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Panel recommends parole for Robert Beausoleil, Manson follower and convicted murderer

In this Jan. 21, 1970, file photo, Robert Beausoleil, then 21, leaves a courtroom in Los Angeles.
In this Jan. 21, 1970, file photo, Robert Beausoleil, then 21, leaves a courtroom in Los Angeles.
(George Brich / Associated Press)
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A California parole panel Thursday recommended for the first time that Robert Beausoleil, a follower of Charles Manson, be freed after serving nearly half a century in prison for murder.

Beausoleil, 71, was not involved in the most notorious killings by the Manson “family” — those of actress Sharon Tate and six others in 1969. He was convicted in the slaying of musician Gary Hinman that same year.

Hinman was tortured for three days, according to testimony at previous parole hearings, including when Manson cut his face with a sword.

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Parole panels had ruled 18 times against releasing Beausoleil.

California’s incoming governor, Gavin Newsom, could block the parole in coming months. Termed-out Gov. Jerry Brown has consistently stopped releases for followers of the cult leader, who died in prison in 2017.

The Los Angeles County district attorney’s office, which has opposed such paroles, did not respond to a request for comment.

Kay Hinman Martley, Gary Hinman’s cousin, who attended Thursday’s hearing, said Beausoleil was already lucky once when his death sentence was reduced to life in prison by an appeals court in 1973.

“I constantly have hope that they’ll do the right thing and keep these people in prison, and now my hopes have to go with the governor,” she said, adding that she plans to reach out to Newsom to tell him “this man does not belong outside the walls of prison.”

But Beausoleil’s attorney, Jason Campbell, said that his client is no longer dangerous and that his release “is long overdue.”

“He is a very thoughtful, insightful and compassionate person. He’s not the person he was in 1969,” Campbell said. “He’s matured dramatically since then.”

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Beausoleil resides in the California Medical Facility in Vacaville, about 45 miles northeast of San Francisco.

Sharon Tate’s sister Debra Tate, who also attended the hearing, said she will mount a social media petition drive so parole opponents can “make their feelings known to Gov.-elect Newsom, because he has a tendency to be very liberal. Without public opinion weighing in on this, there is no hope.”

Newsom spokesman Nathan Click did not respond to a request for comment.

Tate said testimony showed that Beausoleil is still physically capable of violence and had borderline psychological reports. She said he also keeps breaking prison rules by profiting from selling his art and music outside of prison.

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