Brown Board says, Manson Gang Killer OK to go Free

Parole board recommends release for ex-Manson follower Bruce Davis – KansasCity.com

SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. — With a new governor in office, a former Manson family member serving a life term at California Men’s Colony has his best chance at freedom after a parole board recommended his release Thursday.

Bruce Davis, 69, had been recommended for parole in 2010, but then-Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger rejected the parole board’s recommendation. Two years later, he returned, this time — for the first time in 27 hearings — facing people representing the families of his victims.

One of them, Debra Tate — sister of Sharon Tate, who was murdered by the Manson family — said afterward that she’s worried about the board’s decision.

“I’m disappointed that (the board) would release a serial killer back in the public,” she said. In the late 1960s, Davis was one of several people who became followers of Charles Manson in Southern California. After Manson persuaded them to incite a race war by committing crimes they would pin on African-Americans, at least nine people were murdered, causing fear and panic in the Los Angeles area.

Four decades later, the crimes remain among the country’s most infamous. During Thursday’s hearing, Davis’ attorney, Michael Beckman, referred to a tattered and taped-up copy of “Helter Skelter,” the best-selling book on the murders.

Davis was convicted of two murders for his involvement in the deaths of musician Gary Hinman and stuntman Donald “Shorty” Shea. His level of involvement, which has always been disputed, was even more muddled Thursday, when Davis admitted to having a greater role in each murder.

Bruce Davis, 69

“Since 2008, I’ve made remarkable progress in coming to terms with what I did,” Davis said. Davis admitted Thursday to holding a gun toward Hinman as others cut Hinman’s face. And he admitted to attacking Shea with a knife while Shea was alive.

In the past, he’d said he had a more passive role and only cut Shea after he was dead.

While the two parole board members noted his inconsistent story, they said it was their job to determine whether David was a threat to the community.

“While your behavior was atrocious, your crimes did occur 43 years ago,” parole board member Jeff Ferguson told Davis, who has been a model prisoner for years and has had 10 years of positive psychological evaluations.

For Davis to gain release, the decision will have to be upheld by the entire parole board and Gov. Jerry Brown, who has approved significantly more parole recommendations than his two predecessors.

For years, Davis had planned to move to Grover Beach to be with his wife and daughter if released. But since he recently divorced, he said he plans to move to a program for released prisoners in Los Angeles.

Davis said he got hooked up with Manson after serving a 10-day jail stint for marijuana possession. Because he didn’t actually have marijuana on him at the time, he said, he was angry and resentful. “So when I met Charlie — and the girls — I was ready for that,” he said.

After briefly parting with the group, he said, he returned to a much different group of hippies. “After I returned, the conversation had turned from peace and love to hatred and violence,” he said. Still, he stayed, even as Manson planned his race war.

He was not involved in the more well-known murders of Tate and couple Leno and Rosemary LaBianca, though he accepted responsibility for those as well.

While he was older than many of the others, he said he did not have a leadership role — as the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office has contended.

“Everyone agreed with Charlie — that was the role,” he said.

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