetz6690 2 года назад +647

    I can't believe they were smart enough to video tape this, we're fortunate they did since Manson is one of the most studied criminals of all time. His life was horrific as a child & he spent close to the first 20 years of his life in prisons & horrible boys homes. He never murdered anyone himself. His story is mind blowing actually!

    • @marlenecardinahl9346
      @marlenecardinahl9346 Год назад +9

      Sad but what???

    • @nilz9397
      @nilz9397 Год назад +2

      Being in Foster care does not give him the right to influence his muppets to kill innocent people and a baby that could have lived. Lived. Think about it. Had he not thrown his toys out the pram because no one liked his crappy music.

    • @shereesetz6690
      @shereesetz6690 Год назад +9

      @@nilz9397 he wasn't in a foster care system.

    • @nilz9397
      @nilz9397 Год назад +19

      @@shereesetz6690 whatever care system it was. Thats not the point. He basically blames his upbringing.

    • @jamesdickerson6726
      @jamesdickerson6726 Год назад +33

      @@nilz9397 blames his upbringing for what? Not killing people?

  • @Incognito-vc9wj
    @Incognito-vc9wj Год назад +72

    We got people in prison today that would make this guy look like Mary Poppins.

    • @thacryinggame
      @thacryinggame Год назад +2

      No.
      Anything else?

    • @TroyLad
      @TroyLad Год назад +10

      Yes.
      Anything else?

    • @pollyevhillson3089
      @pollyevhillson3089 11 месяцев назад

      Yhea right more like a bunch of pussyes

    • @carlomure
      @carlomure 10 месяцев назад +2

      of course, Charlie not that bad

    • @vyhozshu
      @vyhozshu 9 месяцев назад +7

      got people in the highest posts of power who do every day

  • @ainsleyshand7690
    @ainsleyshand7690 4 месяца назад +14

    Didnt really help himself in this parole hearing and like they was ever gonna let him out anyhow 😂😂😂😂😂

    • @kytaylor5080
      @kytaylor5080 Месяц назад +1

      Name me 5 thing's Manson said in this parole hearing that didn't help him"

    • @GG-jw8pt
      @GG-jw8pt 22 дня назад

      ​​@@kytaylor5080
      "I'm the man in here and that's a fact"
      That finished him if he even had a chance
      He's free now anyway mate! 😂

  • @francisorazio4241
    @francisorazio4241 5 месяцев назад +24

    They should let the other guy read

  • @Prairie_Fairy_Fire
    @Prairie_Fairy_Fire 9 месяцев назад +61

    He knew they weren't going to let him out. He knew they were just going through the motions. He's playing with them while getting his point across.

    • @tatertottymommy328
      @tatertottymommy328 3 месяца назад

      It’s entertainment for him. Plus he knows it’s being televised, so he’s putting on a show. Smart crazy fox. He used to color in his swastika before his “appearances “, too. Intentional insanity.

    • @LLace
      @LLace Месяц назад +1

      No, he’s playin with them to get out his cell . Might as well at this point

    • @ThePhantomLion
      @ThePhantomLion Месяц назад

      @@LLace Manson is dead

    • @user-pm4mr8jl6f
      @user-pm4mr8jl6f 27 дней назад

      Absolutely

  • @ScammerSlammerTV
    @ScammerSlammerTV Год назад +138

    3:03 he spelled his last name wrong on purpose just knowing the guy wasn't even listening and he still want on with what he had to say 😅😅😅

    • @xDRAGONSTARx
      @xDRAGONSTARx 9 месяцев назад +41

      I can't believe that no one else seems to be picking up on this. As soon as I heard him say MANSUN - I knew that HE knew that this parole hearing was just a waste of time. If they didn't hear him spell his surname name wrong, then they weren't going to hear anything he had to say after that.

    • @scottfilipiak7197
      @scottfilipiak7197 8 месяцев назад +9

      He started playing the game the moment he heard it was being recorded. Watch his demeanor change the second he hears “recorded”.

    • @kevinneumann3845
      @kevinneumann3845 8 месяцев назад +1

      I picked up on that too. Mason. lol

    • @beebo907
      @beebo907 8 месяцев назад +6

      ​@@xDRAGONSTARx i figured he spelled it that way because of the difference between the word "son" and "sun". He believes he is in no way anyones son rather than everyones sun. 😮

    • @davebudrus46
      @davebudrus46 8 месяцев назад +3

      Any audience is still an audience

  • @Chezzabell
    @Chezzabell 5 месяцев назад +28

    Politicians send innocent people to apparent wars all the time yet they walk free every day and have very comfortable lives 🙄

    • @user-gr9te5qw5e
      @user-gr9te5qw5e 25 дней назад

      Vote and if you don't Vote don't complain

    • @PANIC_MODE
      @PANIC_MODE 24 дня назад

      That's because innocent people are gullible enough to sign up to murder for their flag in the first place.

  • @marlenesarles5091
    @marlenesarles5091 Месяц назад +6

    Manson's voice sounds like George Bush.

  • @mllee2008
    @mllee2008 Год назад +187

    Listening to this guy TRYING to read an account of the crimes is actually painful! Did they pick the least literate person in the room or what? Ridiculous!!

    • @dabneyoffermein595
      @dabneyoffermein595 Год назад +2

      Good thing Mr. Kay was there

    • @TruthSerum525
      @TruthSerum525 Год назад +8

      The head of this prison board committed a (reading) crime. He should have been prosecuted.

    • @Campfire30
      @Campfire30 Год назад +6

      Yes. It’s like when they used to make us read out loud in school and we had to listen to the bad readers. Made me hate reading.

    • @twillia40
      @twillia40 9 месяцев назад +7

      Illiterate and a speech impediment. Unbelievable they had him read that. Embarrassing.

    • @paulf2898
      @paulf2898 8 месяцев назад +2

      Maybe he was sh!!ting himself in the presence of my manson😂

  • @GamingxAddictx
    @GamingxAddictx Год назад +47

    They had no intention of letting him out, he knew he wasn’t getting out

    • @pauljones8218
      @pauljones8218 Год назад +3

      should of let him out but they dont want too let charlie free

    • @user-yw7hz7lo1s
      @user-yw7hz7lo1s Год назад +2

      He didn’t want to get out

    • @daniels7717
      @daniels7717 Месяц назад

      It’s a charade for the people. In cases as famous as mansons it’s already decided and not by any judge.

  • @daveblack2339
    @daveblack2339 16 дней назад +8

    Just spelling out his surname wrong is so genius he then knew that they weren't paying attention

    • @charlotte_stevens
      @charlotte_stevens 14 дней назад +2

      I had to play it back a few times, I thought it was me hearing U instead of O 😂

    • @dylawn4413
      @dylawn4413 10 дней назад +2

      Or - they took note of it and was part of their assessment of him, how he didn't take any of it seriously by cracking minor jokes like that.

  • @MsCartman74
    @MsCartman74 Год назад +145

    He sounds completely normal but when Charlie realizes they aren't listening and he's wasting his time he starts talking crazy to make the point it doesn't matter what he says anyway 😂

    • @katsetuis5ryan600
      @katsetuis5ryan600 3 месяца назад +1

      He always talks crazy

    • @dennishardy3869
      @dennishardy3869 3 месяца назад +4

      He just rambles on about a bunch of nonsense. They wasted a bunch of taxpayers money to listen to him just ramble on about nothing. They should've made him stick to the matter at hand about those murders or sent him back to his cell for another 2-5 yrs. Cuz they got nowhere with him. Just a bunch of blah blah blah.

    • @lindagurrera685
      @lindagurrera685 3 месяца назад +6

      Exactly- that was his crazy Charlie act that we see on all the interviews he gives - look how calm he is he knows exactly what he’s doing

    • @user-zg3mh7he7b
      @user-zg3mh7he7b 2 месяца назад

      Charlie, Charlie, are you there ?

    • @katsetuis5ryan600
      @katsetuis5ryan600 28 дней назад

      It's Always the poor me act

  • @_gw33do_
    @_gw33do_ 4 месяца назад +17

    Today years old when I learned it is MansUn not MansOn

    • @TheDarkDutchman
      @TheDarkDutchman 4 месяца назад +3

      Wow... good catch! 👌
      That's indeed what he says during the spelling of the name. 3:01

    • @Hulliepap
      @Hulliepap 2 месяца назад +6

      tOdAy YeArs oLd

    • @worldwidemarketing9980
      @worldwidemarketing9980 2 месяца назад +1

      Facts

    • @dragonfly2258
      @dragonfly2258 2 месяца назад +1

      I've followed the Mansun murders and that blew me away. Never knew.

    • @mike_sucks
      @mike_sucks Месяц назад +3

      He did it intentionally to prove they weren't listening. The moderator also gave the wrong date at first

  • @jamesmcdonagh2331
    @jamesmcdonagh2331 Год назад +35

    I think Charllie proved 1 point , hearsay is a big 'holy grail' here in what is said...they think hearsay is the truth.

  • @Syphaxx5
    @Syphaxx5 Год назад +272

    This man was a character. He didn't mind anyone knowing how he felt. It's all in his body language and on his face.

    • @jefferyepstein9210
      @jefferyepstein9210 Год назад +40

      A man who speaks the truth has no fear of anything

    • @Michelina22
      @Michelina22 Год назад +12

      Yes, and he was himself, they couldn’t deal with that, so bc he seemed so outrageous they couldn’t understand it all !

    • @brianmatwa2358
      @brianmatwa2358 Год назад +9

      @@jefferyepstein9210 well said

    • @businesswalks8301
      @businesswalks8301 Год назад +12

      wtf?????? his last name is Mansun not Manson 3:00

    • @dankhill6851
      @dankhill6851 Год назад

      Hes a sociopath, he never showed how he felt lol. When did he express that all of those people deserved to die? Hes not expressing hes actual feelings so he doesn't get the death penalty, when did he express that these murders are the rest of the worlds fault? he has a personality disorder that makes him predictable like everyone else with the same personality disorder, essentially you fell for his maniuplation, imagine what it would be like if the judge fell for that

  • @danielduerst5067
    @danielduerst5067 Месяц назад +3

    So if we understand correctly this is a recording of Mansun Parole hearing in 1992 that got posted to You Tube 2 years ago in 2022

  • @Youtube-Censorship-Police
    @Youtube-Censorship-Police 3 месяца назад +7

    he was obviously much smarter and much more articulate than every other person in that court room

    • @MarkStevens8899
      @MarkStevens8899 3 месяца назад

      Especially that guy who struggles to read??

    • @beachz101
      @beachz101 28 дней назад +3

      He prattles gibberish for an hour, and to you he’s smart? Raise your bar my friend.

    • @susanna8612
      @susanna8612 11 дней назад

      No he wasnt. He was good calculative manipulator, thats all.
      Easily manipulated dumb people like you. Join some religious cult, you would be perfect follower.

  • @gsgoblue1
    @gsgoblue1 Год назад +76

    This hearing was nothing more than a formality. They were never going to parole this guy. What a waste of time and money.

    • @cultfilmfreakreviews
      @cultfilmfreakreviews 10 месяцев назад +7

      thank the democrats who got rid of the death penalty for two years

    • @lynnbrown2409
      @lynnbrown2409 7 месяцев назад

      They knew even before his name was on the docket that they wouldn't let him out.

    • @roddyboethius1722
      @roddyboethius1722 4 месяца назад +3

      He got what he wanted: a platform. They gave it to him

    • @dickenya3278
      @dickenya3278 3 месяца назад +3

      You're allowed a parole hearing whether they release you or not. That's basic knowledge.

    • @d3maccus
      @d3maccus 2 месяца назад

      I ,know, and they needed 13 people for one idiot to read from a piece of paper the whole time

  • @trevorcannon7227
    @trevorcannon7227 6 месяцев назад +209

    For a man with such a turbulent/unloved/terrifying childhood and upbringing, he speaks so eloquently and grammatically correct that it feels to me, that if you were sitting on a public park bench with him, you would be deeply engaged, in what he was saying in the attempt to understand the depth of his being. Seriously, I am not a phycologist or practice any form of phycological study, but this guy is to me is interesting.

    • @johannes2489
      @johannes2489 5 месяцев назад +34

      That is exactly the trait of sect leaders, and some fall for it. I hope you never will.😉✌

    • @colebeans3145
      @colebeans3145 5 месяцев назад +9

      It’s kind of freaking me out watching this while tripping shrooms like wtf but at the same time you could say he did convince kids on acid to kill famous people bc he got nothing to loose and a lot to hate..

    • @SumTingWong1482
      @SumTingWong1482 5 месяцев назад +12

      I agree. One of the parole board members stated at one point in this video that he (Manson) had an IQ over 120. Interesting, though not surprising. I could see how easily he’d be able to lull unsuspecting wayward individuals into thinking CM has all the answers. Very interesting human, despite his criminal past.

    • @calebempey495
      @calebempey495 5 месяцев назад

      A guy named Tom O'Neil spent 20 years writing a documentary on this guy. He was an mk ultra expirement

    • @jlc6923
      @jlc6923 5 месяцев назад +9

      yeah, except for the swastika carved into his forhead that would make me want to back away...quickly

  • @highpockets5340
    @highpockets5340 5 месяцев назад +6

    When he wasnt provided a copy of the report to follow or allowed to speak about anything the parole board didnt want to hear it was obvious he was denied long before this hearing. Good item to research about Manson is what program organized the Lsd parties in California.

  • @user-ju4is6eu1s
    @user-ju4is6eu1s 3 месяца назад +5

    Love how the guy's laughing in the back here and there, what a trip

    • @savagevidz149
      @savagevidz149 10 дней назад

      That is one of the arresting officers from the original arrest of Manson and subsequent trial

  • @rachealpiazza2374
    @rachealpiazza2374 Год назад +61

    when the people who decide your fate can barely read.

  • @brentdonhauser
    @brentdonhauser Год назад +43

    He was running this interview from the start. None of them even picked up he spelt his name wrong for the record. He spelled it MansUn not Mason.

  • @mushroomleg
    @mushroomleg Месяц назад +3

    The fact he never broke gives me inspiration. And the fact that he died in prison handcuffed to a hospital bed makes me sick.

  • @evildead7549
    @evildead7549 Месяц назад +3

    Once got kicked out of school for having a Manson shirt on lol
    Didn't even have to hit someone with a chair to get the day off 😂😂😂

  • @caroledawnmaloney646
    @caroledawnmaloney646 8 месяцев назад +162

    One of the most complex and yet simplest people ever! You have to have a small amount of sadness for a child never loved, Even Charles.

    • @HJ-eb7jv
      @HJ-eb7jv 8 месяцев назад

      Shut up

    • @Urko2005
      @Urko2005 8 месяцев назад +9

      Nah when someone takes life or instigates that , no sadness.

    • @xXDDKJefferyXx
      @xXDDKJefferyXx 8 месяцев назад +11

      techinically he did neither of those things and was railroaded into death pentalty which was reducded to life btw thats 25 years in california so why is he still in?@@Urko2005

    • @unapologeticallyauthentic
      @unapologeticallyauthentic 7 месяцев назад +3

      He died on 11.19.2017

    • @shanebriggs1039
      @shanebriggs1039 7 месяцев назад +8

      Sadness? Your taking the piss right? Are you giving ANY SADNESS to the families of Tate, Sebring, LaBianca, Parent, Hinman, Folger, Shea, Frykowski, ( Paul the baby) 🙄

  • @toytantrumretroandvintaget7756
    @toytantrumretroandvintaget7756 Год назад +53

    He is correct about the prison system. Show weakness and you’re done. He isn’t innocent but at the same time the cards are stacked against him.

    • @TomHuston43
      @TomHuston43 4 месяца назад

      Every criminal has had the cards stacked against them, unless you believe they are innately evil.

  • @jeffreywickens3379
    @jeffreywickens3379 4 месяца назад +1

    I don't know why they gave him these hearings, when they already knew in advance that they're never going to release him.

  • @truckingwithtobee
    @truckingwithtobee Месяц назад +3

    It was never determined that he was dumb. He’s always been very articulate and intelligent.

  • @kodac9072
    @kodac9072 6 месяцев назад +44

    Imagine the monsters our society is creating these days.

    • @dianayount2122
      @dianayount2122 Месяц назад +2

      society has always created monsters

    • @Taco_Raider
      @Taco_Raider Месяц назад

      Imagine that massive fart I just blasted out of my ass

    • @hankgarza4975
      @hankgarza4975 Месяц назад

      How about the Monsters killing people, that the Democrat Party created through slavery and anger?

    • @hankgarza4975
      @hankgarza4975 Месяц назад

      @@dianayount2122 The LEFT breds monsters, just look at the Ghetto's, monster after monster, all because the LEFT teaches them them embrace evil, hate and death.

    • @jae-gw6tl
      @jae-gw6tl Месяц назад

      ​@@dianayount2122it gets better at it as time goes by

  • @peanut924
    @peanut924 2 года назад +63

    "I learned everything ya taught me daddy"!!! I love how he still talks like he's in the 60's.

  • @thomasgarrety7689
    @thomasgarrety7689 3 месяца назад +10

    2:54
    “Can you spell your last name please?”
    “M A N S U N.”
    No one reacts.

    • @quantaVastitude2021
      @quantaVastitude2021 Месяц назад

      Because they are stupid

    • @russellmcgurn4217
      @russellmcgurn4217 22 дня назад +1

      Dude! I caught that too! I was like WTF? Thanks for confirming I'm not nuts! 🤯🤯🤯

    • @quantaVastitude2021
      @quantaVastitude2021 22 дня назад

      @@russellmcgurn4217 no you aren't stupid like the rest

  • @NichOlsonSmooth
    @NichOlsonSmooth 4 месяца назад +33

    At first I listen to him and thought: “This man is intelligent to know what his rights are, and he is convincing.” Then I thought: “Whoah, he got me!” That’s how he convinced his followers! He twists things around to make him look right or justified

    • @crabtrap
      @crabtrap 4 месяца назад +6

      unlikey. he is running on 'institutional time' his logic is valid considering his 'world' of incarceration BEFORE the TATE issues. is easy for people to sa y"he twisted" when they just aren't smart enough to understand

    • @hectorescobar9450
      @hectorescobar9450 3 месяца назад

      He even hypnotised the judge

    • @hectorescobar9450
      @hectorescobar9450 3 месяца назад +1

      @@crabtraphe got you too!

    • @IreneMason-hx9lx
      @IreneMason-hx9lx 3 месяца назад +2

      To your comment I know I feel the same way but on the other hand how can you really convince people to do something so horrible and be held responsible for I guess if you know someone has a weak mind you can convince them

    • @crabtrap
      @crabtrap 3 месяца назад

      @@IreneMason-hx9lx i doubt he influenced the killings that much. They were on LSD and probably ended up getting carried away in their 'trip'. After the bust, Manson was the easy-blame target. LSD in the wrong enviroment can make people do insane things

  • @cindymcmillan609
    @cindymcmillan609 2 года назад +100

    There are homeless criminals living in tents all over Los Angeles, far worse than he ever was.

    • @vikfivestar3889
      @vikfivestar3889 Год назад +5

      But he’s not bad at all

    • @helenajennings4912
      @helenajennings4912 Год назад +1

      Ya i heard young kids that live their are beating these people to death😳

    • @christophernayar6543
      @christophernayar6543 Год назад +3

      @@helenajennings4912 we don’t do that as much anymore ever since they increased the fine to $250

    • @helencharnock3436
      @helencharnock3436 Год назад

      Really worse than what he did to a pregnant woman and all those innocent people. Mmm what is worse than that.

    • @erica4you
      @erica4you Год назад +7

      ​@@helencharnock3436 he didn't do anything himself lol 😆 his followers did like it or not. he didn't touch Sharon Tate

  • @bigtex9836
    @bigtex9836 Год назад +20

    Does the dude with the club behind CM really believe he needs that club ? The dude is 5’2” 118 pounds and handcuffed both legs and hands..unbelievable. Those guys were the guys that got beat up all through their school years. Now they have a badge and a club

    • @brandonmartin4837
      @brandonmartin4837 10 месяцев назад +2

      Exactly then they act surprised that a convict has issues with people like that controlling all aspects of there life

    • @mattandrickadventures8416
      @mattandrickadventures8416 7 месяцев назад +3

      It's all part of the perception that he was a real bad individual; in reality their tring to deceive the public; it seems like there all actors.

    • @katsetuis5ryan600
      @katsetuis5ryan600 3 месяца назад

      ​@@mattandrickadventures8416that's right he's a wonderfully innocent man lol cmon give me a break

  • @WhatAboutBob516
    @WhatAboutBob516 12 дней назад +1

    They had zero intentions of releasing him so why bother with these hearings??

  • @borishranowskyj2105
    @borishranowskyj2105 4 месяца назад +20

    A shame hearing never intended to parole him!

    • @JWM5791
      @JWM5791 24 дня назад +2

      Not a shame at all.

  • @journeyintothebible
    @journeyintothebible 10 месяцев назад +11

    Wow! The guy in charge can barely pronounce any names or streets. Must be his first day. I can't believe he's never heard of any of this.

    • @LynxNGB
      @LynxNGB 7 месяцев назад

      Thats what im saying. Got a dude with the worst lisps. Cant pronounce his R’s and cant read

  • @joetyrrell7589
    @joetyrrell7589 Месяц назад +2

    “So even if it never happened, it’s reality to you?”
    “Yes”
    The system in a nutshell

    • @iggyeo6458
      @iggyeo6458 17 дней назад

      yea, that really pissed me off. the bias inherent in a system that oppresses while waiving a flag of justice and equality.

  • @firstofdecember9247
    @firstofdecember9247 2 месяца назад +3

    Jesus Christ, could they NOT get a guy with basic reading/speaking competency on the panel? It’s obvious they were trying to “get this over with” as fast as possible. What was even the point of all of this? This is the epitome of a “song and dance” to waste even more taxpayer money. Sickening.

  • @bluemoon2934
    @bluemoon2934 Год назад +15

    Goof asks Manson if he’s had a chance to check out a stack of paperwork 4 inches thick after he’s been in the room less than 15 minutes….and their decision for or against parole was reached years before they even attended his parole hearing….All it is is theatrics for the media to bring him to this hearing….I think Manson is the only one in the room with any class or brains at all…..

  • @mrdayyumyum3712
    @mrdayyumyum3712 Год назад +115

    Spending decades in prison confinement gave Charles a lot of time to think, study and analyze all aspect of life.

    • @patnoonan5281
      @patnoonan5281 Год назад

      You need to read some good phycology books you sound naive. There are people way more intelligent than this nut case he's just a master manipulator

    • @Mypleasure-dc3zh
      @Mypleasure-dc3zh Год назад +3

      I'm glad he's gone.
      But, there are others like him and worse out there.

    • @hiflca
      @hiflca Год назад +22

      @@Mypleasure-dc3zh nobody cares if you're glad he is gone

    • @sharongulley5209
      @sharongulley5209 11 месяцев назад +2

      It gave him plenty of time to figure out a lot of different ways to make sure he did not get paroled. He didnt want out because he knew his fate upon release and what would be done to him it would have been worse than anything he or his folloers (other mentally deranged people that needed to be on some REALLY STRONG meds) did to all those people, their family and their friends. Charlie was sick. I wish they had released him so he could have (and would have) gotten THE JUSTICE HE REALLY DESERVED.

    • @mus139
      @mus139 11 месяцев назад +1

      And his Conclusion was...He is a Loser?

  • @ezequieltgarciaiii9888
    @ezequieltgarciaiii9888 4 месяца назад +6

    I find Charles very interesting and I like to hear him speak. A man of many avenues . Just my opinion. ( Texas)

    • @cindymarie67
      @cindymarie67 12 дней назад +1

      I’m watching this right now as im working. A few times he sounded like George Carlin 😊

  • @onestepbeyond7240
    @onestepbeyond7240 Месяц назад +2

    At first Charlie trying to act normal but you know hes going off the rails.😂

  • @eileen9808
    @eileen9808 9 месяцев назад +10

    This panel of judges should all be fired.

  • @maddieadams75
    @maddieadams75 2 года назад +66

    Spell your last name “M A N S U N “ he was so proud to pull that off without questioning him.

    • @BonnietheOutlaw7
      @BonnietheOutlaw7 2 года назад +16

      It's a game he's testing who's smart.

    • @Kat-ve2kd
      @Kat-ve2kd 2 года назад +3

      Made me laugh out loud.

    • @jimkeys4323
      @jimkeys4323 Год назад +11

      I thought I was the only one that caught that. This guy leading the hearing can't read a lick.

    • @maddieadams75
      @maddieadams75 Год назад +4

      @@jimkeys4323 he was crazy, but he knew exactly how to push buttons and manipulate people.

    • @wisdomseeker3362
      @wisdomseeker3362 Год назад

      @@Kat-ve2kd Me too !

  • @tensecondbuickgn
    @tensecondbuickgn 2 месяца назад +2

    His pride and hubris is what prevented him from being let go. A humble and broken approach might have given him his freedom.

  • @user-jk3mi2ee9z
    @user-jk3mi2ee9z Месяц назад +1

    Wow lot of irritation with papers and mic durring question

  • @sneaky1921
    @sneaky1921 7 месяцев назад +127

    So sad that they would never give him a chance to say his part. He was totally right! They used him to make books, movies all for there benefit. He admits to not being a perfect person but that doesn’t make him a murderer!

    • @sylent6818
      @sylent6818 6 месяцев назад +11

      He says his last name is spelled Mansun. Every thing says Manson. Which is correct?

    • @evaIion.
      @evaIion. 6 месяцев назад

      Mansin@@sylent6818

    • @darylmixan8170
      @darylmixan8170 6 месяцев назад

      It's crazy the media propaganda surrounding Charles Manson... Whenever there's a list of Most Evil People, or The Face of Evil, they always have Manson high on the list... I'm not defending what may have happened... but even if what they say he did is 100% true, there are 1000+ people a year that do worse harm than him. He was a CIA MK-Ultra patsy orchestrated to stop the Youth Revolution (Hippie Movement). He was plastered all over the News and Media as a murdering Hippie Cult Leader. They said this is what drugs do, hippies are evil, parents watch your kids... don't let them get sucked into the movement.

    • @darylmixan8170
      @darylmixan8170 6 месяцев назад +11

      ​@strangedays1 probably not... He was an MK-Ultra subject... He was an abandoned throwaway punk. They kept letting him out of prison, let him go to San Francisco at the boom of the youth revolution, he had to meet often with Dr. Carter, the well documented head of MK-Ultra... The same doctor who had sessions with Oswald, Jack Ruby, The Unabomber, and other patsies. I'm not saying it's 100% some conspiracy... But the whole idea behind MK-Ultra was mind manipulation using many tactics including drugs and hypnosis. And with each one of these cases, they had their guy cut and dry without any further investigation... and they paraded him around News Media with a message of fear... or in Oswald and Ruby's case... Thats what happened, end of story... The crazy thing about Oswald is, if he did it, they'd investigate his whole life and everybody he knew to see if he had help or was part of an organization. But they were never going to let him talk.

    • @kurrvana8124
      @kurrvana8124 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@strangedays1continue trusting other people. Saying a person did something while the person completely denies the allegations. Stop trusting other people like a blind sheep.

  • @gednebulizer8810
    @gednebulizer8810 Год назад +40

    Am I missing something? The title of this video says "1992 Parole Hearing" but within the first 2 minutes, Ron Koenig introduces the case very clearly saying "Today's date is April 22nd 1971".

    • @MarkSmith-so8wf
      @MarkSmith-so8wf Год назад +19

      Yes, you are missing something! He was later interrupted by another panel member who corrected him on the year.

    • @LosAngeles-le2bf
      @LosAngeles-le2bf Год назад +4

      😂

    • @ktrudy1
      @ktrudy1 11 месяцев назад +2

      I was thinking the same 😂😂😂

    • @lukeb1360
      @lukeb1360 9 месяцев назад +8

      That guy got so many things wrong. He didn’t even know what day it was

    • @adidaslides123
      @adidaslides123 9 месяцев назад

      Guys an idiot … whole court system is a joke and this video shows example of that

  • @LeaMessenger
    @LeaMessenger 3 месяца назад +2

    I can’t believe my RN mother allowed me to read Helter skelter when I was maybe around age 13 or so? It was such a traumatic dark heavy story that it remained in my system for about two weeks or more.

    • @upgrade1015
      @upgrade1015 2 месяца назад

      And it wasn’t even the real way it happened

    • @LeaMessenger
      @LeaMessenger 2 месяца назад

      @@upgrade1015 if you have the heads up feel free to elaborate on what the real story is thanks

  • @ericweiler6571
    @ericweiler6571 2 месяца назад +1

    You never know what Charlie is thinking. That's the most dangerous thing about him. He could be sitting across the table and he might like you or he could hate you

  • @hilltophomestead5897
    @hilltophomestead5897 2 года назад +199

    I heard a lot of bad things about this guy. I didn't know he didn't have parents and was locked up his entire childhood..I feel like the system failed him on many levels. And just maybe he was misunderstood his entire life

    • @sallyforth7232
      @sallyforth7232 2 года назад +8

      I agree. It makes me cry. I was an infant when it all happened but I read a ton. He should have been paroled and recompensated.

    • @BonnietheOutlaw7
      @BonnietheOutlaw7 2 года назад +48

      @@sallyforth7232 i was 9. But girl don't be empathetic it's a trap. These types of people don't see life the same way as you do.

    • @thisisme3238
      @thisisme3238 2 года назад +16

      Charlie Mansun is actually a very intelligent man, his intelligence was just channeled the wrong way. Who knows what he might have been in his life, if he had a normal upbringing...just sayin!

    • @tmp1111
      @tmp1111 2 года назад +27

      @@thisisme3238 yes that's called the charisma of a psychopath

    • @kingrobthegreat7446
      @kingrobthegreat7446 2 года назад

      no way. He was evil to the core, and he thrived on chaos.
      He was a known pedoedihile/dealer too. He gave the go ahead to the murders and is just as guilty

  • @Jazzykatt23
    @Jazzykatt23 11 месяцев назад +10

    The guy reading the report sure didn’t do his homework on the key players in this case. Can’t even pronounce half of their names.

  • @FinalAffliction
    @FinalAffliction 16 дней назад

    he spelled his last name MansUn? Can someone explain. I don't think he is lying he said it in front of 4 officials and none of them said anything about it.

  • @reynaldoabella5696
    @reynaldoabella5696 2 месяца назад +3

    By his demeanor alone he doesn't deserved to be paroled because he's still a dangerous person to be in the society. . .he'll rot in jail!

  • @jennarobinson4922
    @jennarobinson4922 8 месяцев назад +10

    You can tell when Charlie gives up hope of being granted parole… he basically walks in without hope of being released…. But then he just starts talking to talk.

  • @Amenhir1
    @Amenhir1 2 месяца назад +1

    This man was such a cogent speaker that I'd imagine that if he had ever been released; considering the number of obsessive fans he's probably accumulated over the years; it wouldn't have taken long for him to amass another "family." Regardless of whether he actually killed anyone himself; he was definitely a driving force.

  • @CocoRose336
    @CocoRose336 3 месяца назад +2

    this honestly makes me really sad

  • @paulk8072
    @paulk8072 Год назад +16

    Charles Mansun, a small victory in the lopsided parole hearing.

    • @Thundralight
      @Thundralight 2 месяца назад +1

      They are asking him what he has done in prison to show he has changed. Being in solitary he does not have access to things and programs the general population does. He said they won't even let him have some pencils to draw with.

  • @susanreid5267
    @susanreid5267 Год назад +65

    He’s more intelligent than anyone thinks

    • @cor2250
      @cor2250 Год назад +2

      True !

    • @shadowwolf9503
      @shadowwolf9503 Год назад +1

      Roger that !

    • @Campfire30
      @Campfire30 Год назад

      So what? Intelligence is over-valued. He was a scumbag.

    • @chuckselvage3157
      @chuckselvage3157 Месяц назад

      He tested 120 on an IQ according to one source i read a few years ago.

  • @marlenelopez3427
    @marlenelopez3427 3 месяца назад

    I caught the mispelling of his name as well! Yet, the panel seems soo afraid they don't even correct him!!! 😂

  • @nikkingman
    @nikkingman Год назад +11

    Wow, finally a good quality version of this. Awesome. "Stephen Kay, from his mother"

  • @johnallright6847
    @johnallright6847 10 месяцев назад +41

    Must have been hard for Charlie to listen to all these people telling him how many people he killed when he pleaded not guilty and all the evidence says he never killed anyone.😮

    • @user-sz8km9dy5v
      @user-sz8km9dy5v 8 месяцев назад +2

      Crazy 😢

    • @xannalice
      @xannalice 3 месяца назад

      What? Hard for a murderer? You really feel bad for a MURDERER. What's wrong with you people.

  • @J.Knox46
    @J.Knox46 Месяц назад +1

    "Charles Manson". Mr Manson can you spell your last name? "M A N S U N". LOL

  • @michelecairns1156
    @michelecairns1156 Месяц назад +1

    He just said it - he runs his "program " wether in prison or out " - you need to run it mentally

  • @yougod7253
    @yougod7253 10 месяцев назад +42

    The only man I've ever heard of, who was sentenced to death , who never killed anyone physically in these charges.

    • @tenenieldjoandthenightsist5109
      @tenenieldjoandthenightsist5109 5 месяцев назад +2

      Have you never heard of "felony murder"? Tons of people have been sent to prison on that. Lisl Auman is a great case study. She was in the back of a police car when this officer was shot and killed during the course of a robbery and her so called criminal partner supposedly giving himself up to the cops, he killed this officer in the line of duty and then was shot to death himself by other cops. The police department figured they had to charge someone with the death of the officer so since she was the only one left alive they charged her with murdering that cop even tho she was in the back of a police car handcuffed/already been detained and had already been arrested when that cop was shot by her acquaintance that was robbing someone's apartment. Her innocence was a huge cause that Hunter S Thompson campaigned for and donated money to her legal aid before she was eventually released from prison.

    • @TheBeefSlayer
      @TheBeefSlayer 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@tenenieldjoandthenightsist5109I don’t think felony murder means what you think it does. Lol. A felony is just any crime that can get you a year or more in prison. So all murder charges are in fact felony murder. It’s not some special circumstance or anything. 👍

    • @tenenieldjoandthenightsist5109
      @tenenieldjoandthenightsist5109 5 месяцев назад

      @@TheBeefSlayer "The rule of felony murder is a legal doctrine in some common law jurisdictions that broadens the crime of murder: when someone is killed (regardless of intent to kill) in the commission of a dangerous or enumerated crime (called a felony in some jurisdictions), the offender, and also the offender's accomplices or co-conspirators, may be found guilty of murder.
      The concept of felony murder originates in the rule of transferred intent, which is older than the limit of legal memory. In its original form, the malicious intent inherent in the commission of any crime, however trivial, was considered to apply to any consequences of that crime regardless of intent."

    • @tenenieldjoandthenightsist5109
      @tenenieldjoandthenightsist5109 5 месяцев назад

      @@TheBeefSlayer
      "In most jurisdictions, to qualify as an underlying offense for a felony murder charge, the underlying offense must present a foreseeable danger to life, and the link between the offense and the death must not be too remote. For example, if the recipient of a forged check has a fatal allergic reaction to the ink, most courts will not hold the forger guilty of murder, as the cause of death is too remote from the criminal act.
      There are two schools of thought concerning whose actions can cause the defendant to be guilty of felony murder. Jurisdictions that hold to the "agency theory" admit only deaths caused by the agents of the crime. Jurisdictions that use the "proximate cause theory" include any death, even if caused by a bystander or the police, provided that it meets one of several proximate cause tests to determine if the chain of events between the offence and the death was short enough to have legally caused the death.[3]
      The merger doctrine excludes from the offenses that qualify as underlying offenses any felony that is presupposed by a murder charge. For example, nearly all murders involve some type of assault, but so do many cases of manslaughter. To count any death that occurred during the course of an assault as felony murder would obliterate a distinction that is carefully set by the legislature. However, merger may not apply when an assault against one person results in the death of a different person.[4]
      Felony murder is typically the same grade of murder as premeditated murder and carries the same sentence as is used for premeditated murder in the jurisdiction in question."

    • @tenenieldjoandthenightsist5109
      @tenenieldjoandthenightsist5109 5 месяцев назад

      @@TheBeefSlayer totally draconian too
      "While there is debate about the original scope of the rule, modern interpretations typically require that the offence be an inherently dangerous one, or one committed in an obviously dangerous manner. For this reason, the felony murder rule is often justified by its supporters as a means of deterring dangerous felonies.[1]
      According to some commentators, the common law rule dates to the twelfth century and took its modern form in the eighteenth century. The modern conception of the felony murder rule arose in 1716, with William Hawkins' Treatise of Pleas of the Crown, during his work on English criminal law. Hawkins reasoned that malice was implicit in a crime that "necessarily tends to raise Tumults and Quarrels, and consequently cannot but be attended with the danger of personal hurt." Thus, "this rule should extend to killings in the course of felonies à fortiori." '

  • @pdubz8858
    @pdubz8858 Год назад +22

    Charlie didn't look like such a crazy dangerous whacko here. He's shook knowing he's getting denied AGAIN.

    • @sharongulley5209
      @sharongulley5209 11 месяцев назад

      He wanted his parole to be denied. He knew what his fate would be were he ever released.

    • @Babygirllivecam
      @Babygirllivecam 9 месяцев назад

      @@sharongulley5209his fate like what?

  • @garypavlick5825
    @garypavlick5825 3 месяца назад +1

    The most horrifying thing is to listen to the actual murders. This is the first thing I saw on television in 1969. At the age of 4. And, I cry today as I cried then. I was only 4 years old. Trust me when I say. This force of reality tormented our generation. Everyone in that time payed a price for this hanious crime. I just hope that since they buried him. It would be a good idea to bury these videos. Once and for all. We don't deserve to hear this anymore. I'm tired of picturing myself crying in my mom's arms. And, hearing about the baby. I was afraid of my baby sitters because they looked like those girls. Born in 1965. This is what I'm telling you people what an impact this has on a poor little kid. Even after all these years. Please, bury this. Don't play these videos anymore. Please.

    • @raulpardomorales7994
      @raulpardomorales7994 3 месяца назад +1

      You are a victim of the USA's goverment, your reaction, your trauma, that is exactly what they wanted.

    • @chrisatkins7959
      @chrisatkins7959 2 месяца назад

      You don’t have to watch these. But , to destroy history is criminal. What they did to this man is criminal. I don’t condone murder. But , he did not murder these people he was convicted of killing. So , find you a safe space and cry your eyes out.

  • @tommymacander32
    @tommymacander32 3 месяца назад +1

    This guy was set up to fail from the day he was born. Wrong in so many ways.

  • @ginocavazos2153
    @ginocavazos2153 Год назад +16

    As soon as Charlie Walk in the Room and one of the board members told Mr. Manson to have a seat please He knew what the result was going to be

    • @pauljones8218
      @pauljones8218 Год назад +3

      he should of just stayed in his cell they didnt want to set him free charlie knew all this would just be a waste of time

  • @jamessefton3680
    @jamessefton3680 6 месяцев назад +10

    He said occasionally I like beer and wine and guy asked do you get any of that in here- what a smart ass

  • @user-hk2wk4dz6y
    @user-hk2wk4dz6y 4 месяца назад +2

    Manson: Innocent of the Tate murders period.
    These parole board members are clueless, sloppy and noisy. There is no way they could relate to him.
    Psychiatric care was needed, possibly, but not prison for those murders.
    California then and now should be ashamed of themselves.

  • @Zocto31
    @Zocto31 2 месяца назад +1

    He was railroaded and deserve to be released. He spent his entire life in jail as a political prisoner.

  • @julieallbright5002
    @julieallbright5002 7 месяцев назад +12

    When he talks about how society treats people of no education, parents, and how people basically say a lot of bull to make themselves feel better and people act like they are higher than, when actually nobody helped him when he needed it. It's still the same way. Doctors, healthcare, and just society in general treat others very much as the "Class" their in. People are just trying to live and most are trying to SURVIVE.

    • @LynxNGB
      @LynxNGB 7 месяцев назад

      Not one lie either. Undocumented kids disappearing. Agendas being pushed upon kids. This was just the start.

  • @dixonbidenzmouth4115
    @dixonbidenzmouth4115 Год назад +38

    He's more intelligent than everyone in that room

    • @Campfire30
      @Campfire30 Год назад +3

      And he was a scumbag. Not sure why you people put “intelligence” on such a high pedestal.

    • @unclemonster48
      @unclemonster48 Год назад

      @@Campfire30 do you have a fave red team or blue team politician?

    • @shawnbartels6091
      @shawnbartels6091 2 месяца назад

      Yea an intelligent psychopath!

  • @spitfirestake54
    @spitfirestake54 Месяц назад

    Well damn. They’re up real close to him aren’t they? I’d be uncomfortable being in such proximity to evil.

  • @jeantetreault132
    @jeantetreault132 Год назад +50

    I'm 54 years old and all my life, i heard so many theories and stories about Charles Manson being a monster, or a psychopathic maniac of some kind and even a serial evil minded killer, for that matter.
    As i got older and as i started listening to all of these numerous interviews, or these so-called hearings, on the RUclips chanel, i soon began to understand who Charles Manson really was.
    Hence! i now realize that Manson was a very intelligent sensible man, who had been a victim of the american judicial court system, throughout the course of his whole entire life. Sure he was an outlaw, he was a criminal and a Hillbilly, like he admitted himself, in front of other witnesses.
    But! as a result, Manson was just rejected and i beleive that Vince Bugliosi, the District Attorney of California, used him as a guinea, in order to publish his so-called best seller, entitled Helter Skelter, just to make money off him, after the murders, back in 1969.
    In fact, Manson never had his rights and never had a single trial, after the murder investigations had been classified, simply because Richard Nixon, had him locked up and kept him off the streets. No wonder that Manson seemed liked an angry man.
    Thus! in the occuring final analysis, i don't blame Charles Manson at all, especially after all he's been through. Besides, when Sharon Tate's murder had been committed, during the summer of 1969, Manson was out in Sandiago, that night and even Sharon Tate's Mothers came to testify that Manson had nothing to do with the murder of her daughter.
    Rest in Peace! Charles Manson. 1934-2017.
    Thank you!
    Johnny, Montréal, Canada

    • @user-yw7hz7lo1s
      @user-yw7hz7lo1s Год назад +2

      He was insane and never killed anyone. They killed because they on drugs

    • @unclemonster48
      @unclemonster48 Год назад

      @@user-yw7hz7lo1s exactly he was a walking mk ultra experiment like Ted K unwilling participates. All to see how the sheeple will react to psychedelic drugs and psychosis manipulation. Thanks government 🙄

    • @Bacon4Rashers
      @Bacon4Rashers 11 месяцев назад +4

      It's a little weak saying he never killed any one, a mafia boss who gets some one whacked and hires a hitman should be innocent then?

    • @noholdsbarred8194
      @noholdsbarred8194 10 месяцев назад +2

      Just read Chaos by Tom O Neil and It was eye opening about the whole Helter Skelter book.

  • @ginocavazos2153
    @ginocavazos2153 2 года назад +19

    What Hell did he say Today's Date Is April 22, 1971 that whole panel was completely corrupt He had no chance

    • @Ipleadthefifth
      @Ipleadthefifth Год назад +5

      He already knew he didn't have a chance

  • @uponamidnightdreary
    @uponamidnightdreary 3 месяца назад +2

    Why does he spell his last name Mansun ? @3:02

    • @user-cm7ys9tl1n
      @user-cm7ys9tl1n 9 дней назад +1

      He did it to see if the board officials would pick up on him misspelling his name. They didn't notice, and at that moment he knew he wasn't getting out. It's paperwork formality.

  • @user-nx6qr1mt6f
    @user-nx6qr1mt6f 3 месяца назад

    If you totaled the time he spent in juvenile and adult prisons/jails, I think he spent 70 years locked up.

  • @rocketman475
    @rocketman475 Год назад +8

    Faced with all those condescending officials.
    This was nothing but them complying with the paperwork formalities.
    Is seems like a sham. It shouldn't be called a "hearing ".

  • @juanitabrooks1811
    @juanitabrooks1811 Год назад +11

    If they could stop shuffling the papers so we can hear,,that wld be great also why was he charged so harshly if he wasn't even there when the murders took place,,this case has always been so crazy !!

    • @normcochran9414
      @normcochran9414 10 месяцев назад

      Manson killed Gary Hinman & Shorty Shea himself even though he did have accomplices.

  • @jesus85ize
    @jesus85ize 4 месяца назад +1

    It’s Mansun not Manson. Honestly, it’s one of the biggest Mandela effects I have seen with somebody’s name lol. I think it arrived from Marilyn Manson spelling his name differently than the actual Manson with a UN instead of ON