Cult leader Charles Manson warned there would be 'atrocious murders' with victims 'chopped to pieces' months before he sent his disciples on a two-day killing spree, a new documentary reveals.
Former Manson Family member Paul Watkins recalls how Manson told him that 'one day that up in the mountains of Bel Air and in Beverly Hills... there would be atrocious murders, that there would be blood splattered over everything.
'That people would be chopped to pieces and cut up with knives and there would be things written on the walls in blood.'
Three months later, in August 1969, Manson dispatched a hand-picked group of followers to murder pregnant actress Sharon Tate and four others at her Beverly Hills home, leaving the word 'pig' written in blood. The murders, which would be followed by two more, remain among the most notorious in US history.
The interview with Watkins, who testified against Manson in his 1970 trial, airs tonight in ITV documentary Manson: Lost Tapes, alongside recently unearthed footage taken inside the cult's California commune.
The unseen clips, which were 'lost' for more than 40 years, show followers cavorting naked, women brandishing knives and guns - and features first-hand accounts from those who were willing to kill for Manson without question.
Tapes unearthed in California after four decades reveal the chilling control American cult leader Charles Manson had over his followers. Piuctured: A scene from one of the unearthed tapes aired in the ITV documentary tonight
Charles Manson, pictured left in 1969 when he ordered the murder of seven people, died aged 83. He famously carved a swastika into his forehead while in prison and is pictured, right, serving his sentence in 2014
Cult member Watkins recalled: 'All the guys had to get over all their homosexual things by doing everything that you could possibly think of doing with guys'. Pictured: Two cult members share a passionate moment in the footage
Former cult member Paul Watkins, in Hendrickson's footage, explains the attitude was of free love - with Manson the main attraction, especially for the girls. Pictured: Cult members showcasing the liberal approach to sex in the lost tapes
In the first episode, Dianne tells how she joined the ranch when she was just 14 and explains that many of the other youngsters had come from difficult family backgrounds.
Speaking in the documentary, she says: 'My mom and dad were not the warm, fuzzy hugging variety, they really weren't, and I think that I needed to feel that.'
As the original footage shows, at the ranches where the members lived, they existed on a diet of sex, scavenged food from dumpsters, and drugs.
Catherine Share, nicknamed 'Gypsy', looks back on her experiences taking LSD administered by Manson.
She says: 'I wasn't aware of the fact that he was taking less or none at all. I was aware of the fact that he always seemed like he was in control and I was not.'
As the original footage shows, at the ranches where the members lived, they existed on a diet of sex, scavenged food from dumpsters, and drugs
Catherine Share, nicknamed 'Gypsy', looks back on her experiences taking LSD administered by Manson and being inside the cult
Dianne Lake, nicknamed 'Snake' in the cult. Dianne tells how she joined when she was just 14 and explains that many of the other youngsters had come from difficult family backgrounds. Pictured: Dianne as a teen (left) and speaking in the documentary (right)
Former cult member Paul Watkins explains the attitude was of free love - with Manson the main attraction, especially for the girls.
'He said the whole universe is one great big f***. Everything. He said it was everything... That's all they ever did, was try to get Charlie to make love to them.'
He continued: 'All the guys had to get over all their homosexual things by doing everything that you could possibly think of doing with guys.
'All the girls had to do everything they could possibly think of doing with girls. And any kind of combination that you could possibly think of.'
Victims: (top row left to right) Voytech Frykowski, Sharon Tate, Stephen Parent, (middle row left to right) Jay Sebring, Abigail Folger, Gary Hinman, (bottom row left to right) Leno LaBianca, Rosemary LaBianca, Donald Shea who were all murdered by the Manson cult
But it became apparent Manson had a darker side, Dianne says, after she asked him to make love to her and he responded by brutally sexually assaulting her.
'It was more than just a rejection, he abused me, he hurt me. It was like, "Don't you dare ask me for sex".'
Sharon Tate was pregnant when she was murdered in the home she shared with Roman Polanski by followers of Manson
Speaking in the original footage, Watkins is seen talking about the cult in what seems like an almost hypnotised state: 'It'd be more like fear is what they were experiencing. Charlie said that fear was love.
'Charlie said that fear, love and awareness were the same thing. The more fear you had, the more awareness you had, the more love you had.'
In August 1969 three of his followers, Susan Atkins, Patricia Krenwinkle and Leslie Van Houten, killed seven people: pregnant actress Sharon Tate, Abigail Folger, Wojciech Frykowski, Leno and Rosemary LaBianca, Steven Parent and Jay Sebring.
Three months before Manson hand-picked the group - not including the pregnant Sandra Good – to begin the killings, Watkins recalled how the leader confided in him about how good it felt to kill, and also made a grim prediction.
Speaking in the lost tapes, Watkins said: 'He said that one day that up in the mountains of Bel Air and in Beverly Hills that there would be some atrocious murders, that there would be blood splattered over everything.
'That people would be chopped to pieces and cut up with knives and there would be things written on the walls in blood.'
Manson and three of his followers, Susan Atkins (left), Patricia Krenwinkle (centre) and Leslie Van Houten (right) were involved in the murder of the seven victims
Manson (pictured following his arrest after the 1969 killing spree) went on to spend four decades behind bars until his death in 2017
Home of the 'Family': It was an isolated run down ranch 20 miles north of Los Angeles where they would plan killings, freebase on drugs and have sex with each other
Footage also shows, Sandra Good, known as ‘Sandy’ or 'Blue', who was not involved in the LA murders, but is filmed holding a gun and explaining the 'Family's' attitude towards murder.
Explaining what 'the Family' was like she says: 'Whatever's necessary to do, you do it. When somebody needs to be killed, there's no wrong, you do it.
'And you move on and you kill whoever gets in your way. This is us. If we were unarmed we would chew their necks off, anything, claw their eyes out.
'And they know it… Whatever people have been asking for, we'll give it to 'em'.
The footage was discovered after British producer Simon Andreae traced the whereabouts of filmmaker Robert Hendrickson, who had been given exclusive access to the Manson cult 50 years ago.
Manson (pictured in footage from the lost tapes), who was not actually present but ordered the killings, applied for parole in 2012 but was denied release and was not eligible to apply again until 2027 - but he died in 2017
Speaking in the original footage, Watkins (right) is seen talking about the cult in an almost hypnotised state: 'It'd be more like fear is what they were experiencing. Charlie said that fear was love'. Pictured left: Catherine Share
Ahead of the horrific events of August 1969, Manson was described as becoming increasingly paranoid, and devised a plan for what he believed would be a race war, named after the Beatles song Helter Skelter - which was written in blood on the fridge at Sharon Tate's home (seen)
His own documentary, Manson, was released in 1973 but banned by a judge shortly afterwards.
A private investigator was hired, who discovered Hendrickson had died a few weeks earlier leaving a vast collection of footage, interviews and photos.
The first programme tells the story of how Charles Manson, fresh out of prison after serving seven years, drew his young followers in with the promise of drugs and free love.
'He looked right, acted right, said the right words at the right time, so to me he was JC, or Christ,' Poston recalls.
It worked, agrees Dianne: 'We did kind of think of ourselves as his disciples.'
Ahead of the horrific events of August 1969, Manson was described as becoming increasingly paranoid, and devised a plan for what he believed would be a race war, named after the Beatles song Helter Skelter.
The men and women in the cult had already received some training in using weapons.
Catherine explains: 'He taught us to hold a knife so it was, like, part of our fist, and that's how you do it with a shiv in prison.
'How to flick it open… We put oil on it and flicked it open like a switchblade. And it was going to be our forever survival tool.'
Manson died of a heart attack at the age of 83 in 2017.
Manson: The Lost Tapes starts on ITV at 9pm Thursday [September 27]
Link article
https://hienalouca.com/2018/09/27/unseen-footage-of-charles-mansons-murderous-cult-in-california/
Main photo article Cult leader Charles Manson warned there would be ‘atrocious murders’ with victims ‘chopped to pieces’ months before he sent his disciples on a two-day killing spree, a new documentary reveals.
Former Manson Family member Paul Watkins recalls how Manson told him that &...
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Emily Ratajkowski is a showman, on and off the stage. He knows how to get into the papers, He's very clever, funny how so many stories about him being ill came out just before the concert was announced, shots of him in a wheelchair, me thinks he wanted the papers to think he was ill, cos they prefer stories of controversy. Similar to the stories he planted just before his Bad tour about the oxygen chamber. Worked a treat lol. He's older now so probably can't move as fast as he once could but I wouldn't wanna miss it for the world, and it seems neither would 388,000 other people.
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