Sign in to wowOwow

Enter the email address that you used when registering at wowOwow.
The password field is case sensitive. Click here if you have forgotten your password.

Please register for wowOwow

Newsletter subscriptions
Sign up to receive wowOwow's weekly newsletter and get our best picks delivered right to your inbox. Our newsletter content is hand-picked by the wowOwow editorial team and provides the top features, news, and commentary from our site. Subscribing to our newsletter is free and safe. We will never share your email or other information with a third-party without your direct consent.
By registering, you indicate that you have read and agree
with our privacy policy and terms of service.

Politics | 06/19/2008 11:45 am

Manson Murderess Begs for Mercy

By The Staff at wowOwow.com
Susan Atkins in 1969 © AP

In August 1969 she slit the throat of a pregnant woman begging for mercy. Today, she’s hoping she has better luck when asking for the same from the government.

A former member of the Manson family, Susan Atkins, 60, has requested a "compassionate release" from prison on the grounds that she is terminally ill and has less than six months to live, Department of Corrections spokeswoman Terry Thornton told wowOwow.

The Golden State’s longest-serving female inmate, Atkins was convicted in 1969 for the murders of actress Sharon Tate (who was eight months pregnant) and four others. Perhaps the most gripping detail from the case file was that, before leaving the crime scene, Atkins wrote "PIG" in blood on Tate’s front door.

Atkins received the death sentence, which later was commuted to life in prison at the California Institution for Women in Corona, CA, where she remained until she was hospitalized in March. She’s listed in serious condition and, while Thornton declined to comment on her illness, it’s been reported that she has been diagnosed with terminal brain cancer.

According to Thornton, the prison did an evaluation of Atkins’s release request and found that she met the two necessary criteria — she is terminally ill with an incurable condition that would cause death in six months AND she has a supportive family with the means to care of her – to be recommended for review by the corrections department. If the corrections department makes a positive recommendation, the decision then goes to the sentencing court, which will do one of three things: deny the request, recall the original sentence and re-sentence to a lower term (which could result in a full discharge) or recall the original sentence and place her under parole supervision.

The Los Angeles Times’s op-ed says that Atkins should not be granted the release. What are your thoughts on this?

Click here to vote: Are you in favor of the death penalty in the United States?

251 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

theCHEROKEErose
you are kidding, right…i fail to see why that whole bunch wasnt taken out somewhere and executed in the same style…what a WASTE of taxpayer money to have maintained them all these years…
By theCHEROKEErose on 06/20/2008 9:09 am
Get Sporty
Cherokee, Right. She didn’t just do what she did to Sharon Tate and the others at her home…..she killed the music teacher BEFORE that…and the older couple afterwards…and then laughed about it in court and mocked the victim’s family. She’s already gotten more compassion than she deserves.
By Get Sporty on 06/21/2008 6:00 am
K O
Hi Cynthia, Comparing the cost of a capital murder conviction, including appeals, costs are about the same as maintaining a prisoner over an average life expectency.
By K O on 06/25/2008 11:54 am
Frannie Em
Kitty I wish I had your bank of facts and figures. You are always reliable.
By Frannie Em on 06/26/2008 11:38 am
Anne B.
My mercy and compassion goes to the family and friends of the victims of these unspeakable crimes. (They are the ones serving a true life sentence)…… Time (or accomplishments in prison) and illness do not mitigate the crimes. Justice decreed life in prison with no parole. She should NOT have been allowed to get married or have a website. She is where she belongs.
By Anne B. on 06/20/2008 10:21 am
Kathrine Gluvna
I feel she should stay where she is. It has nothing to do with the celebrity of those murdered. She received the death penalty, so be it.
By Kathrine Gluvna on 06/20/2008 11:07 am
Lorraine Bates
I think they should leave it up to Rosemary LaBianca’s children, Leno LaBianca’s children, and Wojciech Frykowski’s grandchildren if she should be released.
By Lorraine Bates on 06/20/2008 12:38 pm
Get Sporty
Lorraine, Sharon Tate’s sister and all the surviving family members said no. It would be a terrible injustice to release her. That poor women and all of the other victims in their ‘safe’ Benedict Canyon/Los Feliz homes and to have your life end like that for no reason whatsoever. And the poor baby. An 8 1/2 month old baby could feel, hear, be afraid. Just the same as if it were outside her body. I remember that time so well and is upsetting to even think of it, can imagine the trauma it is causing the families all over again. A Canadian friend who worked for a record company lived in Benedict Canyon (later end of 70s)…so nice. You could never imagine in a million years that happening there. Can have compassion for Susan Atikins cancer and her stupidity and her life ruined by her own actions, without assenting to do more trauma to the families.
By Get Sporty on 06/20/2008 8:59 pm
Cyndy Essahbi-Peak
I”m not in favor of the death penalty anywhere! I live in Switzerland, where the death penalty doesn’t exist, and we have less criminality than any other European country! Cyndy Zurich, Switzerland (born in Santa Monica, California 1954)
By Cyndy Essahbi-Peak on 06/21/2008 6:23 am
Cyndy Essahbi-Peak
Sorry, I didn’t get a chance to finish that last message….Sharon Tate and her unborn babie’s murderess should die in prison…definately! I always thought that life-long imprisonment was worse than death, and she deserves to stay where she is! I lived only miles away from that horrific death scene, in the San Fernando Valley, when it happened, and I remember being nauseated and then vehemently angered by the fact that a Charles Manson could even exist and influence young adults the way he did! There were so many drugs and so much craziness at the time, that even “normal” people were acting bizaar, and doing wierd things. Yes, that’s so right….”let go and let God”…it’s the only way to be sane, secure and centered in this materialistic world we live in!!! Cyndy Essahbi-Peak Zurich, Switzerland
By Cyndy Essahbi-Peak on 06/21/2008 6:37 am
Dona Howlett
Cyndy Essahbi-Peak……… So nice to see some one from another Country……..most of us seem to be from California…….How long did you live in California?. I don’t know if you know that if you want to catch up on some of the subjects and people you can click on their photo’s (Avatars) That will take you to everything they have written on the Web site…
By Dona Howlett on 06/22/2008 10:37 am
Get Sporty
A quote from Sharon Tate’s father, “Thirty one years ago I sat in a courtroom with a jury and watched with others. I saw a young woman (Susan Atkins) who giggled, snickered and shouted insults, even while testifying about my daugher’s last breath, she laughed. My family was ripped apart. If Susan Atkins is released to join her family, where is the justice.”
By Get Sporty on 06/21/2008 6:03 pm
Get Sporty
Sharon Tate’s surving sister and Jay Sebring’s nephew telling Diane Sawyer why the murderer’s should never be released. Sharon Tate’s younger sister, Patti, devoted herself for over 25 years to keeping them in prison, until her death from breast cancer, as did their mother until she died from cancer, as did her father until his death. Jay Sebring’s nephew points out that 100+ family members have had a lifetime of pain. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5lv0eLiQv3M&feature=related
By Get Sporty on 06/21/2008 7:00 pm
Agyness O
Fluffy, I agree with you completely. Susan Adkins should never feel the compassion of the courts which she so lacked in her lifetime. Let her die in prison. However, I do not agree with the death penalty. It is not meted out fairly and it is not up to us humans, in my humble opinion, to decide who lives and who dies. Dona and JB, you both have my heartfelt sympathy for having to endure the murders of your family and friend. I think you have both been wise in the way you have dealt with it. Let go of hatred and bitterness. They can kill as well.
By Agyness O on 06/21/2008 9:08 pm
Get Sporty
Agyness, BTW love your avatar. I agree don’t have hate, resentment or bitterness toward them or anyone, my mother drilled that into us as children. And also not to lose clear sight of what you’re dealing with. This woman isn’t dying in prison, but in a hospital with the state providing for her every physical care and her husband and ministry friends her emotional ones. She’s been given more by the California taxpayers than 3 billion people on Earth ever receive: Food, shelter medical care, clothes, a bed, campus grounds, TV, a website, books, as educational, groups, a lawyer, dental, health and psychological services—-all free. She was spared the death penalty. At the time of her death she will be in a bed, medicated out of pain, with her husband and others holding her hand. She won’t be terrorized and butchered and having her life stolen from her. Whatever she could have become she stole from herslef by her own stupid choices. She got a lot better than she deserves.
By Get Sporty on 06/22/2008 4:27 pm