Books Magazine

Charlie and Me

By Dplylemd
Charlie and Me

No, I never met Charles Manson, one of the many things in life for which I'm grateful. However, he had an effect on my life. I grew up in the South. We never locked our doors. I'm not even sure we had a key. Neighbors looked after neighbors and crime was not a common occurrence. A different world.

Then, 1969 came along. With the Tate-Labianca murders, the American psyche changed and Woodstock died. Flower power took on an entirely different aura.

When it was discovered that a diminutive miscreant named Charles Manson and his so-called hippie Family were the culprits, it sent the chill even deeper into our collective bones. If this strange assortment of losers could wreak such havoc, who was safe? Then, Vincent Bugliosi's wonderful book HELTER SKELTER came out and the real story was revealed. This group not only committed murders but they prepared for them by doing what Charlie called "creepy crawling." They would break into people's homes at night, creep around, maybe rearrange some furniture, and leave. This was training, Charlie-style. This is when I started locking my doors.

My encounter with "Charlie's World" took place in 1975. I was doing my cardiology fellowship at the Texas Heart Institute in Houston. I came to California for the first time to run in San Francisco's Bay to Breakers race and then on to Los Angeles to visit my friend Ben, who lived in Marina del Rey. I got in late at night and so the next morning Ben asked what I wanted to do on my first day in LA. The conversation went like this:

Me: Do you know where Benedict Canyon is?

Ben: Sure.

Me: That's where I want to go.

Ben: Why?

Me: You'll see.

And we were off. As we wound up into the canyon, Ben asked what I was looking for. My response: Just keep driving and I'll know it when I see it. We soon came to Cielo Drive and told him to turn. We followed the road to its dead-end. Ben's little orange Fiat was pointed at a high chain-link gate. I got out and walked to it, gripping the metal with my fingers. The property was only partially visible as was the house.

Charlie and Me

Ben asked where we were and what this was. I pointed to the house and said, "Rght there is where Sharon Tate was murdered."

I had to see it. I had read the stories in the newspapers and of course Bugliosi's book, but it all read like fiction. It was hard to believe that something like that actually happened. I had to see concrete evidence. And here it was. The scene of the crime.

So Charlie died. Good riddance. I'm just sorry he wasn't executed long ago. He wiggled through the system thanks to Rose Bird's court briefly overturning the death penalty in California.

But in the end, Charlie succumbed. AMF.

Charlie and Me

Charlie 2012


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