Bobby Beausoleil

Bobby Beausoleil

Mug shot taken in 1969
Born Robert Kenneth Beausoleil
(1947-11-06) November 6, 1947
Santa Barbara, California, United States
Other names Cupid
Criminal charge First-degree murder
Criminal penalty Death, commuted to life imprisonment
Criminal status Incarcerated
Conviction(s) First-degree murder

Robert Kenneth "Bobby" Beausoleil (born November 6, 1947) is a former associate of the Charles Manson "Family" (he denied ever being a member) who is serving a life sentence in prison for the murder of music teacher and associate Gary Hinman on July 27, 1969. By some accounts, Beausoleil's personal attractiveness made him the Manson family's main recruiter of young women. He was a promising musician in addition to being an aspiring poet and actor at the time of the Hinman murder.

Early life

Beausoleil was born on November 6, 1947, to a working-class family in Santa Barbara, CA. Beausoleil's father was a milkman. Beausoleil was a good looking but rebellious youth. By 15, he was sent to reform school. After reform school, Beausoleil drifted between San Francisco and Los Angeles. Beausoleil was involved in music and acting. In 1966, Beausoleil joined several rock bands, such as The Milky Way and Love. In 1967, Beausoleil met Kenneth Anger and had a part in Anger's film Lucifer Rising. In 1969, Beausoleil was living with Gary Hinman when Beausoleil began associating with Charles Manson and his cult.[1]

Murder of Gary Hinman

As described in the book Helter Skelter by Manson prosecutor Vincent Bugliosi, Gary Hinman was killed over money and property that Manson claimed Hinman owed to the Family. It also was intended to serve as the first of a series of murders committed by the Family to start "Helter Skelter", a "war" that Manson had preached to his Family that would happen in the summer of 1969. Accompanying Beausoleil that night were Susan Atkins and Mary Brunner, both of whom were later involved in other murders and crimes as well.

More than a decade later, Beausoleil said that Hinman had supplied him with a batch of bad mescaline that Beausoleil in turn had sold to the Straight Satans motorcycle gang, and that when the bikers demanded their money back, Manson ordered Beausoleil to Hinman's residence to get the money. Hinman is said to have refused to pay, saying "I don't have any money to give you". Beausoleil called Manson back at Spahn Ranch to tell him that no money was forthcoming. Beausoleil, Atkins, and Brunner then held him captive in his own home in an attempt to convince him to refund the money.

Manson arrived and proceeded to slice off a part of Hinman's ear with a sword; Atkins and Brunner stitched it up with dental floss afterwards. Manson then ordered Beausoleil to kill Hinman and told him to make it look as if the crime had been committed by black revolutionaries, as he had been predicting to his Family that a race war was imminent. Beausoleil stabbed Hinman to death as Hinman chanted a Buddhist chant. Afterwards, he wrote the words "Political piggy" on a wall in Hinman's blood in an attempt to lead police to believe the murder was done by a group of radicals. After he wrote the words, Beausoleil dipped his hand in Hinman's blood and left a paw print, symbolizing The Black Panthers, in order to mislead the investigators of Hinman's murder. Beausoleil was subsequently arrested on August 6, 1969 after falling asleep in Hinman's broken down Fiat alongside the highway at Cuesta Grade, a steep segment of U.S. Route 101 between San Luis Obispo and Atascadero.

At Beausoleil's two trials for the murder, the defense mentioned nothing about the murder being the result of a drug transaction gone wrong. His first revelation of this came in 1981, 12 years after the murders, in an interview published in Oui magazine.[2] In that interview, he also denied that Manson had come to the Hinman residence during the event that led to the murder, although he later reversed himself about that aspect. This is the version that Beausoleil currently maintains as truth.[3] Also, conspirator Susan Atkins had stated before her death that she never heard any mention by Beausoleil indicating that the reason they went to Hinman's residence had anything to do with a drug transaction.[4] See Helter Skelter (Manson scenario) for more details on the murders perpetrated by Charles Manson and members of his Family.

Imprisonment

On April 18, 1970, a Superior Court jury in Los Angeles found Beausoleil, aged 22, guilty of first-degree murder and sentenced him to death. His sentence was commuted to life imprisonment when the California Supreme Court ruled the then-prevailing death penalty statutes unconstitutional in 1972. He is currently serving his sentence in the California Medical Facility in Vacaville, California.[5]

Beausoleil's 2010 parole bid was denied, with the next scheduled hearing in 2016.[6][7] On October 14, 2016, California parole authorities announced that Beausoleil's 2016 bid was also denied. [8]

Film roles

Beausoleil was to star in Kenneth Anger's film Lucifer Rising, but little was shot before Beausoleil and Anger had a falling out and the project was abandoned. Some of the footage later appeared in Invocation of My Demon Brother (and again in the resurrected Lucifer Rising film). He also appeared in a softcore porn film titled The Ramrodder (a.k.a. Savage Passion), which also featured his friend Catherine Share – who went on to become a full-fledged member of the Manson Family. This film was shot, in part, at the infamous Spahn Ranch. Beausoleil had a brief appearance as Cupid in the 1967 film Mondo Hollywood, a documentary about the social, political and cultural climate of Los Angeles featuring a wide cast of Hollywood figures, including hair stylist Jay Sebring, who was also murdered by the Family.

Music career

Poster for Beausoleil's official soundtrack for Lucifer Rising.

Circa 1965, Beausoleil was a member of Arthur Lee's band the Grass Roots, which later changed its name to Love. Lee claimed to have bestowed the nickname "Bummer Bob" on Beausoleil due to a drug burn. Beausoleil claims that Lee named his band Love in reference to another of his many nicknames  "Cupid". Around 1966, Beausoleil joined a band called The Orkustra; bandmate David LaFlamme went on to greater success with It's a Beautiful Day. Following his stint in The Orkustra, Beausoleil put together the band he called The Magick Powerhouse of Oz.

In the late 1970s, with the permission of the prison, he composed and recorded the soundtrack for Kenneth Anger's film Lucifer Rising. The official Beausoleil soundtrack was released on CD (along with archival material from The Orkustra and The Magick Powerhouse of Oz) in 2004. He has also recorded and released two albums of instrumental material (Orb and Mantra).

In 2005, a selection of his artwork exhibited in Clair Obscur Gallery, Los Angeles. Just before the exhibition, the gallery exhibited photos of Sharon Tate.[9] The parole board, in denying parole in 2005, stated that this display and marketing of Beausoleil's artwork was exploitative of the victims and showed a lapse of judgment by Beausoleil.[10]

In 2013, The Lucifer Rising Suite was rereleased for the last time on LP. This anthology documents the entire Lucifer Rising soundtrack project from its earliest beginnings in 1967 to its ultimate completion and delivery to the filmmaker in 1979. In addition to the actual soundtrack, alternate themes, musical and soundscape experiments, and some live performances are contained in the box set. All of those recordings were acquired from the original open reel tapes and meticulously restored and mastered for vinyl by Robert Ferbrache. In 2014, a CD version of the boxed set was released. This album package has all of the features of the LP version scaled down to compact disc size.

In 2014, a compilation titled Whispers Through The Black Veil was released on the Wyrd War label containing the song "The Wailing On Witch Mountain", recorded in 2012, which was composed, performed and recorded by Beausoleil.[11]

Bobby Beausoleil in literature

Truman Capote interviewed Bobby Beausoleil while the latter was imprisoned in San Quentin State Prison in San Quentin, California. Capote then published the interview in the form of a short story "Then It All Came Down",[12] included in Music for Chameleons. Bobby Beausoleil's response to the Capote interview can be read here in its entirety.

Filmography

Discography

Studio albums

Compilations

Singles

See also

References

  1. "Bobby Beausoleil". www.biography.com. A&E Television Networks. Retrieved 2016-05-03.
  2. A. L. Bardach (November 1981). "Jailhouse Interview: Bobby Beausoleil and the Manson Murders". Oui Magazine.
  3. "Bobby BeauSoleil Interview with Seconds, 1998". Seconds Magazine. Bobby Beausoleil MySpace page. 1998. Retrieved 2012-11-11.
  4. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on September 10, 2007. Retrieved September 10, 2007.
  5. "State of California Inmate Locator (CDCR number B28302)". California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation. Retrieved 2016-09-02.
  6. Lindsay William-Ross (2010-12-14). "Manson Follower Denied Parole, Can't Ask Again for 5 Years". LAist. Retrieved 2014-07-15.
  7. Archived December 25, 2008, at the Wayback Machine.
  8. Associated Press (2016-10-14). "Manson follower denied parole for 1969 murder of musician". LA Times. Retrieved 2016-10-14.
  9. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on September 25, 2007. Retrieved September 25, 2007.
  10. 2005 Archived March 10, 2012, at the Wayback Machine.
  11. "Whispers Through The Black Veil". Discogs. Retrieved September 7, 2016.
  12. A. L. Bardach (November 1981). "Jailhouse Interview: Bobby Beausoleil". Oui Magazine. Bardach Reports.
  13. "The Lucifer Rising Suite (Original Soundtrack and Sessions Anthology)". Bobby BeauSoleil official web site. Retrieved 2016-05-01.

External links


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