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What’s Been Up With Casey Anthony Since She Got Off: 4 Crucial Updates

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On July 5, 2011, the jury in the murder trial of Casey Anthony delivered a “not guilty” verdict, and the world seemed to erupt with outrage and indignation.

Related: The Casey Anthony Crimeline on CrimeFeed

After minute-by-minute news coverage, endless talk-show hoopla, and protests and debates both online and off, the woman branded “the most hated mom in America” and harangued as “Tot Mom” beat the rap for the 2008 disappearance and slaying of her two-year-old daughter, Caylee Anthony.

The media circus and the public uproar slowly subsided, although fascination with the case never faded away. Anthony herself did seem to fade away from the spotlight, though, effectively slipping into anonymity to the point that if she did turn up anywhere outdoors, somebody reported on it.

Watch Investigation Discovery’s three-part investigation, Casey Anthony: An American Murder Mystery, on Saturday, April 15 at 7/6c or online now. 

In March 2017, Casey Anthony, who’s now 30, finally broke her silence with her first public interview in a half-decade. Here are four updates as to what Anthony’s been doing since her acquittal.

1. CASEY ANTHONY “SLEEPS OK” AND DOESN’T “GIVE A S—T”

Sitting with an AP reporter for a five-part Q&A, Anthony spoke at length about her present life. She stunned observers with a few choice quotes that included:

“I don’t give a s— about what anyone thinks about me, I never will. I’m okay with myself, I sleep pretty good at night…. I understand the reasons people feel about me. I understand why people have the opinions that they do. I’m still not even certain as I stand here today about what happened.”

Related: Casey Anthony Breaks Silence — “I Don’t Give a S—t What Anyone Thinks About Me”

Anthony also admitted lying to the police, also noting:

“Cops tend to victimize the victims. Cops lie to people every day. I’m just one of the unfortunate idiots who admitted they lied…. My dad was a cop. You can read into that what you want to.”

Casey Anthony on February 13, 2017 [AP Photo/Joshua Replogle]

Casey Anthony on February 13, 2017 [AP Photo/Joshua Replogle]

As for her daughter, Anthony said, “Caylee would be 12 right now, and would be a total badass. I’d like to think she’d be listening to classic rock and playing sports and not taking s— from anybody.” [Associated Press]

2. CASEY AND O.J.: A RUMOR OF TV COSTARDOM

During her AP interview, Casey Anthony said she had become fascinated with the 1994 O.J. Simpson murder trail, stating, “There are a lot of parallels” to her own case and adding: “I can empathize with his situation.”

At present, Anthony lives with and works for Patrick McKenna, a private eye who worked as the lead investigator for the defense teams of both Casey and O.J.

Related: O.J. Reportedly Put Casey Anthony on His Visitors List

In March 2017, InTouch magazine printed an unofficial, uncredited rumor that Casey and O.J. might possibly be costarring on a reality TV show, once Simpson gets out of prison for stealing sports memorabilia at gunpoint.

According to the report in InTouch, the source said: “It will give viewers the inside story on the aftermath of living with the horrible crimes they were ultimately acquitted of.”

InTouch further quoted the same unnamed source as saying that O.J. was “putting Casey on his visitor list, and is even willing to pay for her to visit.” [Daily Mail]

3. CASEY TRIED TO OPEN HER OWN PHOTOGRAPHY STUDIO

In November 2015, Casey Anthony filed papers to open Case Photography in West Palm Beach, Florida.

Anthony had always been a talented shutterbug and she looked to be putting her skills to work. The address listed on the filing indicated a property owned by Patrick McKenna, her ex-investigator and current boss, with whom she also lives.

Related: Casey Anthony Sets Up New Photography Business in West Palm Beach

Case Photography opened January 1, 2016. News of the launch hit the media the following month, and incensed online readers bombarded the company’s Facebook page with negative messages, prompting it to be taken down.

The company’s Twitter page is still up, although it hasn’t been active since August. [Orlando Sentinel]

4. CASEY TURNED UP AT AN ANTI-TRUMP RALLY

The AP reporter who, at last, convinced Casey Anthony to chat for the public initially came across her while he was covering an anti-Trump protest in February 2017 staged outside the President’s “Winter White House” in Florida, Mar-a-Lago.

Related: Casey Anthony Spotted at Anti-Trump March at Mar-a-Lago

After being initially spotted by a TV news crew, Anthony declined to talk on camera, but said she opposed President Trump’s policies. The AP scribe turned out to be more persuasive, and … here we are. [Palm Beach Post]

Main photo: Casey Anthony on February 13, 2017 [AP Photo/Joshua Replogle]

The post What’s Been Up With Casey Anthony Since She Got Off: 4 Crucial Updates appeared first on CrimeFeed.


The Many Lies Of Casey Anthony: 4 Times Her Story Didn’t Match the Facts

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Much of the firestorm surrounding the 2008 disappearance and death of two-year-old Caylee Anthony was infamously inflamed by the reported falsehoods and fabrications of Casey Anthony, the toddler’s mother who eventually stood trial for the girl’s murder — and beat the rap.

Time after time, police and prosecutors seemed to catch Casey Anthony engaged in deception before, during, and after the courtroom proceedings that so powerfully enraptured and often infuriated the press and the public.

Related: The Casey Anthony Crimeline on CrimeFeed

Still, on July 5, 2011, a jury ruled that Anthony’s guilt in Caylee’s killing had not been proven beyond a reasonable doubt, and the woman harangued as “Tot Mom” won an acquittal.

Even if Anthony didn’t kill Caylee — which is what we must presume — her path to freedom was reportedly not one built on honesty. Here are four crucial incidents wherein Casey Anthony’s claims did not match up with reality.

Watch Investigation Discovery’s three-part investigation, Casey Anthony: An American Murder Mystery, on Saturday, April 15 at 7/6c or online now. 

LIE #1: ANTHONY CLAIMED SHE SPOKE TO CAYLEE — AFTER THE LITTLE GIRL HAD DIED

The tragic saga is said to have commenced on June 16, 2008, when Casey Anthony took Caylee and left the Orlando, Florida, home of Casey’s parents, George and Cindy Anthony. For the next 31 days, George and Cindy did not see Casey or Caylee. When asked what was up, Casey said she was on work detail in Tampa Bay.

The mystery deepened after George got a notice to pick up Casey’s car from an impound lot, and noted that the interior smelled like a decomposing body. On July 15, Cindy Anthony called the police to report Caylee missing.

Related: 4 I.D. Episodes Featuring Moms Who Are Scarier Than The Monster in Your Closet

Casey immediately claimed that Caylee had been abducted and that she’d just spoken with her on the phone, saying:

“She was excited to talk to me. She said, ‘Hi, mommy!’… Today was the first time I have heard her voice in over four weeks. After 31 days, I know that all that matters is getting my daughter back.”

Investigators later determined that Casey had already been dead for weeks. In fact, even Casey’s defense conceded that to be true, claiming that Caylee drowned in the family’s swimming pool on June 16. [ABC News]

LIE #2: CASEY BLAMED IT ON HER BABYSITTER — WHO WASN’T HER BABYSITTER

During her 31 days away, Anthony occasionally claimed that she left Caylee with a babysitter named Zenaida Fernandez-Gonzalez, who she nicknamed “Zanny the Nanny.” She further stated that Zanny the Nanny took off with Caylee and had been holding her captive.

Related: O.J. Reportedly Put Casey Anthony on His Visitors List

In identifying Zanny, Anthony said they had met through a mutual friend named Jeffery Michael Hopkins. Anthony mentioned that she dated Hopkins briefly, and that Zanny was his current girlfriend. She also described Zanny’s apartment in great detail and told police:

“This is the honest to God’s truth. I don’t know where [Caylee] is. The last person that I saw her with is Zenaida.”

In addition, Anthony said that Hopkins was rich, worked for Nickelodeon, and that his son Zachary frequently played with Caylee. None of this was true.

Related: “I Don’t Know… I Don’t Know What… I Don’t Know Why I Said What I Said” — Cindy Anthony

When police asked for contact info, Anthony told them, “Zenaida’s number has switched a couple times, and Jeff’s number changed.”

Zenaida Fernandez-Gonzalez did prove to be an actual person, but “Zanny the Nanny” did not. The real Fernandez-Gonazelz had no relationship whatsoever with Anthony, Caylee, or Jeff Hopkins. She later sued Casey Anthony for defamation.

Jeff Hopkins attended middle school with Casey Anthony. Except for a single time years earlier when they ran into one another at a bar, he had not been in touch with her since then. He also didn’t have any children and had never met anyone named Zenaida Fernandez-Gonzalez. [People]

LIE #3: ANTHONY SAID SHE WORKED AT UNIVERSAL STUDIOS — WHEN SHE DIDN’T WORK ANYWHERE

For years, George and Cindy Anthony believed their daughter was working as an event planner at Universal Studios. She actually did have a job on the lot four years prior, with a Universal subcontractor. After that, Anthony simply pretended to still be employed.

Related: Casey Anthony’s Internet Search for “Foolproof Suffocation” That the Prosecution Missed

The lie deepened as Anthony made up coworkers, notably a friend named Juliette Lewis (yes, just like the famous Hollywood actress). Anthony said that Lewis did a lot of volunteer work, prompting Cindy to drop by Universal to meet with Lewis about a fundraiser. Cindy waited 90 minutes. Lewis never showed. Anthony explained that Lewis had moved to New York. Later, Universal said the company had no record of an employee named Juliette Lewis.

Related: Casey Anthony Paid Her Attorney With Sex and Confessed to Killing Caylee, Former Private Investigator Claims

Anthony attempted to keep up the Universal job ruse during police questioning. At one point, officers accompanied her to the studio and asked to see her office. Anthony led them on around on a walk for a while before finally breaking down and admitting she no longer worked there. [International Business Times]

LIE #4: CASEY LIED ABOUT NOT LYING

Even though she dodged a guilty murder verdict and a potential death sentence, Casey Anthony did get convicted and sentenced to four years in July 2011 for lying under oath. Because she had already served three years, she was released from prison shortly thereafter.

Still, it’s reported that the lies may have continued.

Related: Casey Anthony Breaks Silence — “I Don’t Give a S—t What Anyone Thinks About Me”

While being deposed in 2014 in regard to the defamation suit filed by Zenaida Fernandez-Gonzalez, Anthony continued to insist that “Zanny the Nanny” was real. She said that she met Zanny at Universal Studios in 2006 and that she babysat for Caylee just once. Most notably, Anthony did finally admit that she had made up the story about dropping Caylee off with Zanny the day of the disappearance, despite telling police it was “the God’s honest truth.”

When asked if the term “Zanny the Nanny” could be, in fact, a code for the drug Xanax, which could have been used to knock out little Caylee, an upset Anthony categorically denied it.

Related: Casey Anthony Spotted at Anti-Trump March at Mar-a-Lago

Anthony further added that she still did not know how to contact Zanny the Nanny and that she never implicated the plaintiff Zenaida Fernandez-Gonzalez in the crime, stating emphatically:

“That’s never been the case and that will never be the truth. So let’s get that straight right here and now. You can ask a hundred more ridiculous questions. I’m not going to answer them. I’m done here.”

As it stands now, with Casey Anthony having just recently broken her public silence, it’s tough to imagine that these “ridiculous questions” will ever actually stop coming. [Daily Mail]

Read more:
AP
CBS News
CNN

Main photo: Casey Anthony on July 1, 2011 [Red Huber/Orlando Sentinel/MCT]

The post The Many Lies Of Casey Anthony: 4 Times Her Story Didn’t Match the Facts appeared first on CrimeFeed.

The Lust Life Of Casey Anthony: 3 Sex Shockers And Secret Allegations

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From the tragic get-go, sex has figured into the Casey Anthony murder case to the point that, at times, the good looks and bodacious appeal of the woman harangued as “Tot Mom” has seemed to supersede the fact that she stood accused of killing her two-year-old daughter, Caylee.

Related: The Casey Anthony Crimeline on CrimeFeed

From provocative “party girl” photos plastered all over the Internet to claims of inappropriate and/or illegal intercourse throughout her life, Casey Anthony is permanently awash in bedroom-based whispers of the press and the public alike. Here are three such examples.

Watch Investigation Discovery’s three-part investigation, Casey Anthony: An American Murder Mystery, on Saturday, April 15 at 7/6c or online now. 

1. IT’S NOT COMPLETELY CLEAR WHO CAYLEE’S FATHER IS

The definite biological paternity of Caylee Anthony is, shall we say, murky. Despite the fact that Casey Anthony has made a statement about who Caylee’s dad is, there are enough other contenders for the role that her word hasn’t necessarily been taken at face value. Not to mention, she’s not exactly known for her honesty.

This could also be because, as implied by rumormongers, she was known to be so promiscuous that she couldn’t even hazard a guess as to who actually got her pregnant. To date, a handful of names have come up as potential fathers. And mysteriously, and perhaps conveniently, none of them are alive anymore to weigh in on the debate.

According to The Tampa Bay Times, Anthony identified Caylee’s father as Jesus Ortiz, a Florida resident who was killed in a 2007 car accident. In a weird twist, Michael Duggan, who dated Anthony and also perished in a 2007 auto crash, has also been pegged as Caylee’s dad. His mother told The Daily Beast she is “100% certain” of it.

Related: Casey Anthony Breaks Silence — “I Don’t Give a S—t What Anyone Thinks About Me”

During the litany of lies that erupted following Caylee being reported missing, ABC News reported that Anthony said someone named Eric Baker fathered her daughter. No evidence turned up of an “Eric Baker” being connected to Anthony — but, freakishly, someone by that name who lived in Kentucky also died in a 2007 car wreck.

Jesse Grund, who was Anthony’s boyfriend after Caylee was born, took a DNA test and discovered he was not the father. Still, Grund told People magazine he was close to the child, stating: “For the first year or two of her life, I was Dad.” [Heavy]

2. CASEY ANTHONY ACCUSED HER OWN DAD OF RAPING HER — AND POSSIBLY FATHERING CAYLEE

During her court-appointed evaluations with psychiatrist Jeffrey Danziger, M.D., and psychologist William Weitz, Ph.D, Casey Anthony reportedly claimed that her father, George Anthony, sexually abused her throughout her life.

Danziger reported that Anthony described the encounters as “disgusting, demeaning, intercourse, and everything.” She also allegedly said, “My first real sex was at age 16. Well, as opposed to anything that was intrafamilial” — meaning not with her father.

Casey Anthony on June 24, 2011. [Red Huber/Orlando Sentinel/MCT via Getty Images]

Casey Anthony on June 24, 2011. [Red Huber/Orlando Sentinel/MCT via Getty Images]

In addition, Danziger testified that Casey said she feared that George had fathered his own granddaughter and, in fact, killed the child.

Related: 4 I.D. Episodes Featuring Moms Who Are Scarier Than the Monster in Your Closet

Jose Baez, Casey’s defense attorney, reiterated this theory in his 2012 book, Presumed Guilty: Casey Anthony — The Inside Story, where he wrote:

“It all began when Casey was eight years old, and her father came into her room and began to touch her inappropriately and it escalated … She could be 14 years old … and go to school and play with the other kids as if nothing [had] happened.”

A DNA test clearly established that George Anthony was not Caylee’s father. He has also never been arrested nor charged for any crime connected to the disappearance or death of his granddaughter. [New York Daily News]

3. CASEY PAID HER ATTORNEY WITH SEX — ACCORDING TO AN INVESTIGATOR

In May 2016, People magazine reported that Dominic Casey, a private investigator who previously worked for Casey Anthony, claimed in an affidavit that A) Anthony was having a sexual relationship with her defense attorney, Jose Baez; and B) Baez said that Anthony admitted to him that she killed Caylee.

Specifically, the investigator stated that he once happened upon “a naked Casey” in Baez’s office one day, and that she said she owed him oral sex for getting her out of an interview.

In addition, Dominic reportedly stated that Baez “told me that Casey had murdered Caylee and dumped the body somewhere, and he needed all the help he could get to find the body before anyone else did.”

Related: Casey Anthony Paid Her Attorney With Sex and Confessed to Killing Caylee, Former Private Investigator Claims

Immediately upon these claims breaking, Baez issued a strong denial, stating:

“I unequivocally and categorically deny exchanging sex for my legal services with Ms. Anthony. I further unequivocally and categorically deny having any sexual relationship with Ms. Anthony whatsoever. I have always conducted my practice consistent with the high ethical standards required of members of the Florida Bar. My representation of Ms. Anthony was no exception.”

Baez threatened legal action, which has not led to any courtroom activities — to date. [People]

Main photo: Casey Anthony on June 24, 2011. [Red Huber/Orlando Sentinel/MCT]

The post The Lust Life Of Casey Anthony: 3 Sex Shockers And Secret Allegations appeared first on CrimeFeed.

Tony Alamo — Cult Leader, Show Biz Costume Designer, and Convicted Pedophile — Dies In Prison

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BUTNER, NC — Tony Alamo, an apocalyptic Pentecostal preacher who was serving a 175-year jail term for sex abuse, has died in prison. He was 82. Let us now remember the Alamo.

Related: The Jimmy Swaggart Sex Scandal: How A TV Mega-Preacher Went Down Weeping

The man who would go on to build a multimillion-dollar Christian empire was actually born Bernie Lazar Hoffman in 1934 to Jewish parents in Joplin, Missouri.

Little is known about Alamo’s early life other than his relocation to Southern California in his twenties, where he worked in and around the music industry, and may have had some success as a live singer. He said he changed his name to “Tony Alamo” to keep up with the early 1960s trend of young Italian hit-makers.

Alamo’s subsequent claims that he was “asked to manage” the Beatles, the Doors, and the Rolling Stones remain, to put it mildly, unsubstantiated.

Tony and Susan Alamo, Mister D.J. record, front cover image

Tony and Susan Alamo, Mister D.J. record, front cover image

Related: Drinking The Kool-Aid: Jim Jones And The Peoples Temple Massacre In Popular Culture

After a quick jail stint on a gun charge, Alamo met and married Edith Opal Horn, another Jewish transplant from the south. She thereafter became known as Susan Alamo.

Together, the Alamos apparently experienced a sudden and potent religious conversion (Tony later explained that Jesus came to him during a meeting at a Beverly Hills investment firm). In 1969, they established the Alamo Christian Foundation in Hollywood.

Related: 7 Modern Doomsday-Cult Leaders Who Ordered Their Followers To Kill

As with many new Christian organizations of that era, the Alamo church attracted hippies and “Jesus Freaks,” and they focused on ministry among disaffected youths and charitable works in inner-city Los Angeles.

However, Alamo also rapidly developed a rather fiery worldview from which he essentially never wavered. The Southern Poverty Law Center, which in 2007 defined the Alamo organization as a “cult,” went on to sum it up thusly:

“His dogma included blaming the Catholic Church for everything from communism and Nazism to the Jonestown massacre. He compared the Vatican to a prostitute. He also ranted about gays and the government.”

In addition, Alamo warned that the apocalypse was at hand — nonstop. As usual, he pinned the blame on the Vatican, which he further described as the source of “narcotics, prostitution, pornography, booze, and the black market — every filthy thing.”

Related: 5 Cult Leaders Who Manipulated, Indoctrinated & Murdered Their Followers

In 1975, the Alamo Christian Foundation moved to Susan’s hometown of Alma, Arkansas. There, the founders ran the operation from a mansion on a sprawling compound that included a signature heart-shaped pool.

For the next 15 years, Alamo played hard to the public fears regarding nuclear war between the United States and the Soviet Union. The Cold War brought in big bucks for the ministry. Only the 1982 cancer death of Susan Alamo seemed to dim the Foundation’s ascent.

Related: Twin Sisters Recall Growing Up In Creepy “Kimmy Schmidt”-Like “Children Of God” Cult

At the same time, Alamo turned his own flashy fashion sense into a major moneymaking operation. Put bluntly, Tony looked like a chintzy Vegas-era Elvis impersonator, and Susan could have competed in any low-rent Dolly Parton cosplay competition. In every sense, the Alamos made this work.

Alamo Fashion, promotional handout [Tony Alamo News]

Alamo Fashion, promotional handout [Tony Alamo News]

Church members had long designed and manufactured the figureheads’ couture for little or no pay. Thus, Alamo had his followers set up a large-scale clothing business that specialized in rhinestone-bedazzled denim jackets. Their pay rates, as might be expected, did not change in the process.

Priced in the modern equivalent of the thousands, Tony Alamo items became hot sellers in Las Vegas, Nashville, and on L.A.’s Melrose Avenue.

Elvis Presley himself was an early customer. Michael Jackson regularly sported his collection. Hulk Hogan, Mr. T, and Sonny Bono even posed with Tony in their own get-ups. For a while, the jackets seemed standard among country music royalty.

The glitzy garment game eventually attracted heat from the IRS, which, in 1985, revoked the Alamo Christian Foundation’s tax-exempt status. This action further solidified the perception of the church being perceived as a cult.

Related: Killer Couple — James Daveggio and Michelle Michaud

As the Feds raided Alamo properties and drilled deep into the church’s accounts for the next few years, Tony took it on the lam. Even then, though, Tony kept peddling his wares. He’d reportedly turn up in a shop somewhere, unload jackets in a cash transaction, and hit the road again. As a result, the Alamo Christian Foundation continually remained afloat.

Finally, in 1991, agents captured Alamo. In addition to financial chicanery, the preacher faced multiple allegations and lawsuits regarding abuse of his followers, in particular children. He served four years, and then returned to run the continually downsized, but never entirely knocked out, Alamo ministries.

Related: Magdalena Solís: Cult Leader, Blood Drinker & Deadly Serial Killer

Following Susan’s demise, Tony remarried an indeterminate number of times. In 2008, authorities busted him on charges of child sexual abuse and pornography. Former followers came out in strength against him. According to The New York Times:

“Witnesses at the trial said Mr. Alamo had made all decisions for his followers: who got married; what children were taught in school; who got clothes; and who was allowed to eat. They said he began taking multiple wives in the early 1990s and increasingly younger ones thereafter, including a 15-year-old girl in 1994. He was convicted after five women testified that they had been married to him in secret ceremonies when they were minors (one as an eight-year-old) and taken to places outside Arkansas for sex.”

In his own defense, Alamo said God ordered polygamy and that “consent is puberty.” Shortly thereafter, he got the maximum sentence of 175 years. He also owed $7.9 million in back taxes.

Authorities have not yet officially released Alamo’s exact cause of death. Whatever becomes of his body, it’s likely to be less colorful than what happened to Susan’s back in 1982.

For six months after Susan’s demise, Tony kept his wife’s embalmed remains on display at their Arkansas compound. He promised devotees that if they prayed hard enough, Susan would be resurrected. Some of them, somewhere, must still be waiting. Now they can wait for Tony, too.

Read more:
New York Times
Washington Post
Time
Music Row
Southern Poverty Law Center
Encyclopedia of Arkansas
SCV History

Main photo: Tony Alamo and Susan Alamo, 1972/screenshot [YouTube]

The post Tony Alamo — Cult Leader, Show Biz Costume Designer, and Convicted Pedophile — Dies In Prison appeared first on CrimeFeed.

The Satanic ’60s: When Manson Follower Susan Atkins Danced Topless For Anton LaVey

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SAN FRANCISCO, CA — Beneath the sunny psychedelia of 1960s California beat a dark heart of outrageous occultism, diabolical decadence, and all things unholy.

Related: Crime History — The Manson Family & The LaBianca Murders, 47 Years Later

The first notable figure to spectacularly tap into the shadow currents of counterculture was Anton LaVey (above, left), a carnival magician and jungle-cat wrangler who founded the Church of Satan on June 6, 1966 (6/6/66 — get it?). LaVey instantly anointed himself the organization’s “Black Pope.”

Amid the head-spinning hippie onslaught of the time, the Church of Satan stirred up huge media buzz through sexually charged theatrical provocations. LaVey attracted Hollywood followers on the order of Jayne Mansfield and Sammy Davis, Jr., and got to be interviewed by Johnny Carson on The Tonight Show.

Anton LaVey publicity photo [Wikipedia]

By the decade’s end, though, a genuinely frightening figure of seemingly legitimate Luciferian power overshadowed LaVey’s sideshow-style antics.

Related: Serial Killer Cinema — 13 Films Based On Charles Manson And The Manson Family Murders

Charles Manson claimed to be both God and the devil. As the head of his homicidal Manson Family cult, he exploded into the popular consciousness decisively as some sort of filthy, desert-dwelling, hell-spawned pope.

In terms of aesthetics and philosophy, universal notions of Satan connected both these California crackpots. However, another figure also bonds the two infernal agitators, though: an all-too-human anti-goddess named Susan Atkins.

Atkins would ultimately become infamous as “Sexy Sadie,” Manson’s highly favored henchwoman when it came time to launch what he described as the “Helter Skelter” race war.

Related: Manson Family Found Guilty — But Did Charlie Actually Kill Anyone?

On August 9, 1969, under Manson’s command, Atkins and her fellow Family members stormed the home of pregnant actress Sharon Tate and slaughtered five people therein. As Tate begged for the life of her baby, Atkins reportedly said, “Woman, I have no mercy for you!” Afterward, Atkins used Tate’s blood to scrawl the word “PIG” on a wall.

It was a long way from the “evil” play-acting Atkins engaged in two years prior, when she danced topless in a vampire cape during a LaVey strip club revue called “Witches’ Sabbath.”

Related: The Cold-Blooded Killing Of The Gay Satanists Of Corpsewood Manor

In her 1977 memoir, Child of Satan, Child of God, Atkins wrote of the experience:

“I was just finishing [a strip routine] when Mr. Garnet, the owner, walked in with a man I had not seen before… The man seemed to be dressed entirely in black. His face and the top of his bald head were extraordinarily pale — white… The intensity of the stranger’s black eyes deepened as he watched my movements. A smile curled about his lips…

Child of Satan, Child of God by Susan Atkins (1977), front cover image [Amazon]


‘Hello…’ LaVey’s voice sounded as though it were in an echo chamber. ‘That was very good.’
He turned to Garnet. ‘Yes. Yes. She would be very good for the vampire role.’‘Vampire role?’ I asked, silently.Garnet turned to me. ‘You see… Mr. LaVey has agreed to stage one of his productions here at the club — a witches’ sabbath, topless and all — and I think it could be fun for you if you’re interested.”What’s a witches’ sabbath?’ I asked, looking first at Mr. Garnet and then back at the bald-headed man.LaVey threw his head back and gave a barking sort of laugh. ‘It’s a time, my dear, when the witches worship their leader – Satan. It’s a marvelous ceremony and will be very colorful for your club. It’s a bit out of the ordinary.'”

Related: Church Of Satan Member Sues For Her Right To Read Satanic Bible In Prison

From there, Atkins describes visiting LaVey’s ornately gothic home, which doubled as the Church of Satan’s headquarters. It freaks her out. She goes on to recount doing the vampire routine in the show. It freaks the audience out — as well as her boyfriend, who tells her:

Charles Manson mug shot [California Department of Corrections]

“‘I don’t like what’s happening to you… This whole thing you’re into at the club is crazy. It’s changed you. All through the rehearsals I’ve watched you change.'”

Despite his pleas, Susan continued her stripping association with LaVey for the revue’s run, writing:

‘The show was a smash hit along the strip. Garnet had scored big. But the witches’ sabbath, and my total sellout to LSD, marijuana, and hashish, and to sex with virtually any attractive man, landed me in the hospital in four months. I was half dead from gonorrhea and had a complete physical breakdown.”

Soon enough, Susan Atkins traded Mephistophelean mentors, and fell under the spell of Charles Manson. That’s when she — along with so much of the world — really changed.

Read more:
Telegraph
Cielo Drive
DBlackThorne

Main photos: Anton LaVey publicity photo [Wikipedia]; Susan Atkins mug shot [LAPD]; Charles Manson mug shot [California Department of Corrections]

The post The Satanic ’60s: When Manson Follower Susan Atkins Danced Topless For Anton LaVey appeared first on CrimeFeed.

Mary Kay Letourneau and Vili Fualaau File For Divorce: But Did They Really Break Up?

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Vili Fualaau, 33, has filed for a legal separation from his wife Mary Kay Letourneau, 55, but have they really gone their separate ways?

Mary Kay, of course, was a sixth-grade teacher in the Seattle area who made national headlines after she was arrested in 1997 for having an affair with Vili, 13. At the time, she was 34 — and married with four children.

Vili’s lawyer reportedly says that his client is not happy any longer in the marriage and, since the children are now 18 and 20, child support would not be an obstacle.

Related: Remember Mary Kay Letourneau? She’s Was Jailed Again …

But Vili told RadarOnline.com a different story. He claims that “everything is fine” between him and Mary Kay, and that he had to file for separation for business purposes. He explained, “All the rumors that you hear between us. It’s fine. Of course [we are still in love]. A piece of paper doesn’t break someone’s feelings!”

Vili clarified that he only filed the papers because he’s trying to get a license to sell “Cigaweed,” which is described as a “marijuana cigarette.” But he can’t get a license if he’s still legally with Mary Kay. He told Radar:

When you want to get licensed, they do background checks on both parties. If I decide to be a part of it, I have to be licensed and I have to be vetted and so does a spouse. She has a past. She has a history.”

Letourneau originally pleaded guilty to two second-degree counts of child rape. She served six months in jail, and was paroled in January 1998. But she was sent back to prison to serve the rest of her seven-year sentence after she was caught with Vili again, in her car less than a month after her release. She had been banned from contacting him.

Related: Mary Kay Letourneau Reveals Her First Sexual Encounter With Former Student Vili Fualaau

The couple married in 2005 after her second release, and had two children together.

To learn more about this case, watch Investigation Discovery’s “Mary Kay Letourneau: Forbidden Love” episode of Barbara Walters Presents on ID GO.

Read more:

RadarOnline.com

Main photo: Mary Kay Letourneau and Vili Fualaau [ABC News (screenshot)]

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Cannibal Killer Luka Magnotta To Marry Fellow Murderer In Big Gay Prison Wedding

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QUEBEC, CANADA — Luka Magnotta, the “Canadian Cannibal” porn star who filmed himself killing and eating a victim in 2012, has found romance behind bars.

Even more delicious, the lovebirds share a common quirk: They’re both cold-blooded murderers!

Related: Looking at Luka Magnotta — His Online Life and His Need for Fame

After hooking up on the website Canadian Inmates Connect, Magnotta, 34, is set to wed fellow life-termer Anthony Jolin, 36, in a ceremony at the Port-Cartier Institution on June 26.

Anna Yourkin, Magnotta’s mother, will serve as a witness. Sorry, the public is not invited.

Jolin had been doing a six-year assault stretch in 2003 when he and cohort fatally shanked another inmate in the shower. Jolin subsequently got life.

Related: Canadian “Cannibal Killer” Luka Magnotta’s Obsession With “Barbie Killer” Karla Homolka

Magnotta last made headlines in 2015 when he initially posted a personal ad in pursuit of, as he put it, his “Prince Charming.” Specifically, that meant:

“A single white male, 28-38 years of age, white and in shape … who is loyal, preferably educated, financially and emotionally stable for a long term committed relationship.”

Just a month later, Magnotta apparently met Jolin online. Bells have been ringing for the deadly darlings ever since.

Related: Schoolgirl Killer Karla Homolka Doing Volunteer Work — At Grade School

Luka Magnotta horrified humanity in 2012 after he posted a video online, “1 Lunatic, 1 Icepick,” in which he murders, dismembers, and cannibalizes Montreal student Jun Lin. He also rapes Lin’s corpse and feeds part of him to a little dog — which he also killed — all to the tune of “True Faith” by synth-rock group New Order.

Afterward, Magnotta mailed parts of Lin’s body to school and political party offices around Canada.

This repulsive tragedy occurred after years of Magnotta desperately chasing Internet notoriety. Along the way, Magnotta modeled, performed in pornography, auditioned for reality-TV shows, claimed to be dating Barbie Killer” Karla Homolka, and made an unforgivable animal torture video titled “1 Boy, 2 Kittens.”

And now, soon, Luka will have a husband!

Read more:
New York Daily News
Toronto Sun
Montreal Gazzette

Main photo: Luka Magnotta/”CoverGuy” audition YouTube video [screenshot]

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Exclusive: Gypsy Rose Blanchard’s Cousin Shares Shocking Family Secrets, Admits “I Would’ve Killed Dee Dee Myself”

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LAFOURCHE PARISH, LA — Just like everyone else, we can’t get enough of the incredibly bizarre and tragic tale of Dee Dee and Gypsy Rose Blanchard. Even after reading all the articles and watching the recent HBO documentary, we still have questions.

Luckily, we had the chance to have an exclusive conversation with Bobby Pitre, Gypsy Rose Blanchard’s cousin and Dee Dee’s nephew, and learn some insider facts and stories that only family would know. Pitre, who is the owner of Southern Sting Tattoo in Larose, Louisiana, has lived down the bayou his whole life and was able to offer a glimpse into what it was like growing up in the orbit of Dee Dee Blanchard.

Related: Update: Gypsy Blancharde Pleads Guilty To Killing Her Mom — Had Posted On Facebook About “Slashing That Fat Pig”

Bobby Pitre [courtesy Bobby Pitre]

Bobby Pitre [courtesy Bobby Pitre]

Lafourche Parish, where you live and where Dee Dee and Gypsy are from, has a real tight-knit, small-town vibe. How could Dee Dee have managed to pull off what she did in a place like that?

She stayed close to my grandparents, as far as home-wise. She stayed at home for sure, so she was real baby-fied. My grandfather says he would give her everything she wanted, and he did. That was his baby. My grandmother was always sick, always in the bed, always complaining about being sick and all these things, so I think that Dee Dee maybe saw the way she was getting sympathy, so maybe she just took that to a whole different level.

You’re talking about Dee Dee’s mother?

Yes, yes. My grandmother.

Is there any suspicion that Dee Dee might have contributed to her mother (your grandmother’s) illness in some way?

Yes. Later on you think about it, you’re like, yeah, maybe that totally makes sense. She was not feeding my grandma and she wasn’t bathing her when my grandmother was in the bed sick. I thought that it was diabetes that killed her, because she had got bitten by a brown recluse spider and they had to dig out this wound on her leg, and she wasn’t healing because of her diabetes. It continued to get worse, and I think Dee Dee may have played a role in that somehow.

And Dee Dee was also poisoning your step-grandmother, right?

Yeah, and I think she still suffers today, because she spent months in the hospital. We didn’t know what was happening. She was bleeding internally and all this stuff, her stomach was ruined because she was drinking freaking Roundup. Dee Dee was feeding her [weed control substance] Roundup!

Now how come Dee Dee wasn’t charged or prosecuted for that?

I don’t know. I never found out until later. I found out around the time of Hurricane Katrina, because Dee Dee had got displaced and went to Missouri. I’d hear bits and pieces through Kristy sometimes — Kristy Blanchard, Gypsy’s stepmom.

Related: A Mother, A Murder, And Munchausen: The Strange Story Of Gypsy Rose Blanchard

Did you or anyone in your family ever suspect that Gypsy wasn’t as ill as she seemed to be?

My dad basically called Dee Dee out on the way she was keeping Gypsy down in a wheelchair. That was just at the beginning of the situation, and pretty much from there on she just left and kept on moving farther away from anybody.

Did your dad actually know that Gypsy could walk?

Yeah, we all did. We all did. We’d play; we’d all hang out. I was a lot older than they were, she was the same age as my younger siblings and my younger cousins so they all played together. They jumped around, played around like it was no big deal. When Dee Dee would see Gypsy she would tell her that her legs are going to give her trouble or whatever. She would tell us that Gypsy’s legs were going to collapse and she had to go soak them in the tub.

She was telling Gypsy that her legs were bad because she had muscular dystrophy. I didn’t find out until later on how she kept that going. I didn’t understand. She kept it going by telling her it was going to eventually get worse. That’s how she kept her down in a wheelchair. But we seen her running around, pushing other kids around in the wheelchair. We were like, there’s nothing wrong with this kid, she’s fine. Dee Dee’s over-dramatic. My dad called her out on it.

What about all the other illnesses she claimed that Gypsy had?

That all came up after they were gone. She did say things before about how Gypsy’s eyes are messed up. My dad said one time that he told Dee Dee, “Dee Dee, what kind of glasses you got on her face?” and he said he grabbed them and he looked through them and said it was like kaleidoscopes. Like she was purposely trying to ruin her eyes by making her wear some glasses that were like kaleidoscopes.

I would hear different things about how Gypsy was progressing. In the back of my mind, and I’m even telling Kristy:

“Gypsy’s good. I don’t know what’s up with Dee Dee, but Jesus Christ, I don’t think nothing’s wrong with that kid. She’s just got a bad mom.”

When Gypsy was first born, like you seen in the documentary, how smart she was. She was pointing out where her head was, her fingers, and knowing how old she was, at one year old. Dee Dee could’ve molded that kid into being a really smart kid and that’s what it looked like she was doing at first. Then, some reason, she flips the script and goes completely assbackwards.

Related: Murder In the Gay South: The Christmas Day Killing At The Drama Club

Bobby Pitre [Kelsey Cheramie]

Bobby Pitre [Kelsey Cheramie]

What was it like when you first heard Dee Dee had been murdered?

I think it was on Facebook, they were talking about, how could this girl kill her mom, oh, it’s awful, all this stuff. I’m like, wait a minute! I had to go in and put my two cents in, because I couldn’t believe what the hell they were saying. I had to let them know where I stood, my point of view, the things that I seen. I went and laid it all out — that girl shouldn’t have even been in a wheelchair. I think she killed her mom because she couldn’t take it no more. I laid it out on that thread and then the whole roof blew off of the thing.

She killed someone who had her prisoner. What would you have done? You would’ve probably did the same thing, that’s how I feel about it. I think also that Dee Dee was just killing Gypsy slow. She wised up and beat her at her own game.

Kristy wasn’t saying anything. She didn’t want to say anything, I don’t think, because I think she was still under that thing where she didn’t want to piss Dee Dee off. I think she wanted to keep the peace always and not say anything to Dee Dee, not overstep her bounds, but I was the opposite. I’ll tell you exactly what I feel, I don’t hold my tongue! I don’t think Dee Dee’s the victim, Gypsy is. Then it started to blow up from there. It got crazy, but that’s why I had to say my piece.

Related: 11 Really Bizarre Louisiana Laws To Keep In Mind For Mardi Gras

When Gypsy gets out of prison, do you think the family and the community are going to rally around her? 

The way her dad talks, he’s going to take care of her. He wants to set her up wherever, however, because he ultimately feels the most guilty. I’m sure I would if I was her father. I’d feel like I totally let you down. Matter of fact, he messaged me a couple days ago — he wants to get a tattoo with angel wings around her portrait or something like that because he totally feels so guilty about it. I can understand where he’s coming from, I have a daughter. I would swim through piranhas and freaking sharks to get to her. He just bought into Dee Dee’s lie. He was in a difficult place, and it led to this.

Well, if he was being told that she had all these issues, and that her mother was willing to take care of her, as a young father he was probably relieved. He trusted Dee Dee to be the caregiver, right?

Yeah. Gypsy couldn’t go to Rod’s house, because she was on all these machines. She had to be hooked up to machines at night, so couldn’t even spend one night over. That’s how Dee Dee got away with that over the years.

So that was a major way of keeping the control, telling Rod that she can’t leave the house.

Yeah. “I can’t take her, there’s no way, she wouldn’t make it through the night. If I take her, she’ll die on me.” That’s the picture that Dee Dee painted for him.

Related: Hannah Overton Exonerated In Salt Poisoning Death Of 4-Year-Old Foster Son

In the HBO documentary, Rod seems to imply that Dee Dee was into witchcraft or black magic. Do you know anything about that?

Yeah, she was into witchcraft when she was younger. Matter of fact, I was into that evil side of things, too, and I think a lot of it came from Dee Dee’s influence, playing the Ouija board and things like that. I think she would tell my cousins that if they didn’t play the Ouija board with her that the devil was going to come and get them.

What? Oh, my God!

She was real manipulative, like things like that. I didn’t care, I’d play the Ouija board just to play. I was drawn to the darkness. That’s just how it was, and I was like that for a long time. I’m still drawn to the darker side of things. I don’t worship the devil, I don’t really believe there is one, but there is good and evil in the world, I know that. That whole religious play was just another one of her ways to freak people out I guess, because she was just a strange character as a kid.

So, you’re basically on Gypsy’s side — you think her actions were justified?

Yeah. I told her, “It wouldn’t have taken me that long to kill that bitch, I would’ve killed her a long time ago before you did.” In the same breath, I can’t say I would’ve in Gypsy’s situation, because her mom was her guardian, so her mom was like her life support in a sense, that’s how she made her feel.

Right and, of course, Gypsy believed that she was sick.

She believed it, yup. She believed without her mom she was completely crippled, and no one was going to wipe her ass.

Related: Women Who Dated Cancer Casanova Claim He Conned Them All

What are your thoughts on Gypsy’s account of what happened that night of the murder; do you believe her story how it went down?

Yeah. Gypsy was told what to do all her life, that’s what she was brought up to do. Her mom would hold her hand, and when she’d say things out of line, she’d squeeze her hand. My grandmother used to do that too, same thing. I’m like, wow, my grandmother used to do all the time. She was raised to listen to what her mom said: Go here, do this, do that, don’t say a word,

Her relationship with Nicholas Godejohn already involved dominance roleplay….

It was a total roleplay, yup. It was a total roleplay, and she just did what she was told. I wouldn’t have had somebody come kill her for me, I would’ve killed her. I wish that Dee Dee would come back to life right now, so I could kill that bitch as slow as possible.

There’s no question of whose side you’re on.

No, exactly. I’d kill her a slow death. I’d sure like to just to make her suffer.

Maybe I shouldn’t put that in print …

Yeah, you can, it don’t bother me. “Did you say you’d kill her?” “Yes, I did.”

Related: When Distinctive Tattoos Help Solve Crimes And Bust Criminals

It’s been mentioned that there’s no way that Gypsy hadn’t absorbed some of Dee Dee’s ability to manipulate, even if it was unconsciously. She’d been around it her whole life, she must’ve had some skill in manipulating people.

Yeah, in the opening scene of that documentary when she’s in the interrogation room, that’s not Gypsy. That’s Dee Dee. The way she did it, the sound of her voice, her mannerisms…. Even like how she said, “Wait, wait, wait,” and she had reached out to his hand like she didn’t believe it. I was like, that is Dee Dee! I’ve seen her act like that. I recognized her mannerisms right off top. It gave me chills watching that. It gave me chills. I told my brother, “Look at it, dude, that’s Dee Dee. Watch this — Dee Dee.” Yeah, it’s just crazy.

Do you know if Gypsy’s getting any psychiatric care or access to a counselor in prison?

No. That’s what I had messaged Rod, back and forth we were talking. Actually, Rod came and visit one day and we were talking about how he was trying to get her at least, if nothing else, a phone call because she does get calls. She could get her some psychiatric help over the phone at least to get things started. Because just retraining her brain is gonna take a long time, but it’s little steps that make the big picture. She’s got plenty of time — utilize it wise.

Main photo: Gypsy Rose Blanchard and her mom Dee Dee [Greene County Sheriff’s Office]

The post Exclusive: Gypsy Rose Blanchard’s Cousin Shares Shocking Family Secrets, Admits “I Would’ve Killed Dee Dee Myself” appeared first on CrimeFeed.


Independence Days: 5 Escaped Prisoners Who Never Got Caught

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Every July 4th, the United States celebrates Independence Day, in honor of the occasion in which the nation’s founders broke free from Mother England. From coast to coast, it’s a happy event marked by parades, parties, and fireworks.

The following five notorious U.S. criminals also have their own personal Independence Days — i.e., the date on which they broke out of prison and never got nabbed — although it’s unlikely that anyone but themselves consider such anniversaries worth celebrating.

Glen Stewart Godwin / Wanted Poster [FBI]

1. GLEN STEWART GODWIN
Independence Days: June 5, 1987 and September 1, 1991
Escaped From: Folsom State Prison, California; and Puente Grande Prison, Guadalajara, Mexico

In 1980, Glen Stewart Godwin went from being a tool salesman with no arrest record to craven killer when he and his roommate beat, strangled, and stabbed a drug dealer friend of theirs to death.

Afterward, Godwin blew up the dealer’s truck — with its ex-owner’s body inside — in an attempt to destroy the evidence. It didn’t work. Godwin ended up with a 26-year sentence and, after attempting to break out of the medium-security Deuel Vocational Institute, got transferred to Folsom to do hard time.

Four years later, Godwin escaped from Folsom and made his way to Mexico, where he fell in with a drug gang. He got busted down there, too, and sentenced to seven and a half years, of which he only served a few months. In September 1991, Godwin broke free and he remains at large today. [FBI]

Related: Crime History — Escape From Alcatraz, The True Story

Frederick Mors [Wikipedia]

2. FREDERICK MORS
Independence Day: May 10, 1916
Escaped From: Hudson River State Hospital for the Insane, Poughkeepsie, New York

Arriving with waves of other immigrants in 1914, the particularly peculiar Frederick Mors landed in New York City from his homeland of Austria-Hungary.

Being fluent in both German and English, he quickly got a job at the German Odd Fellows Home, an elderly-care facility in the Bronx. Once there, Mors proved to be the oddest fellow of all. He fatally poisoned eight residents and told police:

“When you give an old person chloroform, it’s like putting a baby to sleep. It frees them from all pain. It is humane and kind-hearted.”

Mors’ murders promptly got him locked up in the Hudson River State Hospital for the Insane in 1915. The following year, just after word came down that he’d be deported back to Austria, Mors flood the coop and was never heard from again.
[Ephemeral New York]

Related: Related: Prison Break — Find Out How Thousands Of Inmates Escape Each Year

Jerry Bergevin [Michigan Department of Corrections]

3. JERRY BERGEVIN
Independence Day: April 29, 1969
Escaped From: Camp Waterloo, Illinois

Lifelong criminal Jerry Bergevin ran out of luck in 1962. After more than a decade of legal dust-ups involving fights, thefts, and safe-cracking, he got caught breaking into a Flint, Michigan, drugstore and received a sentence of 10 to 15 years.

After doing seven years hard time, authorities approved Bergevin’s transfer to the Camp Waterloo work facility across the border in Illinois, where he would study to become a dental technician. Immediately upon arrival, Bergevin saw an opportunity to run, and he took it. Nobody ever found him.

Michigan finally called off its search for Bergevin in 2013. If alive, he would have been 80 — and maybe even a dental technician. [USA Today]

Related: Related: When Two Wolves Make It Over The Wall — Lt. Joe Kenda On The New York Prison Break

Glen Chambers [Florida Department of Corrections]

4. GLEN STARK CHAMBERS
Independence Day: February 21, 1990
Escaped From: Polk Correctional Institution, Florida

During a 1975 argument in a Sarasota, Florida, bowling alley parking lot, Glen Stark Chambers pulled his girlfriend Connie Weeks from her car and beat her to death on the pavement. Later that year, a court sentenced him to death (his penalty was later lowered to life in prison).

After one previous unsuccessful escape attempt, Chambers pulled it off in 1990. While making office furniture, he hid inside a crate that other inmates loaded onto a delivery truck before it pulled out the Polk Correctional Institution. Chambers managed to change clothes inside the box and slip free while no one was looking.

While Chambers has never been captured, he has been reportedly spotted several times throughout the years, usually along Florida’s Gulf Coast. If he’s still out there, he’s now 66 years old. [Daily Mail]

Assata Shakur aka Joanne Deborah Chesmiard / Wanted Poster [FBI]

Related: Escaped Inmate Found in Dishwasher

5. ASSATA SHAKUR aka JOANNE DEBORAH CHESIMARD
Independence Day: November 2, 1979
Escaped From: Clinton Correctional Facility for Women, New Jersey

Assata Olugbala Shakur, who began life as Joanne Chesimard, is unique to this list in that, although she escaped from captivity in Union City, New Jersey, authorities know exactly where she is today: Havana, Cuba.

As a radical Black Panther, Shakur allegedly engaged in a violent crime spree from 1971 to 1973 that included bank robbery, kidnapping, attempted murder, and armed robbery. Numerous law enforcement officers were shot in the process, some of them fatally.

The run climaxed with a shootout on the New Jersey Turnpike that killed State Trooper Werner Foerster. Shakur, severely wounded during the melee, gave up to responding officers.

Six years later, three members of the Black Liberation Army visited Shakur in jail. They whipped out handguns, took three guards hostage, and commandeered a prison van, taking Shakur with them.

For the next five years, Shakur lived on the run before making to Cuba, where she begged for political asylum in 1984. President Fidel Castro was only too happy to oblige, and one of the FBI’s Ten Most Wanted Terrorists has lived and worked in Havana ever since. [The Guardian]

Celebrate Independence Day by binge-watching Investigation Discovery’s playlist about Fugitives That Tried To Regain Their Independence on ID GO now!

Main photo: Glen Stewart Godwin / Wanted Poster [FBI]

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The Hot Felon And The Heiress: Married Jeremy Meeks Faces Fan Backlash After Apparent Affair

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Hot felon” Jeremy Meeks is facing a huge backlash from fans after photos emerged that appeared to show him cheating on his wife Melissa with the 26-year-old British heiress to the Topshop empire.

Meeks and Chloe Green were pictured making out aboard a $150,000 per week yacht moored off the glamorous Turkish resort of Bodrum over the weekend.

Related: “Hot Felon” Jeremy Meeks Makes Runway Debut At New York Fashion Week

Meeks, 33, who is now a fashion model after being noticed in 2014 when the Stockton Police Department posted his mug shot on their website, arrived back in California Monday and shared a photo to his Instagram page posing with his two sons. For the caption he wrote: “Happy 4th of July from me and my boys!!!

Happy 4 th of July from me and my boys !!!

A post shared by JEREMY MEEKS (@jmeeksofficial) on


Both Green and Meeks documented their trip on social media, with the former jailbird posting a picture of himself sitting on the boat with the caption: “All things are possible.” He also posted a video of himself water-skiing.

Green’s father, embattled fashion tycoon Sir Philip, is worth an estimated $5.1 billion.

Related: “Hot Felon” Jeremy Meeks Banned From London, Deported

The elder Green has declined to endorse his daughter’s dalliance with Meeks, telling The Telegraph, “With respect, I am not getting involved in it.”

👑 #queensareborninjuly #itsmybirthdaymonth 🙌🏽

A post shared by Melissa Meeks (@mmeeks14) on

Jeremy’s wife Melissa, 38 (above), spent the holiday with her sister Michelle Curl, 43 — and posted several selfies of her own on Instagram. Melissa is known for staying loyal to her husband while he served his time, with no idea of the fame that loomed ahead. When asked for comment, she said that she is “still legally married” to the former felon.

Related: “Hot Felon” Jeremy Meeks Is About To Be Paroled — And He’s Headed Straight To Hollywood

Curl, when asked if she knew about her brother-in-law’s reported fling, answered, “Yes and I don’t care. I don’t care at all,” adding that she had “no other comment” to make.

All things are possible !!! #bodrum #turkey #boatlife

A post shared by JEREMY MEEKS (@jmeeksofficial) on

Green posted a picture on her Instagram account of herself with Meeks and a caption that read: “Just the beginning…We appreciate all the love and the hate.”

#prisonbae #JeremyMeeks and his #wife have split he's now with a billionaires daughter #ChloeGreen

A post shared by Culture Unplugged (@thecultureunplugged) on

She later deleted the Instagram account, but it was saved and copied by others, so can still be viewed.

A little afternoon activity … Yeeeeee @jimjordanphotography

A post shared by JEREMY MEEKS (@jmeeksofficial) on

Meeks, who has now deleted all photos of his wife Melissa from his Instagram, is facing a barrage of angry comments from fans.

Related: Women, Rejoice: “Hot Convict” Jeremy Meeks Is Being Released Today

One, by huckoff_please, reads: “I’m with you mama! Shame on you @jmeeksofficial for giving up the one who stuck by your side, even while in jail, knowing none of what would happen afterwards! Now you think you’re ballin’ but you’re playin a dangerous game your gonna lose, cause looks fade and I GUARANTEE all your “posse” gonna drop you as quick as you dropped your wife when they’re done with you…..I’ll sit back and wait.”

Read more:

DailyMail.com

The Telegraph

Main photo: Jeremy Meeks [Stockton Police Department]

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You Might See O.J. Simpson Get Paroled On Live TV On Thursday

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LOVELOCK, NV — Twenty-two years after he was controversially acquitted on live TV in the “Trial of the Century,” O.J. Simpson will appear on television screens around the U.S. again for his latest parole hearing in Nevada.

The hearing will be streamed starting at 1 P.M. EST on July 20 from the Lovelock Correction Center, and can be seen on ESPN and other networks.

Related: Could O.J. Simpson Be Released From Prison In A Few Months?

Simpson, now 70, was sentenced to 9 to 33 years in 2008 for armed robbery and kidnapping following a scheme to break into a room at the Palace Station hotel in Las Vegas to steal sports memorabilia.

If the former NFL star is granted parole, he could be free and on the streets on October 1.

Understandably, the Nevada Board of Parole Commissioners stated that there has been “overwhelming media and public interest” in Simpson’s hearing.

Related: Crime History: O.J. Simpson’s Las Vegas Memorabilia Heist

If the four parole commissioners who are scheduled to conduct the hearing cannot agree unanimously on whether to release Simpson, the remaining three members will be contacted to review the case and vote until there is a majority for approval or denial.

Simpson was controversially acquitted in 1995 of murdering his wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ron Goldman.

To learn more about O.J. Simpson, watch Investigation Discovery’s Is O.J. Innocent? The Missing Evidence on ID GO now!

Read more:

New York Post 

The Wrap 

Main photo: O.J. Simpson [ CNN / YouTube (screenshot)]

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Michael Jackson Police Report: Photos Of Nude Children And Animal Abuse Found At Neverland Ranch In 2003

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Rumors and doubt about the late Michael Jackson’s 2005 acquittal on seven felony counts of child-molestation charges have never gone away, nor has speculation about his close relationship with the young boys he would have over to Neverland Ranch.

Police reports from the Santa Barbara County Sheriff’s Department’s raid of the Ranch in 2003 surfaced last year, and they paint a grim picture of a wealthy and powerful man, plagued with sexual demons, who might have gotten away with, at the very least, inappropriate behavior with children, by paying people off.

Related: “Barbara Walters Presents”: Michael Jackson, The Troubled And Enigmatic “King Of Pop”

In fact, an investigator on the case spoke vehemently to Radar Online, stating, “The documents exposed Jackson as a manipulative, drug-and-sex-crazed predator who used blood, gore, sexually explicit images of animal sacrifice and perverse adult sex acts to bend children to his will.”

 John Wiley via Wikimedia Commons

Carnival rides at Neverland Ranch. [John Wiley via Wikimedia Commons]

Watch Investigation Discovery’s Barbara Walters Presents: Michael Jackson: Man in the Mirror on ID GO now!

According to Radar, the materials found inside Neverland were pornography — heterosexual and homosexual, some involving teens; and BDSM content — and animal torture. Jackson would allegedly use the images to “desensitize” and seduce the young boys with whom he would often share his bed. Radar also quotes a private investigator involved with the raids, who claims that the pop legend would even use sexy photos of his own nephews (his brother Tito’s sons) in their underwear to show to other young boys in order to arouse them.

District Attorney Tom Sneddon wrote in 2003, “The materials described … are relevant to the issues of the defendant’s intent and his method of ‘grooming’ young boys to satisfy his lewd desires.”

And former Santa Barbara Senior Assistant District Attorney Ron Zonen, who helped prosecute Jackson at the time, told Radar:

“A lot of this stuff was used to desensitize the children, and Michael admitted taking one child after another into bed with him for long periods of time. We identified five different boys, who all made allegations of sexual abuse. There’s not much question in my mind that Michael was guilty of child molestation.”

Another suspicious fact is that during the investigation, Jackson rented a storage unit and moved photographs, videotapes, hard drives, computers, diaries, and other evidence out of Neverland. The Sheriff’s Department was able to get a warrant and seized the contents.

Gavin Arvizo, the 13-year-old boy in the case who accused Jackson of sexual abuse, claimed that Jackson spoke to him and his brother repeatedly about the benefits of masturbation and mutual masturbation. One of the books found in Jackson’s possession seems to be a “how-to” primer for homosexual men, and featured a study of masturbation as well as oral and anal sex acts.

Related: Man Takes Love Of Michael Jackson Music A Little Too Far

To be fair, some of the pornography mentioned in the report was not illegal or anything that the average person might not have in their own nightstand drawers. And some of the images found in the books and magazines seem to have been considered art rather than pornography, but many were of nude children, including full-frontal nudity of boys under 14. There were several vintage nudist magazines that all showed nude men, women, and children together. There were also Polaroids picturing seemingly pre-teen boys with their shirts off, posing provocatively. “Michael Jackson was also photographed in the company of these individuals,” according to the documents.

The documents also state that even material that is not technically pornography can be part of a “grooming process,” used by someone who wants to molest children to acclimate them to sexual imagery and lower their inhibitions to “facilitate the molestation.”

Perhaps more damning than the print material are the images found on Jackson’s computers. According to the documents, images were found from a “Teen Sex” website, as well as multiple visits recorded to child-adoption websites. Some of the erotic images found portrayed “naked male adults and children.”

Related: Nipplegate: When Janet Jackson’s Bare Breast Stopped The Big Game

Prescription drugs such as Percocet and Xanax were also found on the property. The documents note that drugs of that nature are often used by sex addicts to dull their desires. There were also cards and letters addressed to “Daddy Michael” from senders with nicknames such as “Doo-Doo Head” and “Big Booty.”

jmerelo via Wikimedia Commons

Jackson with his son Blanket at Disneyland Paris in 2006 [jmerelo via Wikimedia Commons]

One disturbing item that was seized from the Ranch during the raid was a bloodied bed sheet, found in a Disneyland bag with some clothing. Radar also quotes an investigator in the case saying that Jackson had “sexually explicit images of animal sacrifice,” while another source claims there was a photo “of a child holding what appears to be a dead goose bludgeoned to death.”

Related: Elvis’ Granddaughters In Protective Custody Over What Lisa Marie Found On Her Husband’s Computer

The facts remain that Jackson was exonerated of all these charges, and has since passed away. The real truth will probably never be known, but the release of these documents brings to light specific details that the public, and the King of Pop’s fans and defenders, had not known before. The issue of his innocence or guilt will no doubt continue to be tried in the court of public opinion.

Watch Investigation Discovery’s Notorious Headlines: Crimes You’ll Never Forget on ID GO now!

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Main photo: Michael Jackson’s mug shot [Santa Barbara Sheriff’s Department]

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“Baretta” Beats The Rap: When Actor Robert Blake Got Off For Killing His Wife

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It was no O.J. Simpson trial. Still, on March 16, 2005, the media buzzed and the public watched closely as yet another Hollywood celebrity faced a jury’s verdict at the end of a trial in which he’d been accused of murdering his wife.

Related: 5 infamous Cases That Prove “Getting Away With Murder” Isn’t So Hard

The defendant this time was Robert Blake, then 67, an eccentric hothead best known as the tough-talking, two-fisted, bird-loving titular detective on the ’70s cop series, Baretta. It also didn’t go unnoticed that among his best-reviewed roles was that of real-life killer Perry Smith in the 1967 classic, In Cold Blood.

Just as with O.J. Simpson, the evidence against Blake seemed almost insurmountable — sometimes even comically so. Also like O.J., the trial’s narrative took turns that unearthed unexpected ugliness. And then, finally like O.J., Robert Blake heard the exact two words he’d been hoping for and that many did not expect: “Not guilty.”

Robert Blake, People magazine cover dated September 19, 1977

Robert Blake, People magazine cover dated September 19, 1977

The murder of Bonnie Lee Bakley, Blake’s 44-year-old second wife and the mother of their year-old daughter Rose, occurred on May 4, 2001. She and Blake had been married for about six months.

Related: Crime History — The 1959 Clutter Murders of In Cold Blood

The by-all-accounts miserable couple ate dinner that night at Vitello’s Restaurant in Studio City and, afterward, walked to their car parked on a street nearby. Bonnie got into the passenger seat. Blake said he’d left his handgun back at Vitello’s and went to retrieve it.

Once inside, Blake found the pistol, nervously drank two glasses of water at the bar, and left. When he returned to the car, Bonnie sat dead, killed by a pair of gunshots to her head and shoulder.

Suspicion, understandably, immediately fell on Blake. It only intensified, even more understandably, as facts about Bonnie Lee Bakley’s unsavory history came to light.

Related: If O.J. Simpson Didn’t Do It, Then Who Did?

Throughout her adult life, Bonnie Lee Bakley ran scams as a con artist who bilked men out of money by way of intensely sexual come-ons. In the 1990s, she focused on attempting to seduce aging celebrities, bombarding her targets with love letters and nude photos.

Bakley had also been married at least nine, by some reports 10, other times before getting hitched to Blake in May 2000.

Robert Blake and Bonnie Bakley (inset), People magazine cover dated May 21, 2001

Robert Blake and Bonnie Bakley (inset), People magazine cover dated May 21, 2001

Bakley first latched onto Jerry Lee Lewis in 1990. After failing to hook the rock and roll pioneer known as “The Killer” — who also stood suspected of murdering his fourth wife in 1994 — Bakley pursued Dean Martin, who was near death; Frankie Valli, who denied having anything to do with her; Gary Busey, who said a bunch of things that made no sense; and, finally, Christian Brando, who took the bait.

Related: 5 Facts About Jay J. Armes: The Celebrity Super Sleuth With Hooks for Hands and His Own Action Figure

At the time, Christian Brando was doing 10 years for the involuntary manslaughter of Dag Drollet, the boyfriend of his sister Cheyenne (who killed herself in 1995). Brando got paroled in 1996 and commenced a relationship with Bakley over the next few years that overlapped with her getting involved with Robert Blake.

In fact, when Bakley became pregnant with Rose in 1999, she could not be sure which of her two boyfriends was the actual father.

Related: Social Media Is Fueling Celebrity Stalkers, New Study Finds

None of this made for a happy marriage. Bonnie lived in Blake’s guesthouse. Even after they wed, Blake hired a private investigator to look into Bonnie’s activities, and he discovered she was still conning lonely dudes into sending her cash in exchange for amateur porn and phony affections.

Police investigated Bonnie Lee Bakley’s murder for nearly a year. On April 18, 2002, officers arrested Robert Blake on one count of murder and multiple counts of conspiracy to commit murder. Earle Caldwell, Blake’s bodyguard, also got picked up on conspiracy charges.

Robert Blake, Rose Blake, and Bonnie Bakley, People magazine cover dated May 6, 2002

Robert Blake, Rose Blake, and Bonnie Bakley, People magazine cover dated May 6, 2002

The arrest occurred after two professional stuntmen, Ronald “Duffy” Hambleton and Gary McLarty, told police Blake had approached them individually to ask if they’d kill Bonnie for money. Both agreed to testify against Blake in court. The prosecution would later regret taking them up on that offer.

Robert Blake’s murder trial finally commenced on December 20, 2004.

For more on this case, watch Investigation Discovery’s Barbara Walters Presents American Scandals: Robert Blake: A Hollywood Hit on ID GO now!

The D.A. painted a picture of Blake as a volcanic rage-aholic who preferred to kill his wife rather then give her anything in a divorce. The defense discredited the testimony of the two stuntmen by revealing that they had been cocaine and methamphetamine enthusiasts.

Three months later, the jury cleared Blake of the murder charge and deadlocked on the conspiracy counts. He walked.

In another parallel with O.J. Simpson, Robert Blake lost a 2005 wrongful-death civil case filed by Bakley’s three other children. He was ordered to pay them $30 million dollars. A later appeal cut the fee to $15 million. Blake declared bankruptcy.

After the initial not-guilty verdict in 2005, though, Robert Blake beamed happiness and told the press he would be “going cowboy.”

Related: Nick Gordon Ruled “Legally Responsible” for Bobbi Kristina Brown’s Death

Los Angeles District Attorney Steve Cooley seemed to speak for many when he, in turn, stated:

“Quite frankly, based on my review of the evidence, he is as guilty as sin. He is a miserable human being. [The jury was] incredibly stupid. They think they know these celebrities. They think they know Robert Blake.”

Alas, just recently, Robert Blake filed for a marriage license with Pamela Hudak, 55. So perhaps, in fact, no one actually knows Robert Blake. Good luck to Ms. Hudak.

In the meantime, the murder of Bonnie Lee Bakley remains, technically, unsolved.

Watch Investigation Discovery’s Notorious Headlines: Crimes You’ll Never Forget on ID GO now!

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Main photo: Robert Blake/Baretta publicity still [ABC promotional image]

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The O.J. Simpson Trial: Where Are They Now?

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It was the summer of 1995, and 14-year-old me was looking forward to three months of carefree languishing. I would have the house to myself while my parents were at work, so I could eat all the candy I wanted, talk on the phone for hours, and finally watch my soap opera regularly again. Marlena on Days of Our Lives was possessed by the devil. It was insane. (This was before DVR, when you had to set your VCR’s timer to literally record the episode onto a VHS tape — and the TV had to be on the right channel, even if it was off. How did we get anything done in such archaic times?!)

Related: What To Know About O.J. Simpson’s Las Vegas Memorabilia Heist

Alas, NBC had other plans for me. Because when I went to turn on the TV promptly at 2 P.M. on that first day of summer break, ready to bask in the glow of Marlena’s Satan eyes, I instead found myself staring into the vacant gaze of O.J. Simpson. For that entire summer, nearly every episode of Days was preempted until late at night, in favor of airing the Simpson trial. I was angry at first, but I didn’t have a driver’s license and I was a bit of a loner anyway, so I sat on the couch the entire summer and became obsessed with O.J. Simpson, the Dream Team, Kato Kaelin, and the trial of the century.

Thanks to American Crime Story: The People Vs. OJ Simpson, we recently had the chance to see it all play out again. Only this time, Ross from Friends is Kim Kardashian’s dad.

To get up to speed, here’s a little refresher course on some of the key players from the O.J. Simpson trial and what they’re up to now. (P.S. In the fall of 1995, an exorcism was performed on Marlena and she was freed from the Devil’s clutches.)

To get a deeper look into the O.J. Simpson case, go to ID GO now!

oj-simpson-mugshot

O.J. Simpson [Los Angeles Police Department]

O.J. Simpson

THEN: Duh, standing trial for the 1994 murders of his ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend, Ronald Goldman. He maintained his innocence and was acquitted at the end of a lengthy televised trial in 1995.

NOW: Oof, where to begin? In 1997, Simpson lost a civil suit filed by the Goldman family to the tune of $33.5 million, very little of which he’s since paid, though $500K was delivered to the family after his Heisman Trophy was auctioned off.

Related: O.J. Simpson, Hollywood Star: 14 Times The Juice Scored At The Movies

In 1996, Simpson partnered with a ghostwriter on a book called If I Did It, in which Simpson presented a “hypothetical” description of what happened the night Brown Simpson and Goldman were murdered. The book was originally supposed to be published by Regan Books, but after a public outcry and the vehement objections from the victims’ loved ones, the release was canceled. In 2007, a judge awarded the rights to the book to the Goldman family, who were still owed the vast majority of their civil settlement. The Goldman family found another publisher and released the newly retitled If I Did It: Confessions of the Killer, but with comments from the Goldman family and journalist Dominick Dunne, who had covered the original trial for Vanity Fair. The icing on the cake? On the book’s cover, the “If” in the title was written in significantly smaller type so it actually appeared to read I Did It. Damn.

Simpson continued to get in trouble with the law following his acquittal, from his 2001 arrest for simple battery and burglary, to a 2002 arrest for “speeding through a manatee-protection zone,” to a 2004 suit filed by DirectTV who accused Simpson of pirating their satellite TV service. Then, in 2007, Simpson was arrested and charged with multiple felony counts, including criminal conspiracy, kidnapping, assault, robbery, and using a deadly weapon for robbing sports memorabilia from a Las Vegas casino-hotel. In 2008, he was convicted and sentenced to 33 years in prison, with the possibility of parole after nine years. On July 20, 2017, Simpson was released on parole.

Related: O.J. Simpson Granted Parole, Will Be A Free Man In October

Kato Kaelin [© Glenn Francis, www.PacificProDigital.com via Wikimedia Commons]

Kato Kaelin [© Glenn Francis, www.PacificProDigital.com via Wikimedia Commons]

Kato Kaelin

THEN: The aspiring actor lived in Simpson’s guesthouse at the time of the murders, and was called as a witness to testify about Simpson’s behavior and movements both before and after the time Brown and Goldman were believed to have been killed. His testimony was inconsistent with Simpson’s version of events, but Kaelin ultimately was best known not for what he said in his testimony, but the flaky, rambling manner in which he said it, earning him prosecutor Marcia Clark’s ire and making him the butt of many late-night jokes.

NOW: After Simpson was acquitted, the National Examiner put Kaelin’s mug on the cover alongside the headline “Cops think Kato did it!” and he sued for libel. A federal judge threw out his suit, saying that the story itself was not libelous, but Kaelin won on appeal, thus establishing a new precedent that says headlines can be considered libel.

Related: Barbara Walters Presents American Scandals: America’s Favorite Houseguest Shares New Insights About The O.J. Trial

Otherwise, Kaelin has managed to make a career out of being himself, appearing in movies, TV shows, late night sketches, reality TV, and game shows. I once saw him eating sushi in Burbank, so there’s that.

Al Cowlings [Los Angeles Police Department]

Al Cowlings [Los Angeles Police Department]

Al Cowlings

THEN: If you were alive in June 1994, you were probably among the 95 million people in the United States who watched police pursue a 1993 white Ford Bronco down a Southern California highway, with Simpson sitting shotgun. The driver of the vehicle was Simpson’s childhood friend and former football pro Al Cowlings, who claimed Simpson put a gun to his own head and threatened to kill himself if Cowlings didn’t drive him to his home in Brentwood. When they arrived, Simpson was arrested for the murders of Brown Simpson and Goldman.

Cowlings had his own money-making scheme in mind. During the trial, he held an unannounced press conference down the block from the courthouse, and announced that he would be taking questions from the public about everything but the murders and the trial via a 900 number. There are unconfirmed reports that, thanks to the $2-per-minute cost, Cowlings made over $1 million from this 900 number.

Related: 5 Big-Game Football Players Busted For Big-Game Crimes

NOW: Cowlings would apparently like to leave the past in the past, because he threatened to sue F/X over its series American Crime Story: The People Vs. OJ Simpson, in which he was played by none other than Malcolm Jamal Warner, aka Theo Huxtable. Cowlings was no doubt worried that the series will once again raise suspicions that he helped Simpson cover up the crime; shortly after the murders, a porn star alleged that Cowlings told her that he disposed of the murder weapon, and that the knife used to stab Brown Simpson and Goldman “was sleeping with the fishes.” He denied it.

As for the white Ford Bronco? Cowlings sold it to a collector for $75,000, nearly twice its original value. However, the new owner has been making the most of his purchase by reportedly renting it out for events and parties. Like I said, everyone tried to make a buck off the O.J. Simpson trial.

denise-brown

Denise Brown, sister of murder victim Nicole Brown-Simpson, cries as she testifies on the witness stand during the O.J. Simpson murder trial 03 February in Los Angeles. [POO/AFP/Getty Images]

Denise Brown

THEN: Nicole Brown Simpson’s older sister Denise was devastated by her sister’s brutal death and was a fixture in the courtroom throughout the Simpson trial, acting as the family’s spokesperson. Denise testified as well, telling the court about her former brother-in-law’s temper and possessiveness over Nicole.

NOW: For the past 20 years, Brown has been an advocate for victims of domestic violence and has been active in raising awareness and money for shelters and resources through the Nicole Brown Foundation, which was established in 1994. In 2006, when Simpson announced plans to publish his tell-all memoir, If I Did It, Brown turned down the publisher’s bribe to not make a public stink about the book, and made the TV rounds instead, decrying the blatantly exploitative book deal. (If I Did It was subsequently shelved, though digital copies managed to make their way online.)

Related: The Many Knives Of O.J. Simpson

In late-2014, Brown got involved in making a documentary tribute to her sister, raising money for the project on Kickstarter. She had one stipulation: that Simpson’s name never be mentioned in the film or in any of the promotions. 

“There is no verdict in our story,” she told HNGN in January 2015. “We are not talking about him or that. We are honoring Nicole…. I am so tired of seeing O.J. this, O.J. that. I want the focus to be on my sister – not him.”

Alas, the film’s marketers convinced Brown’s partner on the film that the only way to promote the film was by using O.J. Simpson’s name. Brown was not having it and, true to her word, pulled her support for the project.

Marcia Clark in 2011 [Larry D. Moore CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons]

Marcia Clark in 2011 [Larry D. Moore CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons]

To watch Investigation Discovery’s Notorious Headlines: Crimes You’ll Never Forget, go to ID GO now!

Marcia Clark

THEN: The Simpson trial turned Clark and the rest of the prosecution team into household names overnight, and Clark especially had to deal with the downsides of sudden fame. She and fellow prosecutor Christopher Darden did their damndest to prove Simpson’s guilt, but thanks in part to the mistakes made by the LAPD in their investigation, the duo’s efforts were trumped by those of Simpson’s ace defense attorneys. Clark was largely held responsible for the loss.

Related: Rap Songs, Books, Comedy, And More — The Pop Culture Reponse To The O.J. Simpson Case

NOW: Clark took a leave of absence from her job following Simpson’s acquittal in order to focus on writing Without a Doubt, her book about the trial that allegedly garnered her $4.2 million. She resigned from her position with the D.A.’s office shortly before the book came out in 1997, and has not tried a single case since. Instead, she’s appeared as a legal expert on various TV news shows, and has used her experience in the courtroom to pen a regular column for The Daily Beast, as well as crime novels. She’s even done a little bit of acting, playing an attorney not too dissimilar from herself on an episode of Pretty Little Liars.

Lawyer Christopher Darden on August 19, 1996 [Ron Galella, Ltd./WireImage]

Lawyer Christopher Darden on August 19, 1996 [Ron Galella, Ltd./WireImage]

Christopher Darden

THEN: Clark’s partner-in-prosecution had a brief moment of glory when he introduced the bloody glove as evidence at trial, and then asked Simpson to try it on. This show-stopping tactic, of course, backfired — Simpson appeared to struggle as he put on the glove, prompting defense attorney Johnnie Cochran to utter that now infamous line: “If it doesn’t fit, you must acquit.”

NOW: In 2012, Darden made headlines by alleging that he believed someone on Simpson’s defense team had tampered with the glove’s lining“I think Johnnie tore the lining,” Darden said. “There were some additional tears in the lining so that O.J.’s fingers couldn’t go all the way up into the glove.” In a follow-up interview, Darden clarified, “A bailiff told me the defense had it during the lunch hour. It’s been my suspicion for a long time that the lining had been manipulated.”

Related: 5 Infamous Cases That Prove Getting Away With Murder Isn’t So Hard

In the years after the trial, Darden started teaching, taking positions at both California State University – Los Angeles, and Southwestern University School of Law. In 1999, he left academia in order to start own law firm, Darden & Associates, Inc., specializing in criminal defense and civil litigation. Like Clark, he is also a writer, and published several books.

Robert Shapiro and Kim Kardashian attend the Zeugari 2010 fashion show at Mi-6 Nightclub on October 14, 2009 in West Hollywood, California. [Jason LaVeris/FilmMagic]

Robert Shapiro and Kim Kardashian attend the Zeugari 2010 fashion show at Mi-6 Nightclub on October 14, 2009 in West Hollywood, California. [Jason LaVeris/FilmMagic]

Robert Shapiro

THEN: Initially a key member of Simpson’s “Dream Team,” defense attorney Robert Shapiro ended up taking a backseat during trial after tensions flared between him and Johnnie Cochran.

NOW: Following the Simpson trial, Shapiro focused his legal practice mostly on civil litigation, though he continued to represent various celebrities caught up in minor legal trouble. Among his clients over the years? Rob Kardashian – the son of Shapiro’s fellow Dream Team member, Robert Kardashian – whom Shapiro defended against battery and petty-theft charges following an altercation with the paparazzi. Shapiro has also represented Lindsay Lohan, Eva Longoria, and Khloe Kardashian‘s estranged husband Lamar Odom. Oh, and he’s also the cofounder of both LegalZoom and Shoedazzle.com (with Kim Kardashian).

Related: “The O.J. Simpson Story”: Remembering The Lost 1995 Fox TV Movie

In 2005, his son Brent died of a drug overdose, prompting Shapiro to start the Brent Shapiro Foundation, a drug awareness non-profit.

Mark Fuhrman in 2008 [Concreteloop2 at English Wikipedia via Wikimedia Commons]

Mark Fuhrman in 2008 [Concreteloop2 at English Wikipedia via Wikimedia Commons]

Mark Fuhrman

THEN: The LAPD detective played a key role in the police investigation of the murders, having found a glove believed to belong to Simpson at the location of the murders. However, the defense portrayed Fuhrman as a lying racist who framed Simpson by planting the glove at Nicole Brown Simpson’s condo.

On the stand, Fuhrman testified that he was not racist and had not used the n-word in 10 years, only to have those statements contradicted by four defense witnesses who testified otherwise. (He was eventually charged with perjury and accepted a no-contest plea bargain.)

The defense also questioned Fuhrman about whether he had ever falsified police reports or planted evidence in the Simpson case, and he responded by evoking his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. Needless to say, after the trial, Fuhrman found himself forced into early retirement.

Related: Crime History: A Look Back At The Still Unsolved Murder Of Martha Moxley

NOW: Like just about everyone associated with this case, Fuhrman tried to make a buck off his role in the trial, publishing a book called Murder in Brentwood in 1997, which told “his side” of the story. He has since published numerous other true crime books, including Murder in Greenwich about the death of Martha Moxley, and Silent Witness: The Untold Story of Terri Schiavo’s Death, in which he made the case that Schiavo – who was kept in an irreversible persistent vegetative state for seven years after suffering a serious heart attack — was murdered.

These days, Fuhrman is a frequent guest on Fox News, and is often seen defending the actions of police officers accused of police brutality.

Faye Resnick

THEN: A friend of hers since 1990, Faye Resnick was actually staying with Nicole Brown Simpson in the days leading up to the murder. Resnick had a longtime cocaine addiction, and just a few days before the murder, Nicole and a few other friends had an intervention, convincing Resnick to check into rehab. During the trial, the defense presented the theory that the murders were committed by drug dealers who had come to collect money that Resnick owed them.

NOW: After the trial, Resnick published not one, but two books about the case: 1994’s Nicole Brown Simpson: The Private Diary of a Life Interrupted and 1996’s Shattered: In the Eye of the Storm. In the first book, Resnick alleged that Nicole had cheated on Simpson with football player Marcus Allen; Simpson found out about the affair after he and Nicole had split, and, according to the book, this was what set him off and led him to commit the murders. 

Related: If O.J. Simpson Didn’t Do It, Who Did?

In 1997, Resnick posed on the cover of Playboy, and has become a somewhat regular fixture on reality TV shows like Keeping Up With The Kardashians and The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills, thanks to her friendships with Kris Jenner and Kyle Jenner.

Paula Barbieri

THEN: The model and aspiring actress was Simpson’s girlfriend at the time of the murders, and testified that she was with him the night before. The morning of the murders, she left Simpson a 30-minute-long message on his answering machine, ending their relationship and saying she was flying to Las Vegas to be with Michael Bolton, of all people.

Simpson, meanwhile, claimed to have never received the message, and Barbieri stuck by Simpson throughout the trial, visiting him in jail quite frequently. The couple eventually broke up in 1995, after Simpson was acquitted and Barbieri allegedly caught him cheating.

Related: O.J. Simpson Reportedly Considered Killing Himself In Kim Kardashian’s Bedroom Before Bronco Chase

NOW: After the trial, Barbieri became a born-again Christian and in 1997, she wrote a book about dating OJ, the trial, and her religious awakening called The Other Woman: My Years With O.J. Simpson. In it, she maintained that she believed Simpson was innocent. In 2000, Barbieri married Florida Circuit judge Michael Oversheet and the two live in Panama City, Florida, with their daughter.

As for the other people best known for their role in the OJ Simpson trial? Here’s what we know:

  • Johnnie Cochran, Simpson’s lead defense attorney, died from a brain tumor in March 2005 at the age of 67
  • Robert Kardashian, also on Simpson’s defense team, died from Esophageal cancer in September 2003 at the age of 59
  • F. Lee Bailey, also a member of Simpson’s Dream Team, was disbarred in Florida and Massachusetts in 2001, and denied a law license in Maine in 2014
  • Judge Lance Ito continued to work for the Los Angeles Criminal Court System until his retirement in 2015
  • Sydney Simpson and Justin Simpson, O.J. Simpson and Nicole Brown Simpson’s two children, have since grown up, gone to college and are reportedly both working in the restaurant industry.

To get a deeper look into the O.J. Simpson case, go to ID GO now!

Main photo: Defense attorney Johnnie Cochran Jr., left, delivers closing arguments Wednesday, Sept. 27, 1995, during the O.J. Simpson double-murder trial while prosecutors Marcia Clark and Christopher Darden, second from right, and defense attorney Peter Neufeld, right, listen. [AP Photo/Vince Bucci, Pool]

The post The O.J. Simpson Trial: Where Are They Now? appeared first on CrimeFeed.

Amanda Knox Opens Up About Her Life & Career After Wrongful Conviction

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SEATTLE, WA — Amanda Knox has revealed new details about her prison ordeal, her new life and career in journalism, and how she says she was coerced into confessing to a brutal murder and wound up sentenced to 26 years in an Italian jail in a new interview with Rolling Stone. 

Related: Crime History: The Kinky Sex Murder Convictions — & Acquittals — Of Amanda Knox

In 2009, Knox and her boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito were both convicted of the sexual assault and murder of Knox’s roommate Meredith Kutcher in Perugia, Italy. She was sentenced to 26 years in prison – and he to 25 – but both convictions were overturned in 2011.

The prosecution appealed, and in 2013 they were retried for the same murder and found guilty again. That verdict was overturned after another appeal, and the two were eventually acquitted in 2015.

Acquaintance Rudy Guede was convicted of the crime and is currently serving a 16-year prison sentence, but the Italian government and international media reported on every salacious detail of Kutcher’s murder and attacked Knox, who the British press nicknamed “Foxy Knoxy.”

Related: Amanda Knox Was Not OK With A Drug-Dealing Lesbian Hitting On Her In Prison

After her exoneration, Knox wrote the memoir Waiting to Be Heard. Today, she works as a reporter for the West Seattle Herald

Knox lives in Seattle with her boyfriend, Christopher Robinson, who she has been dating since 2015. In addition to her journalism, she also works with The Innocence Project, and said her work with the nonprofit organization has helped her cope with the psychological trauma she felt since her conviction.

Knox said she thought the documentary O.J.: Made in America was “incredible” in its portrayal of the Black community and their very real fears and suspicions of the LAPD.

Related: Amanda Knox, Who Assures Us She’s Not Dead, Just Made Her Bizarre Instagram Public

When asked if she saw similarities between her trial and Simpson’s, Knox said:

They saw themselves in O.J. Simpson, so they wanted him to be free. But in my case, who was I? No one knew who I was before all of this happened. If people see what they want to see, they wanted to see the Black man in the L.A. community accused of something by the cops who were corrupt be innocent. In my case, so many people thought, ‘Oh, this random college girl? Ohhh, Girls Gone Wild. Ohhh, that’s hot. Ohhh, I want to see that.’ That’s what they wanted to see and that’s what they saw.”

She said that her ordeal has made her “part of a tribe of people I would have never been mixed in with otherwise,” including “mostly impoverished Black men who are unable to defend themselves.”

Related: Italian Court Says “Glaring Errors” Led To Wrongful Conviction Of Amanda Knox

Knox is currently waiting to hear the status of her lawsuit against Italy related to her alleged illegal interrogation, which she claims lasted 53 hours over a period of five days. The case is currently being heard in the European Court of Human Rights. About her interrogation, Knox stated:

You don’t have to beat a person into submission and psychologically screw with them, like they did with me. As soon as they start pushing an interrogation into a predetermined answer, as opposed to the truth, the outcome is inevitable. You are going to break people. I was a 20-year-old girl who had never been in trouble with the law before, and I had the Italian fluency of a 10-year-old. There was no way I was coming out of the interrogation room intact.

Asked if she had any regrets, Knox was thoughtful and said that she wished that she had been able to write a novel in prison, but other than that, is trying her best and says she is “very happy with the person I am now.

Read more:

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Main photo: Amanda Knox [ABC News / YouTube (screenshot)]

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Aleister Crowley: Did “The Wickedest Man in the World” Inspire Scientology?

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Born in 1875, the world-renowned — and, in many places, reviled — British occult icon Aleister Crowley transfixed humanity as a mystic seeker, a ceremonial magician, a spiritual philosopher, a pansexual libertine, a pioneering drug enthusiast, and a limitless traveler of this plane of reality and, according to him, a multitude of others.

Related: Report — Scientology Leader David Miscavige Paid Private Eyes $10K A Week To Spy On His Father

After Crowley established the religious system Thelema and lived by its anything-goes maxim of “Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of law,” the U.K. press disparaged him as “The Great Beast” and “The Wickedest Man in the World.”

Among the accusations leveled at Crowley were that he routinely practiced human sacrifice, once roasted and ate a baby (while drinking “wine from a virgin’s skull”), advocated and participated in sex crimes that included rape and pedophilia, and both inspired and colluded with the Nazis.

Crowley faced no formal charges for any of these allegations. Such claims most certainly did, however, add to his simultaneously luminous and sinister legend.

Related: Exclusive — Ex-Scientologist Marty Rathbun On The Church’s Spying Budget, The Origins Of Auditing & Starting Over At Age 58

One thing Aleister Crowley actually did, in fact, was take notice of future Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard in 1946. A letter from Crowley disciple Jack Parsons to his mentor proclaimed:

“About three months ago I met [US Navy] Capt. L. Ron. Hubbard… Although Ron has no formal training in Magick, he has an extraordinary amount of experience and understanding in the field… He is the most thelemic person I have ever met and is in complete accord with our principles. He is also interested in establishing the New Aeon… We are pooling our resources in a partnership that will act as a limited company to control our business ventures.”

In turn, a tape exists of a 1952 lecture in which Hubbard recommends Crowley’s book Magick and Theory in Practice, and declares:

“It’s fascinating work in itself, and that’s work written by Aleister Crowley, the late Aleister Crowley, my very good friend.”

Numerous observers point out similarities between Crowley’s Thelema beliefs and the tenets of Scientology.

Related: Did An “Online Death Cult” Focused On Reptilians, Witches, And Aliens Drive A Woman To Kill Her Boyfriend?

Both practices focus on taking participants back through their actual births to achieve enlightenment. Both espouse out-of-body traveling as a goal to be achieved through ritual learning that can eventually be implemented at will. And both Crowley and Hubbard despised psychiatry as humanity’s primary force of evil.

On that topic, Crowley wrote:

“Official psychoanalysis is committed to upholding a fraud … psychoanalysts have misinterpreted life, and announced the absurdity that every human being is essentially an anti-social, criminal, and insane animal.”

In Dianetics, the basic text of Scientology, Hubbard proclaims:

Left: Thelema symbol [Wikipedia]; right: Scientology cross [Wikipedia]

“We discover psychoanalysis to have been superseded by tyrannous sadism, practiced by unprincipled men … This, then, is the end of the trail for psychoanalysis — a world of failure and brutality.”

In addition to these philosophical similarities, Scientology’s triangular and cross symbols visually bring to mind emblems created by Crowley even at first glance.

Related: Is R. Kelly Holding Women Hostage In An Abusive Sex Cult?

A seemingly simplified charge thrown at Crowley and Hubbard alike is that they essentially just practiced “black magic” in honor of the Christian embodiment of evil, Satan.

Defenders of each man vehemently argue against any such notion, and impartial researchers agree that far more exists in Thelema and Scientogy than mere devil worship. Still, Satan does often precede the reputation of both global-scaled troublemakers in the general consciousness.

Related: Unholy Communion — Does A Satanic Cult Connect “Son Of Sam” To Charles Manson?

Crowley, perhaps puckishly, did refer to himself in public as “666” and “The Anti-Christ.” Hubbard’s son later claimed the same of his estranged father.

In a 1983 Penthouse magazine interview, L. Ron Hubbard, Jr. (who later changed his name to Ron DeWolf) stated:

“I believed in Satanism. There was no other religion in the house! Scientology and black magic. Black magic is the inner core of Scientology — and it is probably the only part of Scientology that really works. Also, you’ve got to realize that my father did not worship Satan. He thought he was Satan. He was one with Satan.”

In the end, Aleister Crowley is said to have died a penniless drug addict, but his influence on the world continues to be massive, in everything from his appearance on the cover of Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band to Westerners embracing yoga and meditation to the outlier rock music genres of punk and heavy metal.

L. Ron Hubbard departed his earthly vessel in 1986. Scientology remains a major world religion of seemingly unending controversy.

To learn more about Scientology, watch the “A Scientologist’s Escape” episode of Investigation Discovery’s Dangerous Persuasions on ID GO now!

Read more:
Disinfo
The Guardian
Open Culture
Listverse
AC2012
Vigilant Citizen
Lermanet

Main photos: Aleister Crowley [Occult Free Public Domain Images]/L. Ron Hubbard [Wikipedia]

The post Aleister Crowley: Did “The Wickedest Man in the World” Inspire Scientology? appeared first on CrimeFeed.

Occult Sex, Rocket Magic & Scientology: The Jack Parsons – L. Ron Hubbard Explosion

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PASADENA, CA — They called it the “Babalon Working” — a ceremonial procession of occult rituals enacted in 1946 by a 31-year-old rocket engineer and a 34-year-old science fiction writer intended to manifest a living incarnation of the goddess Babalon right under the sunny skies of southern California.

Related: Unholy Communion — Does A Satanic Cult Connect “Son Of Sam” To Charles Manson?

The scientist, Jack Parsons, was a genius who had dropped out of CalTech to cofound the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) and pioneer the invention of rocket fuels that are still used today. The fantasy scribe was L. Ron Hubbard. He went on to create Scientology.

Related: Aleister Crowley: Did “The Wickedest Man In The World” Inspire Scientology?

At the height of World War II, the U.S. military enthusiastically funded Parsons and the JPL to beat the Nazis with advancements in rocket technology.

Parsons emerged from the war, then, as a brilliant inventor who also had considerably deep pockets with which to finance his actual greatest passion: the implementation of the pagan “magick” contained in the writings and practices of British occult icon Aleister Crowley.

In 1945, Parsons purchased a Pasadena mansion and bid like-minded seekers to join him there in a libertine commune that came to be called “The Parsonage.”

Related: 7 Modern Doomsday-Cult Leaders Who Ordered Their Followers To Kill

According to the essential Jack Parsons biography Sex and Rockets by John Carter:

“Jack specified that only bohemians, artists, musicians, atheists, anarchists, or any other exotic types need to apply for rooms — any mundane soul would be unceremoniously rejected.”

L. Ron Hubbard quickly made Parsons’ cut, and an uneasy, short-lived, and, in many senses, explosive friendship commenced between the two visionaries.

Related: Sucking Out “The Black Reaper” — Occult Teen Sex And Murder In Texas

Throughout both his scientific and spiritual work, Parsons kept in close touch with Aleister Crowley, his idol and mentor. Parsons also practiced Crowley’s Thelema religion and espoused and lived by Crowley’s main credo (“Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of law”). In addition, Parsons also regularly sent Crowley money.

As a result, Crowley’s personal endorsement of Hubbard — “He is the most Thelemic person I have ever met and is in complete accord with our own principles” — suggested to Parsons that perhaps he had finally met his magickal match.

Newly emboldened with a partner in otherworldly proclivities, Parsons sought with Hubbard to manifest the pagan goddess Babalon out of the divine and into this earthly realm. Thus began the machinations of the Babalon Working.

Related: The Cold-Blooded Killing Of The Gay Satanists Of Corpsewood Manor

Among Crowley’s most vaunted ideals, absolute sexual freedom ranked high. Parsons embraced this concept in 1945 when he left his wife Helen Northrup for her 17-year-old sister, Sara Northrup.

Sex and Rockets by John Carter [Feral House]

For a while, the new couple’s open relationship pleased both. That changed, though, when Sara took up with L. Ron Hubbard instead.

Sara’s affair with Hubbard strained the limits of Parsons’ ability to suppress his jealousy, but it also inspired him to embark on a spree of “sex magick” undertakings that, according to true believers, rocked The Parsonage with supernatural activity.

Related: Report — Scientology Leader David Miscavige Paid Private Eyes $10K A Week To Spy On His Father

According to occult expert Richard Metzger, most of the rituals involved Parsons masturbating onto magical tablets while Hubbard, working as his scribe, “scanned the astral plane for signs and visions.”

Following a Babalon Working ceremony in the Mojave Desert, Parsons believed he had finally conjured Babalon in the form of Marjorie Cameron, a 23-year-old illustrator who had dropped by The Parsonage. The two immediately became a couple and embarked on whole new realms of sex magick.

Related: Exclusive — Ex-Scientologist Marty Rathbun On The Church’s Spying Budget, The Origins Of Auditing & Starting Over At Age 58

The Babalon Working culminated with Parsons and Hubbard, inspired by Crowley’s 1917 novel Moonchild, attempting to conjure a newborn Thelemic messiah that would overthrow Christianity by way of an immaculate conception somewhere else on the planet.

Reportedly, this stage involved Parsons and Cameron having sex while Hubbard chanted alongside them. Even Crowley is said to have backed off from this notion.

As far as anyone knows, nobody ever did give birth to the Antichrist as a result.

Related: The Satanic ’60s — When Manson Follower Susan Atkins Danced Topless For Anton LaVey

In the wake of the Babalon Working, Parsons invested his considerable life savings into Allied Enterprises, a business partnership with Hubbard and Sara Northrup. Allied Enterprises ended in fairly short order with Parsons losing all his money while Hubbard and Northrup sailed off in Parsons’ boat and got married. It especially stung, then, when even Crowley chided Parsons for being a “weak fool” who fell for an obvious “confidence scheme.”

From there, Hubbard authored Dianetics and instituted Scientology. He departed this realm of existence in 1986, a hugely powerful multimillionaire.

In 1952, after a lifetime of international rocketry breakthroughs, interdimensional occult adventuring, boundless sexual derring-do, and accusations of espionage and devil worship, Jack Parsons blew up at only 37. He died in a home laboratory explosion that’s on record as being accidental. At least that’s the official story.

To learn more about Scientology, watch the “A Scientologist’s Escape” episode of Investigation Discovery’s Dangerous Persuasions on ID GO now!

Read more:
Vice
io9
Daily Dot
Space Safety Magazine

Main photo: Jack Parsons [WikiMedia Commons]

The post Occult Sex, Rocket Magic & Scientology: The Jack Parsons – L. Ron Hubbard Explosion appeared first on CrimeFeed.

Watch Now: Charles Manson’s 5 Most Outrageous TV Interviews

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Even if you never saw or heard the man himself, the life and crimes of Charles Manson and his homicidal hippie cult the Manson Family are the stuff of mind-melting nightmares.

Under Charlie’s orders, the Family executed the “Tate-LaBianca” murders, in which they slaughtered suburban Los Angeles residents, including Hollywood star Sharon Tate, over two nights of horrific bloodletting intended to set off Manson’s theoretical “Helter Skelter” race war.

Related: Crime History — The Manson Family and the LaBianca Murders

Still, that was in 1969. Nonetheless, nearly 50 years later, Charles Manson continues to rule as America’s preeminent ranting, raving, bug-eyed boogeyman.

The reason for that is two-fold. Indeed, Manson is toxically charismatic (after all, he did convince a small army of previously uncorrupted hippie kids to kill and die for him). Then, because Charlie is so simultaneously hypnotizing and hair-raising, he has always provided journalists with absolutely killer interviews. As a result, he’s gotten to spray his madness all over the media fairly regularly for close to a half-century now.

What follows are five of Charles Manson’s most insanely incendiary and uncomfortably captivating high-profile Q&A sessions. Just try looking away once Charlie gets going.

1. TOMORROW WITH TOM SNYDER (1981)

Tom Snyder’s late-night NBC Tomorrow show aired after Johnny Carson and typically sent wee-hours viewers to sleep with toned-down, intelligent conversation. Such was not the case, however, on June 12, 1981.

Snyder scored network TV’s first up-close, in-depth sit-down with Manson and, after taking some heat from various moral guardians, he opted to go through with the interview at the California State Prison Medical Facility.

Surprisingly, Snyder’s eccentric, unbuttoned style seems to mellow Manson down quite a bit. Charlie talks for long stretches between the inevitable flip-outs. And even knowing that nothing untoward happened during the conversation, it’s terrifying to watch the newsman in such close proximity to the madman.

Related: Serial Killer Cinema — 9 Films “Inspired” by Charles Manson and the Manson Family

2. GERALDO WITH GERALDO RIVERA (1988)

As cool-headed as Tom Snyder was in his approach to Manson, Geraldo Rivera, at the height of his tawdry afternoon talk show, confronted Charlie with alpha machismo and, as expected, he got the scary guy to howl … literally.

In the course of their talk at San Quentin, Geraldo tells Manson he’s a “murdering dog.” Charlie responds that he raised himself as a “wolf boy,” as well as that he’s God and the devil. He also (sort of) threatens to chop off Geraldo’s head.

Related: No Sympathy for These Devils — The 1980s Satanic Panic

During the same year in which racist skinheads broke his nose during an on-air riot and he hosted the live NBC prime-time Halloween special, Devil Worship: Exposing Satan’s Underground, Rivera aired this interview under the title “Manson: Psycho.”

Manson spouts his usual gibberish but, also as usual, he works in some disturbingly insightful nuggets, such as when he tells Rivera, “The guy you’re trying to make me into is impossible. What you’re doing is you’re creating a legend, you’re creating a beast, you’re creating whatever you are judging yourselves with — into the word ‘Manson.’”

Related: Crime History — Manson Found Guilty — But Did Charlie Actually Kill Anyone?

3. TODAY WITH HEIDI SCHULMAN (1987)

The prospect of NBC’s Today show blasting Charles Manson across America’s breakfast tables certainly seemed, to put it mildly, out of character.

Nonetheless the morning program that typically traffics in celebrities promoting their latest projects and charmingly goofy weather forecasts dispatched correspondent Heidi Schulman to talk with Manson. She, and everyone else, got an earful.

Among Charlie’s most volcanic declarations were these doozies:

“I’ve never killed anyone. Maybe I should have killed 400 or 500 people. Then I would have felt better. Then I should have felt like I really offered society something.”

“You know, if I wanted to kill somebody I’d take this book and beat you to death with it and wouldn’t feel a thing. It’d be just like walking to the drug store.”

“Believe me, if I started murdering people there’d be none of you left.”

Finally, upon parting, Manson turned to Schulman and said, “You know you’re about 10 pounds overweight, don’t you? I’m just telling you. That’s all. I’m just sayin’.”

Related: Crime History — Manson Associate Denied Parole for the 18th Time — Did Charlie’s Family Kill to Free Him?

4. TURNING POINT WITH DIANE SAWYER (1993)

Acclaimed ABC news journalist Diane Sawyer devoted an entire episode of the network’s Turning Point series to examining the Manson phenomenon, anchored by an expectedly tumultuous talk with Charlie himself.

Manson looks arguably more frightening than ever with long, greasy hair, a prison-issue sweatshirt, and that signature swastika tattooed between his eyes.

Manson speaks from the point of view of his prostitute mother and reiterates that he never sought out followers and that the Family members came to him. He also remarks of the Tate-LaBianca murder sites: “If you’re gonna do something, leave something witchy. Just like I would tell you — if you’re gonna do something, do it well.”

The high point, so to speak, occurs when Charlie points his magnetic eyes straight into the camera and asks of the viewers at home: “Every one of you tried to kill me for the last 25 years, and I’m still here. Ha-ha-ha. Now what?”

Related: Charles Manson Out of the Hospital — Scarier Than Ever?

5. NIGHTWATCH WITH CHARLIE ROSE (1987)

Smooth PBS talker Charlie Rose actually gets atypically worked up in the course of his powwow with Manson. After Manson repeatedly denies any responsibility, let alone remorse, regarding the Tate-LaBianca massacres, Rose asks if he cares about the brutality.

Manson explodes in response: “Care? What does that mean — care? Put me in solitary and fine me, break my teeth out, break my ribs, brush me up, take me down the hole, and then come back and tell me about ‘care!’ I don’t know what care is, man!”

One musical highlight occurs when Manson suddenly bursts out singing the Beatles’ “Why Don’t We Do It in the Road?”

Watch Investigation Discovery’s Manson: The Prison Tapes on ID GO now!

Main photo: Charles Manson 1969 mugshot [LAPD]

The post Watch Now: Charles Manson’s 5 Most Outrageous TV Interviews appeared first on CrimeFeed.

Candice Delong On The “Worst Date She’d Ever Been On”— With The Unabomber

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Former FBI agent and profiler Candice Delong , host of Investigation Discovery’s Deadly Women and Facing Evil With Candice Delong, worked a lot of cases in her 20-year career, including the frighteningly random Tylenol poisoning case.

But perhaps the most iconic case Delong worked was that of the Unabomber — who was eventually, after a 17-year manhunt, found to be the reclusive former math professor Ted Kaczynski.

Related: Crime History: “Unabomber” Ted Kaczynski Pleads Guilty, Gets 8 Life Sentences

CrimeFeed spoke with Delong about what it was like working the case, how Kaczynski was captured, and cooking tips from the Unabomber.

CrimeFeed: How did you decide that profiling was the field you wanted to pursue?

Candice Delong: When I was going through the Academy as a new agent trainee — this was in 1980 — some of our classes were in behavioral sciences, and the early profilers, the ones that founded the department — John Douglas, Roy Hazelwood — presented some lectures. They would put a crime scene up on the screen and start telling the class, based on what they were looking at and the various things that the offender did to the victim, about how that offender led his life, or what he was all about — a psychological, a behavioral profile. Lifestyle and things like that of the offender — age, race, where he might likely live in relation to the victim, were they strangers, did they know each other, that kind of thing. I was just fascinated because I had been a psychiatric nurse for 10 years.

Then in 1984, after I’d been an agent for four years, the Behavioral Science Unit put out the word to all the field divisions that they wanted one person from each office trained by the Behavioral Science Unit to work in that agent’s office. In my case it was Chicago, as liaison to the Behavioral Science Unit at Quantico, and I got that position. It was over the next several years that I got a lot of training in different aspects of criminal behavior — murder, sex crimes, crimes against children, things like that.

Related: Was The Unabomber Also The Zodiac & The Tylenol Killer?

Do you have any opinion on the theory that the perpetrator of the Tylenol crimes was also the Unabomber? 

Oh, it’s absolutely not factual at all. We have very, very good reason, compelling reasons, to believe we know who did it — James W. Lewis. We couldn’t get him on the murders, but he was convicted of trying to extort Johnson & Johnson. We were unable to find the evidence to charge him with murder. He did serve 15 years on a 20-year sentence, and he was paroled. Since then, he’s written a book called Poison!.
In terms of the crimes being similar, in a way they are. Putting potassium cyanide or any other toxic substance in a bottle of over-the-counter medicine, several bottles, and spreading them all over, that’s a bomb in a sense…. Anyway, Ted Kaczynski was much brighter than the person that did the Tylenol murders.
He was an evil genius. He had a genius IQ. He was a math professor at Berkeley. One of my brothers was a student in the math department at Berkeley at the time.

Oh, really? Oh, that’s so strange.

Yeah. He doesn’t remember him, but a lot of people don’t remember him because he only was there for two years, and he was not particularly good at relating to students, and so he left.

Related: Candice Delong: 9 Survival Tips From 350 Cases Of Deadly Women

How did the FBI get involved in the Unabomber case?

[The first incidents had random targets], but after those, Kaczynski started targeting specific individuals. He targeted United Airlines and the President of United Airlines. The first cases I think went to ATF (Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives).
Then he mailed a bomb that got onto a plane, and it was fortunately not a good bomb. It was supposed to detonate at 5,000 feet, but instead it just smoldered in a bag of mail. That smoked up the plane, and they had an emergency landing.
That got the FBI into the case, because that’s a Federal violation — crime on an airplane. Technically, the case started for the FBI right there.

Unabomber sketch [FBI]

Unabomber sketch [FBI]


It was handled out of the Chicago division for many, many years. But then, during the placement of one of the devices, he was seen. A woman looked out her window and saw a guy in a hooded sweatshirt with aviator sunglasses. She just looked out her window right after he placed the device in the parking lot. He stood up, and she looked right at him. Then he walked away. That’s where that famous composite sketch comes from. But because of that, he kind of went underground. He didn’t do anymore activity for maybe five to six years, and so the case went cold, and Chicago closed down the case, figuring, well, he’s dead or whatever. Then, he re-emerged. He made two bombs. He took a bus to San Francisco from Helena, Montana, and he mailed two letter bombs right near the San Francisco FBI office … the San Francisco division of the FBI reopened the case, and they became the lead office.

Related: Former FBI Profiler Candice Delong Explains Why It’s Never “Normal” When Women Kill

I was transferred from Chicago to San Francisco — at my own request, but the Unabomber did help me get my wish. San Francisco needed so much help, and I’m from there. I wanted to be there anyway, and I’d had my name on the wishlist for San Francisco.

So that worked out great.

Yeah. I should send Kaczynski a fruit basket!

What was your first impression of Kaczynski when you saw him?

I was waiting with some other agents in a neighbor’s cabin that we had secured to hold Kaczynski during the search. We couldn’t arrest Kaczynski. We didn’t have an arrest warrant — we had a search warrant. We had 24 hours to find what we named in the search warrant that we were looking for in his cabin…. I looked up and he was about … 50 feet away, being brought down a road, and we had heard yelling before.
There were three agents who lured him out of his cabin. My boss, Max; a local forestry agent named Jerry, U.S. Forestry; and another agent from the Helena, Montana, office, who is a real big guy. We’d heard all this yelling, then they brought him down to the cabin where I was, and I’m looking at him. He’s about 15 feet away. I thought, “Oh my gosh, he’s so small.”

Related: Facing Evil With Candice Delong: Could Someone Really Sleep Through Such A Vicious Murder?

Oh, wow.

I knew his height and weight, but to see it was different. He was five nine, weighed 140 — very wiry. He had real long hair, unkempt. It looked like a bomb went off in his hair, maybe one of his own. He was covered with sweat. He was wearing a threadbare T-shirt and torn jeans. When he was 50 feet away, I said to [my partner] John, “Oh, my gosh, he must have really put up a fight. His pants are all torn.” Then as he got closer, and I’m giving him the once over. I realized his pants weren’t torn — they were rotting off of his body.

Eww.

He hadn’t had a bath. He took a bath a couple of times a year, and he’d usually take it in a cold stream. He looked right at me. We were about two feet apart — he had the bluest eyes I’ve ever seen, and he smelled like wet dirt.
When we were in the cabin — it’s a cabin maybe 15 feet by 15 feet. It had a pine table with some chairs in the middle of it. No heat…. We, of course, identified ourselves as Federal agents…. He looked at my boss, Max, and said, “Well, they say if you’re ever in serious trouble you shouldn’t say anything without a lawyer, so I want a lawyer.” And that was that.

Materials used by the FBI in its search of Theodore Kaczynski's mountain cabin in Lincoln, Mont., sit outside the cabin's door in this April 1996 file photo [AP Photo/Elaine Thompson]

Materials used by the FBI in its search of Theodore Kaczynski’s mountain cabin in Lincoln, Mont., sit outside the cabin’s door in this April 1996 file photo [AP Photo/Elaine Thompson]

In a roundabout way admitted he knew he was in serious trouble, right?

Well, when you’re surrounded by FBI agents and you’re handcuffed, you’re in trouble. He was a smart guy. He didn’t try to sit there and BS us. Once somebody invokes their right to an attorney, then you can’t talk to them about it, because anything they say could be thrown out. So for the rest of the afternoon, agents were in and out of the cabin. I remember sitting across from him at one point, and he was trembling. By this time we had a pretty good fire going in the stove, and I had taken off my ski parka it was so warm — actually it was my son’s ski parka, mostly black with a bright red and blue stripe and a big red collar. I had taken it off and hung it over a chair. I’m watching him, and he’s watching me, and so I said, “So, what’s it like living off the land?” As if I cared, really.

Related: Facing Evil With Candice Delong: Why Did A Respected Nurse & Mother Of 2 Kill 20 Of Her Patients?

Right. You had to come up with something to talk about with him that wasn’t the case.

Exactly. I couldn’t say, “Why’d you kill those people? How’d you do it.” Eventually the subject got around to cooking, and of course I knew he only had a wood stove and lived an extremely spartan lifestyle. He proceeded to tell me how to cook turnips — boil turnips on an open stove. All I could think was, first of all, this guy doesn’t know that a boiled turnip will never cross these lips, and number two, this is like the worst date I’ve ever been on!

Turnips [Wikipedia]

Turnips [Wikipedia]


Then I noticed he had a big wet stain on his T-shirt, and I reached across and I put my hand on his chest, and I thought, “Whoa, he’s sweating.” He wasn’t shivering because he was cold. He was sweating because he was nervous. He was frightened. He was scared out of his mind probably. I really did take a guilty pleasure in knowing that here was this guy that caused so much death and destruction, and now here he was trembling. So I gave him my parka and put it over his shoulders.
While all this is going on, the bomb technicians were searching his cabin. [After about four hours] the bosses came in. Max, my boss, who’s the supervisor of one of the Unabomb squads in San Francisco, and the agent from Helena stood Kaczynski up and said, “Mr. Kaczynski you’re under arrest for the murder of three people and putting down explosive devices.”

Related: Facing Evil With Candice Delong: After Inflicting 25 Stab Wounds With Her Stiletto Heel, A Convicted Killer Claims Self-Defense

They took him out and took him to the Helena jail, and there’s that famous picture that a University of Montana student took of Kaczynski being led into the Helena jail with an FBI agent on either side of him, wearing my son’s ski parka.
Even though he had never actually worn the jacket, he just had it draped over his shoulders, when I got the jacket back, it had three horizontal rows of dirt on this big collar.Special Agent cover

Oh, my God.

I put it away. I never washed it. It has official Unabomber dirt on it, and the rest is history.

Learn more of Candice Delong’s insider info on the Unabomber case and her FBI career in her book Special Agent: My Life on the Front Lines As A Woman in the FBI!

Main photos: Ted Kaczynski mug shot [Federal Bureau of Investigation; Candice Delong [courtesy Candice Delong]

The post Candice Delong On The “Worst Date She’d Ever Been On” — With The Unabomber appeared first on CrimeFeed.

Edgar Smith, Killer Who Conned William F. Buckley Into Getting Him Off Death Row, Dies At 83

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VACAVILLE, CA — On March 20, 2017, Edgar Smith, 83, died from complications related to diabetes and heart disease.

The California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation waited until September to issue word of his passing. Perhaps they wanted to make sure that, this time, Smith was really gone.

Related: A Killer Way With Words — Jack Henry Abbott, Norman Mailer’s Favorite Felon

Smith, who abducted and murdered a 15-year-old girl in 1957, had cheated the reaper once before — when his writings convinced famous conservative journalist William F. Buckley to take up Smith’s case and successfully campaign to get him off death row in 1971.

Alas, Smith couldn’t outrun the grave forever and he expired in a prison hospital.

Related: Jack Unterweger — The Sex Fiend Serial Killer Turned Celebrity Author & Crime Reporter

On the evening of March 5, 1957, New Jersey resident Smith, then 23, fumed in anger over having gotten fired from an auto repair shop after only a week.

The ex-Marine and married father of an infant daughter then focused his rage on a seemingly random target: 15-year-old cheerleader and honor student Victoria Zielinski. Smith pulled up to Zielinski as she walked home from a friend’s house, forced her into a Ford Mercury he borrowed from a friend, and took her to a sandpit in the town of Mahwah.

Once there, Smith tore off the teenager’s shirt and bra, severely bit her right breast, and savaged her head and body with a rock and a baseball bat, resulting in what the autopsy would deem, “a total crushing of the skull.”

Related: Hate, Rape & Homicidal Rage — Serial Killer Carl Panzram, Who Stole The President’s Gun

The buddy from whom Smith had borrowed the car suspected something amiss immediately when he got the Mercury back. Weird stains splattered the seats. Smith explained those away by saying he got drunk and threw up.

He also said Smith turned ghost-white after somebody brought up the dead girl being discovered and joked about police “looking for a Mercury.” More damningly still, the friend kept his baseball equipment in his trunk and quickly noticed the bat was missing. He pointed the authorities, then, in the direction of Smith.

Upon visiting the trailer in which Smith lived, officers discovered the pants and shoes he wore on the night of the murder. Dried blood caked the garments.

Related: Norio Nagayama, Spree Killer Turned Author, Hangs For His Crimes — 28 Years Later

At his trial, Smith concocted a story about driving Victoria Zielinski to the sandpit and getting into an argument with her. He said he hit her, but left after a buddy of his showed up on the scene. That other guy, Smith maintained, must have done in poor Victoria.

The jury didn’t buy it. After a two-and-a-half hour deliberation — including a break for lunch — they found him guilty of first-degree murder. The judge sentenced Smith to take a seat in New Jersey’s electric chair.

Related: Author Drives 500 Miles To Confront Teen Who Gave Book Bad Review, Hit Her In Head With Wine Bottle

Once behind bars, Smith got to work on figuring a way out — legally, if not honestly. He took college courses and earned a law degree. He filed appeals on his own behalf and garneried multiple stays of execution.

Smith also took to reading highbrow periodicals, including National Review — the political, art, and culture weekly published and edited by conservative New York media star William F. Buckley.

When Buckley found out that Smith had trouble getting fresh issues of National Review at Trenton State Prison, he sent the inmate a complimentary subscription. From there, the two began corresponding and struck up a friendship. Buckley encouraged Smith to write about his experience in the justice system.

Brief Against Death by Edgar Smith / front cover image [Amazon]

In 1968, Smith published Brief Against Death, a dynamic polemic in which he argues his innocence and claims he only confessed to any misdoing under severe coercion. Buckley penned the intro for the best-seller. Buckley also authored a powerful Esquire article on behalf of his pen pal that helped shift public opinion on Smith.

Amid all this media barnstorming, the state allowed Smith to cut a plea deal in 1971. He admitted guilt (on paper) in exchange for time served, and he walked free — only to kidnap and assault with a deadly weapon again.

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Buckley dispatched a limousine to the Trenton State Penitentiary to pick up Smith. The car transported the freed man to a Manhattan TV studio, where Smith immediately appeared on Buckley’s popular PBS talk show Firing Line — his first of numerous guest-spots.

Smith also became a popular speaker on college campuses and wrote several more books on the topic of justice.

Edgar Smith’s public-figure run lasted for a few years. After it ran out of steam, he then had to try to find a regular job.

In that pursuit, Smith dropped by the offices of the San Diego Union in late November 1976. The newspaper had no open positions. As it had back in 1957, Smith’s workplace frustrations again drove him to a sick and violent extreme the very next day.

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On December 1, Smith cruised into the parking lot of the Chula Vista garment factory in San Diego. He scoped out Lefteriya Ozbun, 33, as she was getting off work and walking to meet her husband. Smith snuck up behind Ozbun, held a knife to her throat and forced her into his car, where he immediately taped her hands together and sped off.

The panicked Ozbun asked what Smith what was happening. He reportedly replied,

“Shut up! I’m going to stick a knife in you and take your money!”

Heroically, the five-foot-one, 100-pound Ozbun managed to free her hands. She grabbed the steering wheel, honked the horn, and kicked hard against the windshield. As the car skidded to the bottom of an embankment, Smith stabbed her with a six-inch blade.

Ozbun flung herself from the vehicle with the knife still protruding from her midsection. Smith, fortunately, drove away in terror. Ozbun memorized his license plate and successfully flagged down help.

Related: Learn How This Kidnapping Victim Escaped From The Trunk Of Her Own Car

After about two weeks hiding out in cheap motels, Smith telephoned William F. Buckley from Las Vegas to tell him what was up. Buckley, in turn, immediately telephoned the FBI.

At his next trial, Smith copped to killing Victoria Zielinski, but claimed he had only intended to rape Lefteriya Ozbun. He got life in prison for attempted murder and related charges.

In his weekly column, William F. Buckley apologized for having been duped and actively enabling a predator to stalk free in society. Until he died in 2008, the Smith case remained one of Buckley’s most daunting regrets.

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In 2009, the withered, near-deaf, 75-year-old Edgar Smith appeared before a parole board. When they asked what would keep him from committing crimes if they freed him, Smith simply said, “Old age.”

No parole was awarded to Edgar Smith that day, or ever again.

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Read more:
New York Times
Washington Post
AP
NJ.com
Murderpedia

Main photos: Edgar Smith [Bergen County Sheriff’s Office]

The post Edgar Smith, Killer Who Conned William F. Buckley Into Getting Him Off Death Row, Dies At 83 appeared first on CrimeFeed.

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