Letter/envelope set with greeting card from Manson Family member Red/Squeaky.
This auction is for a letter from paroled California would-be presidential assassin and Manson Family member Lynette Fromme. She also went by the names Squeaky and Red. Fromme was NOT an active participant in the infamous Tate/Labianca Murders. She was, however, arrested on 9/5/1975 in Sacramento, CA, for pointing an unchambered firearm at President Gerald Ford. Her motive was to get a platform to address deforestation of the California redwood trees. Lynette Fromme was paroled on 9/14/2009.
ITEM DESCRIPTION: The missive is one page on nice stationery (it's completely black on the reverse), dated 3/24/2009, and signed, "Red." In the letter Fromme inquiries about fellow Manson Family member Susan Atkins and she has drawn a shamrock. Fromme has also sent along a homemade Flash Gordon greeting card, which is blank. The original mailing envelope is postmarked 3/25/2009. The letter and envelope come inside a protective comic book sleeve with an acid free board and have been stored flat. Message me with any questions you might have. Thanks for having a look-see.
ABOUT THE MANSON FAMILY: The Manson Family was an environmentally consensus commune of sorts, consisting primarily of young adults, which was established in the late 1960's by Mr. Charles Manson. The group shared similarities with other "hippie communes" of that era. In 1969, after a few members of the group were arrested and later connected to a series of high-profile California murders, the group became the focus of intense media scrutiny. The crimes became known as the Tate/Labianca Murders. At the crime scenes messages were written in blood on the walls, such as "Helter Skelter" and "political piggy." Among the victims were Roman Polanski's wife/movie actress Sharon Tate, who was over eight months pregnant and stabbed 16 times. Coffee heiress Abigail Folger was also among the dead, she was stabbed 28 times. Staring 7/25/1969 to 8/26/1969 nine people were murdered. The crimes had many residents in Los Angeles on edge. Manson, Charles Watson, Susan Atkins, Patricia Krenwinkel, Leslie Van Houten, Bobby Beausoleil, Bruce Davis, Steve Grogan, and Linda Kasabian were arrested on unrelated charged only to be linked to the murders after Atkins began bragging to fellow inmates about the crimes. During and after the trail Lynette Fromme and Sandra Good became the two most public voices from the group. Both women were arrested in 1975, Fromme for the attempted assassination of President Ford. Prosecutors argued the 1969 crime spree was done in effort to incite a race war between white and black Americans, although there was very little evidence to suggest that. They also presented to the jury all the murders were carried out under Manson's orders. All the defendants were ultimately convicted. Despite never personally killing anyone themselves Manson, Atkins, and Van Houten were each sentenced to death, along with Krenwinkel, Watson, and Grogan. Watson had committed the bulk of the murders himself. Those death sentences would be commuted to life with the abolishment of the death penalty in 1972. Beausoleil and Davis received life sentences. Kasabian received immunity in exchange for her testimony and corroboration of the prosecution theory. Grogan would be paroled in 1985. Atkins and Manson have since died in prison. In more recent years Manson supporters Craig "Gray Wolf" Hammond and Afton "Star" Burton became the group's face. The A.T.W.A, an acronym of air, trees, water, and animals, and environmental theme has always been the message those closest to Manson have tried to convey and not one of "race war hippie death cult murder" that the media presents. A common misconception is despite constantly being referred to as the "Manson Family," the term itself was actually coined by the lead prosecutor Vincent Bugliosi and was never something those in the group called themselves. There has also been an ongoing argument of guilty and responsibility in the media. Some claim Manson was factually innocent of any wrongdoing, a claim that does have some validity. Whether you believe Manson is innocent or guilty, the case remains one of the most celebrated in American true crime history and modern times.