Will Newsom have a change of heart in parole of Manson family member?


This recording was made using enhanced software.

Summary

Parole board recommends release

A California parole panel has recommended the release of Patricia Krenwinkel, a convicted Manson Family murderer.

Convicted murderer

Krenwinkel was involved in the 1969 killings of eight people, including actress Sharon Tate.

Governor has final say

The decision now awaits final review and potential action by Gov. Gavin Newsom.


Full story

A California Board of Parole panel has recommended that convicted Manson Family murderer Patricia Krenwinkel be released from prison. While the recommendation does get the convicted murderer closer to freedom, she’ll need California Gov. Gavin Newsom to change his mind on keeping her in prison. 

The Manson Family murders of 1969 were a series of brutal killings carried out by followers of Charles Manson, a cult leader who orchestrated the attacks.

Patricia Krenwinkel admitted to attacking and repeatedly stabbing coffee heiress Abigail Folger during a brutal murder at the home of actress Sharon Tate in August 1969. The Manson Family members killed all five people at the Tate home. They include an 8-month pregnant Sharon Tate, Jay Sebring, Abigail Folger, Wojciech Frykowski, and Steven Parent.

The following night, Krenwinkel was involved in another double homicide, this time targeting Leno and Rosemary LaBianca in their Los Angeles home.

In total, eight people were murdered, including Tate’s unborn son.

Messages written in victims’ blood

After the murders, Krenwinkel helped write disturbing messages, including the phrases “Helter Skelter” and “Death to pigs,” on the walls using the victims’ blood. This was intended to spark fear and confusion and was part of Charles Manson’s delusional plan to incite a race war.

Sentencing and prison term

Krenwinkel and the other Manson Family members were originally sentenced to death. However, those sentences were later commuted to life in prison when California abolished the death penalty in 1972.

The 77-year-old has been behind bars since her 1971 conviction, making her California’s longest-serving female prisoner. She interviewed for a parole special TV program in 1993.

Krenwinkel’s previous statements on parole

“Their criteria is very much based on ‘Are you a danger? Would you commit the same crime?’” Krenwinkel said about the parole board in the 1993 interview. “Well, if that’s part of the criteria, of course not. I would never do any of that again. Number one, the circumstances would never come, but by God, I’ve grown. I’ve spent these years looking at every detail of the kind of person I was that allowed me to get into a situation like that. It could never be repeated.”

Unbiased. Straight Facts.TM

Patricia Krenwinkel has had 16 parole hearings and has been denied parole 14 times previously. More than 116,000 people have signed a petition opposing her release.

Victim’s family opposes release

Sharon Tate’s sister, Debra Tate, created an online petition asking for support against Krenwinkel’s release.

“For years, this woman laughed about the murders in court and showed absolutely no remorse at all,” Tate wrote. “Society cannot allow this serial killer who committed such horrible, gruesome, random killings back out.”

Parole recommendation and next steps

On Friday, Krenwinkel appeared for her 16th parole hearing in the state of California. Even though the board recommended her for release, she’s not free yet.

After the parole board recommends release, its legal team has up to 120 days (four months) to review and officially confirm that the decision follows the law.

Once the board finalizes the decision, Newsom then has 30 days to approve it, reverse it or take no action.

Previous parole denial by governor

The last time Krenwinkel was up for parole in 2022, Newsom overturned the parole board’s recommendation. He said Krenwinkel still posed an “unreasonable danger to society” if she was freed at that time. In his 2022 report, the governor wrote, “At her parole hearing, Ms. Krenwinkel accepted responsibility for her direct crimes, yet she continued to shift disproportionate blame to Mr. Manson for decisions and conduct within her control.”

Joey Nunez (Video Editor) contributed to this report.
Tags: , , ,

Why this story matters

The parole recommendation for Patricia Krenwinkel, a former Manson Family member convicted of multiple murders, highlights ongoing debates about justice, public safety, rehabilitation, and victims' rights more than five decades after one of America's most infamous crimes.

Parole and rehabilitation

The consideration of Krenwinkel's parole after decades in prison raises questions about the purpose of incarceration, whether individuals convicted of serious crimes can be rehabilitated, and at what point redemption or release is appropriate.

Victims' rights and public reaction

Family members of the victims and segments of the public strongly oppose Krenwinkel's potential release, arguing that justice and societal safety outweigh claims of rehabilitation, as evidenced by outreach like petitions and public statements.

Criminal justice and governor's discretion

The decision ultimately rests with California Governor Gavin Newsom, illustrating how high-profile parole cases involve not only legal and psychological assessments, but also political accountability and executive discretion in matters of public concern.

Get the big picture

Synthesized coverage insights across 46 media outlets

Behind the numbers

Patricia Krenwinkel was convicted of seven counts of first-degree murder in 1971 and is noted as California’s longest-serving female inmate. After more than 50 years in prison with no major rule violations and multiple psychological evaluations deeming her a low risk for reoffending, the parole board recommended her release. The governor has 150 days for final review.

History lesson

This is not the first parole recommendation for Manson Family members. Leslie Van Houten, another convicted member, was released in 2023 after decades in prison. Past decisions have frequently been contested and sometimes overturned by governors, but courts have occasionally overruled executive interventions, demonstrating the complexity of parole in high-profile cases.

Oppo research

Opponents, including relatives of victims and public petitioners, argue that Krenwinkel’s crimes were too severe for release, citing enduring trauma and public safety risks. They also claim insufficient remorse and raise concerns about setting a precedent for other violent offenders, urging authorities to uphold her continued incarceration for justice and public reassurance.

Bias comparison

  • Media outlets on the left frame Patricia Krenwinkel primarily as a “follower” or “member” of the Manson Family, subtly diminishing her individual culpability and emphasizing rehabilitative progress.
  • Media outlets in the center adopt neutral language and contextualize parole within legal processes and victims’ impacts, bridging factual clarity without partisan framing.
  • Media outlets on the right spotlight her as a “killer” and invoke charged terms like “infamous murders” and “parole recommenced” to evoke skepticism and vigilance.

Media landscape

Click on bars to see headlines

46 total sources

Key points from the Left

  • A state parole board panel recommended parole for Patricia Krenwinkel, a former follower of Charles Manson, who is serving a life sentence for her role in the 1969 Tate-LaBianca murders.
  • At 77 years old, Krenwinkel attended her first parole hearing since a previous decision for her release was reversed in 2022 by Governor Gavin Newsom.
  • The panel considered Krenwinkel's youth of 21 at the time of the murders and her exposure to harmful relationships as significant factors in the case.
  • Debra Tate, Sharon Tate's younger sister, expressed disbelief that someone convicted of seven murders could be eligible for parole.

Report an issue with this summary

Key points from the Center

  • A California prisons panel recommended releasing Patricia Krenwinkel on parole on a recent Friday in Los Angeles.
  • Krenwinkel, a 77-year-old serving a life sentence for seven 1969 Los Angeles murders by Charles Manson's followers, had previously faced reversed parole recommendations.
  • She was convicted for a two-night killing spree including the murder of actress Sharon Tate and four others at their Benedict Canyon home.
  • The parole board found Krenwinkel posed little reoffending risk due to her age and behavior, but the full board and governor have up to 150 days to decide.
  • Family members oppose her release and the governor could reject it again.

Report an issue with this summary

Key points from the Right

  • A California prisons panel recommended Patricia Krenwinkel for parole while she is serving a life sentence for her involvement in the murders committed by Charles Manson's followers in 1969.
  • At 77, Krenwinkel is the longest-serving female inmate in California, and the panel believes she poses little risk of reoffending.
  • The recommendation is subject to review by the full state Board of Parole Hearings and the California governor, which may take up to 150 days before becoming final.
  • Krenwinkel was convicted in 1971 for seven counts of first-degree murder, including the murder of actress Sharon Tate.

Report an issue with this summary

Powered by Ground News™