EFTA00810894.pdf
dataset_9 pdf 1.2 MB • Feb 3, 2026 • 20 pages
Hi Steven,
I assume you watched the Manson movie.
My friend Michael Simmons asked me about its vibes.
I replied that I felt strange. It wasn't me. I didn't feel
afraid there. I brought the LSD there; the girls hadn't
asked for it. And I didn't have a bad trip there. I
didn't wake up laying on the floor and hugging the
toilet.
There wasn't any flirting me, nor vice-versa, though I
knew a journalist who had sex with one of them, and
a lawyer of two of them for a three some. The actor
playing me smooched with Squeaky. I never did that.
Below is a recent article about Charles Manson wrote
for a collection of a book that Fantagraphics Press
which will be in mid-March.
Please consider the editor of Rolling Stone.
Carry on,
paul
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Zapped
byte
Cod of -Absurdity
The Best of Paul krassaer
Introduction b
Andy Borowitz
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The Parts Left Out of Manson's Obituaries
By Paul Krassner
When Charles Manson was a prison inmate, he got introduced to
Scientology by fellow prisoners, and his ability to psych out people was
intensified so that he could zero in on their weaknesses and fears. In
1967, he was released and went to the Scientology Center in San
Francisco. A friend who accompanied him there told me, "Charlie said
to them, 'I'm Clear - what do I do now?"
But they expected him to sweep the floor - shit, he had done
that in jail. However, in Los Angeles, he went to the Scientology
Celebrity Center. Now this was more like it - there he could mingle with
the elite. I was able to obtain a copy of the original log entry: "7/31/68,
new name, Charlie Manson, Devt. No address. In for processing =
Ethics = Type III." The receptionist - who, by Type III, meant
"psychotic" - sent him to the Ethics office but he never showed up.
At the Spahn Ranch, Manson combined his version of Scientology
auditing with post-hypnotic techniques he had learned in prison, with
geographical isolation and subliminal motivation, with sing-along
sessions and encounter games, with LSD and mescaline, with
transactional analysis and brainwashing rituals, with verbal probing
and sexual longevity that he had practiced upon himself for all those
years in the privacy of his cell. He was also raped by fellow inmates.
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Ultimately, in August 1969, he sent his well-programmed
"family" off to slay actress Sharon Tate, some friends, and her
. Tate's husband, film director Roman Polanski, was in London at
the time. A few months later, when the family members were captured
and charged with homicides, Manson was portrayed by the media as a
hippie cult leader, and the counterculture became a dangerous enemy.
Hitchhikers were shunned. Communes were raided. In the public's
mind, flower children had grown poisonous thorns. But Manson was
never really a hippie.
He had grown up behind bars. His real family included con
artists, pimps, drug dealers, thieves, muggers, rapists, and murderers.
He had known only power relationships in an army of control junkies.
Indeed, Charlie Manson was America's Frankenstein monster, a logical
product of the prison system - racist, paranoid, and violent - even if
hippie astrologers thought that his fate had been predetermined
because he was a triple Scorpio.
Now, on their black-painted bus, they visited the Hog Farm
commune were all in a circle, chanting "Om," which somehow caused
the visiting Manson to start choking and gagging, so his family began
counter-chanting "Evil." It was an archetypal confrontation. Charlie
even tried to get Hugh [later Wavy Gravy] Romney's wife, Bonnie Jean,
in exchange for one of his girls. But they finally left, mission
unaccomplished.
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Manson had convinced himself and his family that the Beatles'
songs - "Helter Skelter" and "Blackbird" - were actually harkening a
race war, which he wanted to hasten by leaving clues to make it
appear that black militants had done the killing. Stolen credit cards
were deliberately thrown away in a black neighborhood. Healter (sic)
Skelter was scrawled with a victim's blood on the refrigerator, and the
word WAR was scratched onto a victim's stomach.
Roman Polanski put a $10,000 contract out on Manson's life.
Meanwhile, Black Panther Eldridge Cleaver was still on the lam.
He had gone from Cuba to Algeria. Having been arrested for
possession of marijuana, Timothy Leary escaped from prison to Algeria
with the help of the Weather Underground, only to be imprisoned by
his host, Cleaver. Leary escaped from Cleaver's clutches only to be
arrested by American agents and taken back to the States, then put in
solitary confinement at Folsom prison, in a cell right next to Manson's.
The two "hole-mates" couldn't see each other, but they could talk.
Manson didn't understand why Leary had given people acid without
trying to control them.
"They took you off the streets," Manson explained, "so that I
could continue with your work."
* * *
Coincidentally, as I was diving into my Manson research, I
received a letter from Charlie himself. He had seen in prison a copy of
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The Last Supplement to the Whole Earth Catalog co-edited by Ken
Kesey and me.. During the trial, I had published an apocryphal piece in
The Realist about Manson's stay at Boys Town - "Charles Manson Was
My Bunkmate" by Richard Meltzer. A defense attorney read it to
Manson and he got pissed off. He complained, "You know how long I
stayed in Boys Town? Two days!"
In response to his letter, I mentioned that the article had been
intended only as a satire of media exploitation. He replied: "Yes,
brother, the world is a satire and I did see all sides of your story,
'Charlie's Bunkmate.' But I think in Now with no cover. Most people
take into their minds bad thoughts and call it joking. Some lie and call
it funny. I don't lie." Shades of Trump.
In pursuit of information, I visited Warren Hinckle. He was my
editor at Ramparts, and after that folded, at Scanlan's, which also
folded, but he had been planning to publish an article on the Manson
case in Scanlan's, and now he brought me to former FBI agent William
Turner, who had checked out Doris Day. The only connection she could
possibly have with the Manson case was that her son, record producer
Terry Melcher, had met Charlie and was interested in his music, and
that Melcher was a former tenant of the Beverly Hills mansion where
the massacre took place. Aha! I realized that could be the focal point of
my satire - a torrid affair between Doris Day and Charlie Manson - a
perfect metaphor for the coming together of the image and underbelly
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of Hollywood. Just for the hell of it, I wrote to Manson and asked if he
ever had sex with Doris Day.
His reply: "Yes, and I also fucked [the Hollywood dog actor] Rin-
Tin-Tin and the Virgin Mary."
I continued to absorb whatever details I could find out about the
Manson case. A prison psychiatrist at San Quentin told me of an
incident he had observed during Manson's trial. A black inmate said to
Manson, "Look, I don't wanna know about your theories on race, I don't
wanna hear anything about religion, I just wanna know one thing -
how'd you get them girls to obey you like that?"
Manson replied, "I got a knack."
Hinckle also brought me to the renowned private investigator Hal
Lipset, who informed me that not only did the Los Angeles Police
Department seize pornographic films and videotapes that they found in
Sharon Tate's loft, but also that certain members of the LAPD were
selling them. Lipset had talked with one police source who told him
exactly which porn flicks were available - a total of seven hours' worth
for a quarter-million dollars. Lipset began reciting a litany of porn
videos. The most notorious was Greg Bautzer, an attorney for Howard
Hughes, with Jane Wyman, the former wife of then-Governor Ronald
Reagan. There was Sharon Tate with Dean Martin. There was Sharon
with Steve McQueen. There was Sharon with two black bisexual men.
Lipset recalled, "The cops weren't too happy about that one."
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He told me there was a videotape of Cass Elliot from the Mamas
and the Papas in an orgy with actors Yul Brynner, Peter Sellers, and
Warren Beatty - Brynner and Sellers, together with John Phillips of the
Mamas and the Papas, had offered a $25,000 reward for the capture of
the killers..
I had felt that there was some connection between Charlie's
executioners and their victims before the murders took place. I finally
tracked down a reporter who told me that when she was hanging
around with L.A. police, they showed her a porn video of killer Susan
Atkins and victim Voytek Frykowski, even though, according to the
myth, they had never met until the night of the massacre.
But apparently the reporter mentioned the wrong victim,
because when I asked Manson directly - "Did Susan sleep with
Frykowski?" - he replied: "You are ill advised and misled. [hairdresser
victim Jay] Sebring done Susan's hair and I think he sucked one or two
of her dicks. I'm not sure who she was walking out from her stars and
cages, that girl loves dick, you know what I mean, hon. Yul Brynner,
Peter Sellers . . ."
* *
I came across Billy Doyle's name in Ed Sander's book, The
Family. Doyle was Cass Elliot's boyfriend. He was also the drug
connection for two of the victims, Voytek Frykowski and his girlfriend,
coffee heiress Abigail Folger. Sanders wrote:
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Sometime during [the first week in August] a dope dealer from Toronto
named Billy Doyle was whipped and video-buggered at [the Tate
residence]. In the days before his death, Sebring had complained to a
receptionist at his hair shop that someone had burned him for $2,000
worth of cocaine and he wanted vengeance. Billy Doyle was involved in
a large-scale dope-import operation involving private planes from
Jamaica.
And Dennis Hopper was quoted in the Los Angeles Free Press:
They had fallen into sadism and masochism and bestiality - and they
recorded it all on videotape too. The L.A. police told me this. I know
that three days before they were killed, twenty-five people were
invited to that house to a mass whipping of a dealer from Sunset Strip
who'd given them bad dope.
Naturally, Billy Doyle felt it was rude of Sebring and Frykowski to tie
him to a chair, whip him, and then fuck him in the ass while a video
camera taped the proceedings before a live audience. When folksinger
Phil Ochs and Yippie Jerry Rubin visited Manson in jail, Ochs asked him
if he knew Doyle. Manson, who had been quite glib up to that point,
flinched, then hesitated, and said, "No."
Police investigators eliminated Doyle as a suspect in the
murders. However, on the Friday evening just a few hours before the
massacre took place, Joel Rostau - the boyfriend of Sebring's
receptionist and an intermediary in a cocaine ring - visited Sebring and
Frykowski at the Tate house, to deliver mescaline and coke. During the
Manson trial, several associates of Sebring were murdered, including
Rostau, whose body was found in the trunk of a car in New York. So it
appeared that the Manson family had actually served as some sort of
hit squad for a drug ring.
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Voytek Frykowski's father had financed Roman Polanski's first
film. He and Abigail Folger, were staying at the Polanski residence. She
was paying the rent and supplying him with the money for their daily
drug supplies. In July 1969, Billy Doyle promised Frykowski a new
synthetic drug, MDMMA, made in Canada. I had tried MDMA a few
times - it felt like a combination of mescaline and amphetamine, acting
as an extraordinary energizer and, if you were with the right person, a
powerful aphrodisiac. The plan was for Frykowski to become the
American distributor of MDMA. He was hoping to sell a screenplay, but
it's always nice to have something to fall back on.
Peter Folger was the coffee tycoon whose daughter Abigail had
been one of the victims. She supported Tom Bradley as the first black
candidate for mayor of Los Angeles, despite the objection of her father,
who had a reputation as a fierce racist. While Ed Sanders was
researching his Manson book, he received a Mafia kiss from a lawyer
for Peter Folger.
* * *
Within a week after the murders, there was a dawn raid on the
Spahn Ranch, with a grand-theft-auto search warrant. The Manson
group had been stealing Volkswagens and turning them into dune
buggies. Manson and four family members - Linda Kasabian, Susan
Atkins, Patricia Krenwinkel and Leslie van Houten - were arrested, then
released in three days. But, while they were in confinement, Atkins told
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her cellmate about the murders, and when the cellmate was released,
she informed the Los Angeles police.
By this time, Manson and the others had moved to another ranch
in Death Valley, where they were arrested again. Preston Guillory, a
former deputy sheriff at the Malibu Sheriff's Department, aided the Los
Angeles Sheriff's Department in the original raid of the Spahn Ranch.
Guillory had participated in that raid, and I interviewed him at an
apartment in San Francisco. He stated:
We had been briefed for a few weeks prior to the actual raiding
of Spahn Ranch. We had a sheaf of memos on Manson, that they
had automatic weapons at the ranch, that citizens had
complained about hearing machine-guns fired at night, that
firemen from the local fire station had been accosted by armed
members of Manson's band and told to get out of the area, all
sorts of complaints like this.
We had been advised to put anything relating to Manson on a
memo submitted to the station, because they were supposedly
gathering information for the raid we were going to make.
Deputies at the station of course started asking, "Why aren't we
going to make the raid sooner?" I mean, Manson's a parole
violator, machine-guns have been heard, we know there's
narcotics and we know there's booze. He's living at the Spahn
Ranch with a bunch of minor girls in complete violation of his
parole.
Deputies at the station quite frankly became very annoyed that
no action was being taken about Manson. My contention is this -
the reason Manson was left on the street was because our
department thought that he was going to attack the Black
Panthers. We were getting intelligence briefings that Manson was
anti-black and he had supposedly killed a Black Panther, the
body of which could not be found, and the department thought
that he was going to launch an attack on the Black Panthers.
Manson was a very ready tool, apparently, because he did have
some racial hatred and he wanted to vent it. But they hadn't
anticipated him attacking someone other than the Panthers,
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which he did. Manson changed his score. Changed the program
at the last moment and attacked the Tates and then went over to
the LaBiancas and killed them. And here was the Sheriff's
Department suddenly wondering, "Jesus Christ, what are we
gonna do about this? We can't cover this up. Well, maybe we
can."
I bet those memos are no longer in existence. The memos about
what Manson was doing. Citizens' complaints. All those things I'm
sure have disappeared by now. It shows the police were
conscious of the fact that he had these weapons in violation of
his parole. You've got at least involvement here on the part of
Manson's parole officer, on the part of the Sheriff's Department,
probably the sheriff himself, and whoever gave him his orders.
Manson should have been [imprisoned] long before the killings,
because he was on parole, period. He was living at the Spahn
Ranch with an outlaw motorcycle gang. I feel that, to say the
least, the sheriff of Los Angeles County is an accessory to
murder.
The raid was a week after the Sharon Tate thing, and the
intelligence information was coming in for about three weeks
prior to the raid. They just didn't want any arrests made. It was
obvious they wanted the intelligence information we were
gathering for some other reason. Three days after they were
arrested, seventy-two hours later, they were all released - lack of
evidence - after this mammoth raid. This raid involved two
helicopters, 102 deputies and about twenty-five radio cars, and
all the charges were dropped against everyone.
It appeared to me that the raid was more or less staged as an
afterthought. It was like a scenario that we were going through.
There was some kind of a grand plan that we were participating
in, but I never had the feeling the raid was necessary or that it
required so many personnel. Now, if you were a police official
and you were planning a raid on the Spahn Ranch, utilizing 102
deputies and helicopters and all that, one would think that with
all the information coming out a month prior to the raid, wouldn't
you have them under fairly close surveillance? If you did have
them under fairly close surveillance, wouldn't you see them
leave the Spahn Ranch to go over and kill seven people and then
come back?
So the hypothesis I put forward is, either we didn't have them
under surveillance for grand-theft-auto because it was a big
farce, or else they were under surveillance by somebody much
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higher than the Sheriff's Department, and they did go through
this scenario of killing at the Tate house and then come back,
and then we went through the motions to do our raid. Either they
were under surveillance at the time, which means somebody
must have seen them go to the Tate house and commit the
killings, or else they weren't under surveillance.
You have to remember that Charlie was on federal parole all this
time from '67 to '69. Do you realize all the shit he was getting
away with while he was on parole? Now here's the kicker. Before
the Tate killings, he had been arrested at Malibu twice for
statutory rape. Never got [imprisoned for parole violation].
During the Tate killings and the Spahn Ranch raid, Manson's
parole officer was on vacation, so he had no knowledge of
Manson being incarcerated, so naturally Manson was released,
but why wasn't a parole hold put on him?
It's like Manson had God on his side when all these things are
going down, or else somebody was watching every move he
made, somebody was controlling from behind the scenes.
Somebody saw that no parole hold was placed. Manson liked to
ball young girls, so he just did his thing and he was released and
they didn't put any hold on him. But somebody very high up was
controlling everything that was going on and was seeing to it
that we didn't bust Manson.
Prior to the Spahn Ranch raid, there was a memo - it was verbal,
I would have loved to Xerox some things but there wasn't
anything to Xerox - that we weren't to arrest Manson or any of
his followers prior to the raid. It was intimated to us that we were
going to make a raid on the Spahn Ranch, but the captain came
out briefly and said, "No action is to be taken on anybody at the
Spahn Ranch. I want memos submitted directly to me with a
cover sheet so nobody else can read them." So deputies were
submitting memos on information about the Spahn Ranch that
other deputies weren't even allowed to see. We were to submit
intelligence information but not to make any arrests. Manson was
in a free fire zone, so to speak. He was living a divine existence.
We couldn't touch him.
And so it was that the presence of racism had morphed the Sheriff's
Department into collaborators in a mass murder. But who was the
higher-up that gave them the order to leave Manson alone? I was
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certainly prepared to believe that's what occurred. I had been
gathering piece after piece of a mind-boggling jigsaw puzzle, trying to
make them all fit snugly into one big cohesive picture, but without
having any model to pattern it after.
Tex Watson, the Manson family member who led the others on
the night of the massacre, had played a bigger part in planning the
massacre than generally believed. Charlie had instructed the girls to
do whatever Tex told them. When Manson was charged, Watson was
also charged, but federal authorities held Watson in a Texas prison
with no explanation - not even his own lawyers were allowed to see
him - while Vincent Bugliosi prosecuted the Manson trial in California.
In order to find Manson guilty, the jury had to be convinced that
Charlie's girls were zombies who followed his orders without question.
However, in order to find Watson guilty, another jury had to be
convinced that he was not a zombie at all and knew exactly what he
was doing.
* * *
In the course of our correspondence, there was a letter from
Manson consisting of a few pages of gibberish about Christ and the
Devil, but at one point, right in the middle, he wrote in tiny letters, Call
Squeaky, with her phone number. I called, and we arranged to meet at
her apartment in Los Angeles. On an impulse, I brought several tabs of
LSD with me on the plane.
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Squeaky Fromme resembled a typical redheaded, freckle-faced
waitress who sneaks a few tokes of pot in the lavatory, a regular girl-
next-door except perhaps for the unusually challenging nature of her
personality plus the scar of an X that she had gouged and burned into
her forehead as a visual reminder of her commitment to Charlie.
That same symbol also covered the third eyes of her roommates,
Sandra Good and Brenda McCann. "We've crossed ourselves out of this
entire system," I was told. They all had short hairstyles growing in now,
having shaved their heads completely. They continued to sit on the
sidewalk near the Hall of Justice every day, like a coven of faithful nuns
being witness to Manson's martyrdom. Sandy had seen me perform
stand-up at The Committee in San Francisco some years previously.
Now she told me that when she first met Charlie and people asked her
what he was like, she had compared him to Lenny Bruce and me. It
was the weirdest compliment I ever got, but I began to understand
Manson's peculiar charisma.
With his sardonic rap, mixed with psychedelic drugs and real-life
theater games such as "creepy-crawling" and stealing, he had
deprogrammed his family from the values of mainstream society, but
reprogrammed them with his own philosophy, a cosmic version of the
racism perpetuated by the prison system that had served as his family.
Manson stepped on Sandy's eyeglasses, threw away her birth-control
pills, and inculcated her with racist sensibility. Although she had once
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been a civil rights activist, she was now asking me to tell John Lennon
that he should get rid of Yoko Ono and stay with "his own kind." Later,
she added, "If Yoko really loved the Japanese people, she would not
want to mix their blood."
The four of us ingested those little white tablets containing 300
micrograms of acid, then took a walk to the office of Laurence Merrick,
who had been associated with schlock biker exploitation movies as the
prerequisite to directing a sensationalist documentary, Manson.
Squeaky's basic vulnerability emerged as she kept pacing around and
telling Merrick that she was afraid of him. He didn't know we were
tripping, but he must have sensed the vibes. I engaged him in
conversation. We discussed the fascistic implications of a movie, The
French Connection, and he remarked, "You're pretty articulate - "
"For a bum," I completed his sentence, and he laughed.
Next we went to the home of some friends of the family, smoked
a few joints of soothing grass, and listened to music. They sang along
with the lyrics of "A Horse with No Name": In the desert you can't
remember your name, 'cause there ain't no one for to give you no
pain.) was basking in the afterglow of the Moody Blues' "Om" song
when Sandy began to speak of the "gray people" - regular citizens
going about their daily business - whom she had been observing from
her vantage point on the corner near the Hall of Justice.
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"We were just sitting there," she said, "and they were walking
along, kind of avoiding us. It's like watching a live movie in front of
you. Sometimes I just wanted to kill the gray people, because that was
the only way they would be able to experience the total Now." That
was an expression Charlie had borrowed from Scientology. Later,
Sandy explained that she didn't mean it literally about killing the gray
people -- that she had been speaking from another dimension. She told
me that prosecutor Vincent Bugliosi once snarled at her as she kept
vigil outside the courthouse: "We're gonna get you because you
sucked Charlie Manson's dick." The girls just sat there on the sidewalk
and laughed, because they knew that oral-genital relations did not
constitute a capital offense.
When we returned to their apartment, Sandy asked if I wanted to
take a hot bath. I felt ambivalent. I knew that one of the attorneys in
the case had participated in a ménage a trois with Squeaky and Sandy,
but I had also been told by a reporter, "It certainly levels the high to
worry about getting stabbed while fucking the Manson ladies in the
bunkhouse at the Spahn Ranch - I've found that the only satisfactory
position is sitting up, back to the wall, facing the door."
Visions of the famous shower scene in Psycho flashed through
my mind, but despite the shrill self-righteousness that infected their
true-believer syndrome, they had charmed me with their honesty,
humor, and distorted sense of compassion. They sensed my hesitation,
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and Squeaky confronted me: "You're afraid of me, aren't you?" she
asked.
"Not really. Should I be?"
Sandy tried to reassure me: "She's beautiful, Paul. Just look into
her eyes. Isn't she beautiful?"
Squeaky and I stared silently at each other for a while - I recalled
that Manson had written, "I never picked up anyone who had not
already been discarded by society" - and my eyes began to tear. There
were tears in Squeaky's eyes too. She asked me to try on Charlie's
vest. It felt like a perverted honor to participate in this ceremony. The
corduroy vest was a solid inch thick with embroidery - snakes and
dragons and devilish designs including human hair that had been
woven into the multicolored patterns.
Sandy took her bath, but instead of my getting into the tub with
her - assuming she had invited me - I sat fully dressed on the toilet,
and we talked. I was thinking, You have pert nipples, but instead I said,
"What's that scar on your back?" It was from a lung operation.Brenda
asked for another tab of acid, to send Manson in prison. She ground it
into powder which she then glued to the paper with vegetable dye and
the notation, Words fly fast, explaining that Charlie would know what it
meant. She stayed up late that night, writing letters to several
prisoners with the dedication of a polygamous war wife.
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Squeaky visited me a few times in San Francisco. On the way to
lunch one day, she lit a cigarette, and I told her about the series of
advertisements by which women were originally conditioned into
smoking: a woman standing next to a man who was smoking; then a
woman saying to the man, "Blow some my way"; and finally a woman
smoking her own cigarette. Squeaky simply smiled, said "Okay," and
dropped her cigarette on the sidewalk, crushing it out with her shoe.
Another time, when I attempted to point out a certain fallacy in
her logic, she responded, "Well, what do you expect from me? I'm
crazy!" Once, she told me she had been beaten up by members of the
Mel Lyman family from Boston because she wouldn't switch her
allegiance to them, even though they'd had plans to break Manson out
of jail, by means of a helicopter, while his trial was taking place. She
said they were "well organized."
Squeaky mailed me her drawing in red ink of a woman's face
with a pair of hands coming out of her mouth. Written in script was the
song lyric: "Makes me wanna holler, throw up both my hands . . ."
In 1975, she tried to shoot President Gerald Ford. She was
wearing a Red Riding Hood outfit, and I sent her a note in prison,
teasing her about fading into the crowd. I never heard from Squeaky
again.
However, I did receive an email from an old acquaintance,
and here's his surprise greeting:
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"We met in roughly 1975 when you were living in San
Francisco. I took a series of photos of you, and thought I had
one of you standing in front of a sign saying 'Stop When
Flashing' that I thought would be memorable, but haven't
tracked it down.
"In the spirit of your button (Come Clean], I wanted to tell
you that at the time we met I was an undercover investigator
working for the Church of Scientology's Guardians' Office, who
were going quite insane trying to figure out who wrote 'The
Awful Truth About Scientology' in The Realist. I failed to get
that from you, but we did smoke a joint together, and that was
happily the start of my gradual exit from the Church. Drove
them crazy. Long story.
"I've always admired your spirit, and read your recent
piece on Manson with some fascination. Anyhow, embarrassed
as I am about the circumstances of our meeting back then, I
was able to leave that outfit in the nick of time. Running a
medicinal Cannabis lab now...Long. Strange. Trip."
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