Tate Lablianca Murders example essay topic

1,520 words
... und nothing unusual. Nearby the Scott's dogs went into a barking frenzy sometime around 2: 00 or 3: 00 a.m. He got out of bed, looked around and found nothing unusual. Robert Billington, a member of a private security patrol thought he heard several gunshots a little after 4 am. and called the headquarters. The LAPD officer said, 'I hope we don't have a murder, we just had a women screaming call from that area. ' Winifred Chapman, Tate's housekeeper, got to the main gate around 8 am.

She opened the gate. As she walked up to the house she saw an unfamiliar white Rambler parked in the driveway. When she got inside she walked toward the living room noticing that the front door was open, that there were splashes of red everywhere. Looking out the front door, she saw pools of blood in the front lawn. LAPD officer Jerry De Rosa was the first to arrive. He walked up to the Rambler and found a young man slumped over in the passenger seat, drenched with blood.

Two other officers arrived and the three of them approached the house. On the front door was scrawled the word, 'PIG. ' When they reached the living room they were shocked, a young pregnant woman was lying on the floor smeared with blood, a rope around her neck that was connected to a rafter on the ceiling. The other end of the rope was around the neck of a young man lying nearby, also drenched in blood. As they looked through the rest of the house they heard a dog and a man, it was William Garretson, occupant of the guesthouse was arrested immediately for the murders. (Manson) Manson's next household was the LaBlianca's.

After they murdered Rosemary LaBlainca, one of Manson's girls took Rosemary's wallet and credit cards and left them in the ladies room of a gas station, in an area heavily populated by blacks. Theoretically, the credit cards were supposed to be used by some black women. That in turn would appear to be responsible for the deaths of the La Bianca family. The credit cards were never used or even turned in.

(Sanders, 153) Late one Saturday evening, Leno and Rosemary LaBlianca and Susan Struthers, drove back from vacation. They dropped Susan off at her apartment and went home to 3301 Waverly Drive in Los Angeles. It wasn't until the next day that anyone came to the house to see them. Around 8: 30 am.

Frank, Rosemary's son, was dropped off by a friend. He carried his camping equipment up the driveway and noticed that something was wrong. He knocked on the door and got no answer. He went to a pay phone to call, but again got no answer. He called his sister, Susan, who came to the house with her boyfriend. Frank and the boyfriend found that the back door was open.

They left Susan in the kitchen while they looked around. When the two men walked into the living room they saw Leno in his pajamas lying with a pillow case over his head and a cord around his neck. Something was sticking out his stomach. They ran out of the house dragging Susan, and they called the police. When the police arrived and searched the La Bianca's house. They found Leno with a blood drenched pillow case over his head.

He had a fork protruding from his stomach and the word 'WAR' carved into his flesh. They found Rosemary in the master bedroom. She had her nightgown up over her head. She also had a cord tied tightly around her neck. In various places around the house there were words written in the victim's blood, 'DEATH TO PIGS,' 'HEATHER SKELTER,' misspelled.

(Manson) Vince Bugliosi, the author of Helter Skelter, has a theory that heaps a great deal of fault upon the homicide detectives of the Los Angeles Police Department. The Lapp's was very slow in connecting the Tate murders with the LaBlianca murders the following night, and with the murder of Gary Hinman a few days earlier. This was caused by the lack of communication between the LAPD and Los Angeles County Sheriff's Office. The LAPD was approached by two Los Angeles Sheriffs shortly after the Tate-LaBlianca murders. The told the LAPD of the murder of Gary Hinman on July 31. Also, there was a connection between the three crime scenes.

On Hinman's living room 'POLITICAL PIGGY' was scribed in the wall. Those words were similar to the words written at both the Tate and LaBlianca crime scenes. Also, Hinman had been stabbed to death as the victims at the Tate and LaBlianca homes. The LAPD detectives refused to examine any connections between the three crime scenes. If the LAPD had listened to the LA Sheriff's detectives, they would have heard that the Sheriff's Office has arrested Bobby Beausoleil for the Hinman murder who living with a bunch of hippies led by Charles Manson. But, the LAPD had already decided that the Tate murders were a result of a drug deal that had gone bad.

The LAPD had also taken William Garretson, the caretaker on the Tate estate who claimed that he slept through the entire bloody ordeal. (Manson) On September 1, 1969, ten-year old Steven Weiss found a gun in his back yard, in Sherman Oaks. He took the. 22 caliber Hi Standard Longhorn revolver to his father, who immediately took it to the LAPD. The gun was dirty, rusty, and had a broken gun grip.

A couple of weeks earlier, the LAPD forensic experts determined that the. 22 caliber revolver with the broken gun grip was the exact gun they had figured that the Tate's were killed with. A. 22 caliber Longhorn revolver was a rare and antique gun. When the gun was turned in it was tagged, filled away, and forgotten about. The detectives working for the LA sheriff's department was a group of aggressive young people, they had done research and come up with a few suspects, including Charles Manson. (Lan garde) In mid-October, the LAPD began talking to the Sheriff's office and decided to investigate the similarities between the murder of Gary Hinman and the Tate-LaBlianca crimes. The investigation lead to the Spahn Ranch, which was the home of the hippie group that called itself the Manson 'family'.

Bobby Beausoleil, the man charged with the murder of Gary Hinman, had lived at the Spahn Ranch with the Manson 'family. ' The police found out that Manson sent Bobby and a girl named Susan Atkins to Hinman's house to get money. When Hinman would not give them money, they killed him. Susan Atkins had mentioned to a friend a fight she had with a man who she stabbed in the legs several times.

At this point there seemed to be no connection between Beausoleil and the Tate-LaBlianca murders, except for that Susan Atkins had stabbed a man in the leg. Gary Hinman had not been stabbed in the leg, but Voy tek Fryowski, a victim at the Tate house. After all of the investigations they had figured that Charles Manson made his 'family' do all of the killing for him. When the LAPD found out about this they arrested the whole 'family.

' (Manson) In conclusion, the Sixties was a very violent time in American history. Charles Manson put an abrupt end to the hard times in America. The Manson family committed various hideous acts of murder, because Charles told them to do so. He was defined as the devil. In the eyes of his 'family' he was god. His followers looked up to him and impersonated all of Charles actions.

To many, Charles Manson symbolized the end of civilized society and the dawn of a new age of terror. Book of Revelations. Online Available web May. 2000. Buglioso, Vincent.

Helter Skelter. New York: Bantam Books, 1974. Charles Manson. Online Available web 1 May. 2000. Filter, Deborah K. Forensic Science and Charles Manson Murders.

Online Available web 2 May. 2000 Galante r, Marc. Cults: Faith, Healing, and Coercion. New York: Oxford University Press, 1989. 'In '69: Manson'. News weeks.

3 July. 1989: 54-55. La garde, Deborah. The Manson Murders, 30 Years Later. Online Available web 30 April.

2000 Porterfield, Kay Marie. Straight Talk About Cults. New York: Facts on File, 1995. Sanders, Ed. The Family. New York: Avon, 1971.

Singer, Margaret. Cults and Our Midst. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass Publishers, 1995.