Thought I would post a letter from Bobby B. after his 2005 parole hearing and his explanation of the Claire Obscure Art Gallery exhibit and other things as this seems to be a hot topic at the moment:
December
18, 2005
Dear
loved ones and friends,
It
makes my heart ache to have to tell you that I will be unable to join you in
the free world until. . . well maybe until hell freezes over, from the looks of
things. My fifteenth parole hearing since I became eligible for parole in
August of 1976 has ended in a denial of parole for an additional three years.
I
went into the hearing energized and upbeat, but without expectations, focused
on communicating effectively while remaining detached from the outcome. Still,
I could not help feeling somewhat hopeful. After all, Carolyn Hagin, my
attorney, had prepared an impeccable presentation for the hearing. It
incorporated numerous letters from family and friends, all eloquent and
heartfelt in their expressions of support for my release, attesting to my
character, abilities, and contributions to the community. Along with these were
included solid parole plans with secure residence, offers of employment and a
family support network, an excellent work and education history, an extremely
positive psychological evaluation summery, etc. It is doubtful the Board has
ever seen a presentation more strongly indicative and supportive of an
individual’s suitability for release on parole. Despite my resolve to remain
detached for the outcome, throughout the hearing, I could not help feeling
optimistic.
So
when the decision was rendered, and I realized that I will be 61 years old and
have been in prison for 40 years when – as presently scheduled – my suitability
for parole will next be considered, I was stunned. It knocked the wind out of
me.
Ironically,
the hearing actually went very well, for the most part. It was conducted in as
professional a manner as the physical circumstances would allow.
The
hearing panel was cooperative in making a factually accurate, hysteria-free
summery of the events that brought me to prison. I was allowed to speak freely
and honestly and at length about what I think and feel about these experiences,
and what I’ve learned from them. Commissioner Farmer, the chair, was
particularly encouraging and receptive in this process. The Deputy
Commissioner, Ms. Grammer-April, was also professional, asking questions and
listening to the answers in a manner that was helpful. Like the last several
hearings, no reporters from the press were present in the hearing room to make
everyone feel self-conscious. More than any previous hearing, it seemed to me
there was an air of fairness to the proceedings.
Respectful
attention was given to each letter of support individually and (over the L.A.
prosecutor’s objections) I was allowed to comment on the nature and scope of
each relationship. A good deal of attention was also given to some of the
extraordinary endeavors and activities I’ve been involved in, and their
far-reaching benefits.
Things
got a bit dicey when the prosecutor from Los Angeles insinuated a recent
“fearful” letter and attached computer printout from my confidential file into
the hearing process. (That the prosecutor was privy to these items raises some
suspicion that he was somehow involved in how they came to be placed in the
confidential file, because by the rules neither an inmate’s attorney or the representative
from the D.A.’s office is permitted to view the contents of this file without
court order.
The
panel had stated early in the hearing that no confidential information would be
relied upon; later, I heard the prosecutor tell the panel to take a second look
at the confidential documents.
The
letter was barely mentioned and seemed of little concern. The attached printout
obviously raised some eyebrows, however. I could not see it because my hearings
are conducted over telephone between Oregon and California, and I had no “eyes”
in the hearing room because my attorney could not be present (Carolyn will be
giving birth to her second child in mid-January, and is on maternity leave from
her practice). I was able to glean from the comments made that the printout
consisted of a portion of a web page on the Clair Obscure Gallery website, where
some of my artwork has been on display. Of the 36 pieces of my art on display
there, only the few erotic pieces I did many years ago were included on the
printout, apparently. Later I would learn that it also included some mention of
Manson, but I’m still not certain in what context his name appeared in the
printout.
There
were some questions about my having done erotic art. I answered them candidly
and honestly, explaining that they are part of a much larger body of work that
I have produced over these many years. I explained that most of the more
overtly erotic pieces depicted on the printout (the titles were mentioned) were
created for Barbara, originally intended as a private expression of intimacy
between the two of us, and that we decided to display them within the context
of the larger body of work as a retrospective. This seemed to satisfy the
hearing panel, more or less, but I sensed there was some sort of complication.
Due largely to the archaic mechanism by which we were forced to communicate I
was unable to put my finger on what it was until it was too late. I was
literally blind-sided.
Throughout
the hearing, up to this point the specter of the Charles Manson persona loomed
large, like the proverbial elephant in the room that everyone is trying to
avoid talking about. I spoke frankly about my relationship with him when the
topic came up. The panel seemed to appreciate my candor and to respect my
responses. I have reached the point in my life where it has become natural to
simply tell it like it is. Perhaps this is why there had been relatively little
focus on my former association with Manson, and refreshingly more attention on
what has occurred since.
This
was clearly frustrating to the prosecutor from L.A., who was chomping at the
bit to have his say. I surmise that when the hearing was first begun last June
and he had had an opportunity to review a copy of our presentation, all the
letters of support, etc., he realized that his case was weak. Unlike his
relatively low-key presentation last hearing, he came armed for bear when the
hearing was resumed last week.
When
the prosecutor’s turn came, he immediately launched into a vitriolic attack on
my character. It consisted essentially of a scattergun regurgitation of Helter
Skelter misinformation, in addition to some bits that I had never heard before
and seemed to be drawn from thin air, laced with insinuation and innuendo.
Naturally, there was a lot of Manson this and Manson that – intended, of
course, to generate a cloud of suspicion and mistrust and prejudice deriving
from the Manson hysteria. This is a typical tactic, in my experience, and is
usually pretty effective. It serves notice of the potential, if parole is
granted, for political fallout of a particularly unpleasant sort.
In
my summation, which immediately followed, I was able to cut through the
bullshit and clear the air to a considerable degree. But enough damage had been
done to sabotage the hearing. Assuming the elephant in the room had not posed
too great of an obstacle, and if the hearing panel had seriously been
considering granting parole, the hope that it would was dashed at that point. I
had been re-prosecuted yet again, painted with the ugly brush so that I would
be barely recognizable even to myself: an implied threat to the Board that “the
people of California” could get nasty if it dares to release me.
After
a forty-minute recess for deliberation, the hearing was resumed. In rendering
the decision finding me unsuitable for parole, Commissioner Farmer sited, as
usual, the severity of the crime. The essential facts of the case will never
change. I killed a man for reasons that seem, and were, trivial. I forfeited
any say in how much punishment is enough, so I must accept, along with all of
the other consequences for my actions, the repeated recitation of what I did. I
have no one to blame for the choices I’ve made, and their consequences, but
myself.
Then
came the part informing me that the panel had determined that an additional
period of three years was needed to evaluate my readiness for parole. He stated
that it would be unreasonable to assume that sufficient change could occur in
less time than that.
At
this point Commissioner Farmer broke with formality and explained his reasons
for this decision. I was impressed by his candor. Even though what he was
telling me was devastating, I was appreciative of his willingness to be up
front and open in telling me his reasoning for determining that 36 years of
imprisonment was not enough. This was a first.
The
hinge pin was the computer printout. I thought that maybe the erotic art was
going to be a sticking point, but I was wrong about that. Commissioner Farmer
carefully stated that he was not a prude, that while some people might consider
explicit adult fantasy art to be pornography (as the prosecutor had suggested),
he did not. It was not the nature of the art that bothered him . . .
No,
what disturbed the hearing panel, he said, is that as late as 2005, this very
year, I had contracted with an agent or gallery owner to allow my artwork to be
displayed and marketed to the public in a manner that exploited the notoriety
of my crime and the Manson connection to promote sales of my art and music (the
Dreamways CD). This, he said, demonstrated a “serious lapse of judgment” that
required a longer period of confinement so that there would be adequate time to
allow the Board to evaluate my “ability to maintain a distance from Manson” in
the public eye, and refrain from involvement with such displays in the future.
He mentioned – again, with surprising candor – that he was concerned about
possible repercussions from the governor and the public if he were to vote to
parole me under the present circumstances.
I
wanted to scream STOPP!!!!!!! I wanted to have an opportunity to tell him that
he had made a mistake, to explain that the conclusion he had arrived at was
based on evidence that was faulty due to omission of the original context, that
was “cooked” to mislead. I wanted an opportunity to present evidence of my own
to demonstrate that there had been no attempt to capitalize on the Manson
connection or my crime as a strategy for promoting the Dreamways series art
show, and any other work I have created.
I
have been adamant in my communications with everyone who has assisted me in
publishing my work that it be allowed to succeed or fail on its own merits. I
have, in all cases, asked them to avoid making public references to the
criminal part of my past except as necessary to meet the most basic
requirements of ethical disclosure (it would be criminal of me to not be honest
and divulge that this element exists). For the gallery show of my art I
authorized the use of an “artist bio” that summarizes my life from birth to the
present, and includes a very brief passing mention of Manson amid comments on
the most essential circumstances of my imprisonment these many years; included
with the intention of minimally meeting the basic requirements of ethical disclosure.
I will provide each of you with a copy of this brief bio. Unless there is some
other mention of Manson in relation to me on the gallery’s website that I am
unaware of, it was this document that the hearing panel based their decision to
find me unsuitable for parole.
Anyway,
I had to resist the temptation to scream out during the recitation of the
hearing decision and beg for an opportunity to clarify matters before the door
was slammed in my face. By then it was too late. Once the parole hearing had
gone into recess for deliberations, the opportunity to present additional
information or speak for myself had passed. Mr. Farmer seemed pained by the
decision he had been forced to arrive at. I waited for him to finish talking
out of politeness, then hung up the phone.
So
there you have it: the whole story, of the best and worst parole hearing I’ve
ever had.
Where
to from here?
I
have spoken with Carolyn, and we have discussed all of this. We will be taking
the outcome of the hearing on appeal in superior court as soon as the decision
becomes final, which will occur at around the time that Carolyn returns to work
from maternity leave, about 120 days from now.
There
are more than adequate grounds for a successful appeal. There are at least
several glaring errors, both substantive and technical. Not least of which is
that the document central to my being denied parole, the computer printout from
the website, was the one document that I was not provided a copy of prior to
the hearing. There was no way that I could have reviewed the information in
advance of the hearing and prepared an appropriate answer to it. And in fact I
could not even see the document while the hearing was taking place, making it
virtually impossible to have formed an adequate response on the fly.
This
violates one of the Board of Prison Terms’ most fundamental rules: that the
prisoner be provided with copies of all documentation that the hearing panel
will be relying on far enough in advance of the hearing (10-30 days is typical)
to allow for reasonable preparation. That this basic requirement was not met is
inexcusable.
Ordinarily
the goal of an appeal is to get a new hearing. It makes more sense in this case
to reopen the hearing that just took place. I want to keep the record established
in this hearing intact and add to it my answer to the information that was
insinuated into the hearing process midway. I may (if Carolyn agrees) write a
letter to Commissioner Farmer, gambling on the off chance that he will act to
reopen the hearing on his own volition when I point out to him the nature and
magnitude of the mistake that has been made in the handling of my hearing. The
BPT is not known for revisiting its own decisions without being forced to by an
order from the courts, but I figure it’s worth a shot.
The
parole board has recently eliminated the direct administrative appeal process.
This is a good thing, as it was nearly always a useless waste of time. Seeking
remedy in court is now the only available recourse in most cases.
In
order to pursue this course of action, Carolyn will need to be paid her
reasonable fees for preparing the writ and making court appearances. I do not
have adequate funds to cover these costs. I will state this plainly and without
shame: You can count on me to stand my ground and do my part in the fight, but
I need some help. If you are in a position to make a contribution to cover some
of my attorney’s fees for what’s ahead, and you would like to help in this way,
you may send funds to her in my behalf to the following address.
Carolyn
M. Hagin, Attorney
Pier
Five Law Offices
506
Broadway
San
Francisco, CA 94133
Phone:
415-986-5591
There
is another way you can help me to meet this challenge, one that may well be
even more important than helping me to get my case into court.
I
am faced with a very serious dilemma, and I must soon make a decision that will
undoubtedly determine the direction of my life from this point forward.
Ultimately the course of action (or non-action) I choose will be my decision alone,
but before I make that decision I would very much appreciate having the benefit
of your venerable collective wisdom.
Before
me are two paths, each very different in what they demand of me and all of the
people closest to me, each with its own set of possible advantages and
potential perils.
Path
A:
If
I choose this path I would comply with the parole board’s recent
recommendations to avoid any activity that may even remotely be construed as an
attempt to promote my work, or myself or to profit by it, on the basis of
criminal notoriety such as my long-ago association with Manson. Effectively
this means that I would have to curtail all efforts to publish my work or
publicly communicate directly with the world at large – to pull my music
releases off the market, to stop showing and selling my art to the public, to
decline interviews, to suspend any plans to publish my first book, to pull down
the websites and cease my ongoing public dialogue. It means that I would have
to hunker down, keep a low profile, maintain good prison behavior and work
record, and make myself as invisible to the public as possible.
Among
the possible benefits of choosing this route are that with the passage of time
I may shake the “Manson cooties” enough for the L.A. district attorney’s office
to lose interest in opposing my release. By demonstrating my willingness to
comply with the parole board’s recommendations over a long enough period of
time, they may reward me with my heart’s desire – to be with my beloved Barbara
in the home she has made for us, enjoying the company of our children and
grandchildren, and be generally engaged in life as a free man.
The
potential pitfalls of this course of action (or rather, inaction) include the
distinct possibility that the Manson specter will continue to morph unchecked
into ever more bizarre mutations, and that, correspondingly, resistance from
the D.A.’s office to releasing anyone associated with Manson will be
insurmountable to me and to the parole board as well. There will be little to
show for the years creatively and artistically wasted, sacrificed in the hope
of a result for which there are no guarantees of any payoff, ever. And if I am
released, may be just in time to gulp a few deep breaths of freedom from prison
before I die.
This
may seem an extreme response, but I see no way to avoid any potential risk with
halfway measures. In practice, ironically, the Manson association has proven to
be more of a liability than an asset when displaying and offering my work
publicly. Still, there is bound to be someone who will adopt the position that
my work could not possibly be of interest to anyone on its own legitimate value
as art. No matter how conscientious I am (as I have been) in avoiding the
appearance of exploiting some misbegotten notoriety as an expedient for
marketing my work, there’s just no sure-fire way to avoid being perceived as
pandering to people who are interested in that sort of thing. Perception, not
fact – much less truth – defines what is real for most people.
The
workaround of publishing under an assumed name is simply absurd. The style is
distinctive and already known under my own name. And besides, it is conceivable
that I could be held liable for fraud if I fail to disclose the true origins of
the work that I publish.
So
I’m stuck with what appears to be an either/or choice. As one who is an artist
by nature, I’m sickened by the prospect that the price of my release from
prison may be to stop expressing who I am for an extended period of time.
Path
B:
The
alternative path would be to stay the course.
Years
ago, when I consented to do the interview with Michael Moynihan for Seconds
magazine, I made a covenant with myself in relation to the world. After many
years of keeping a low public profile and getting much stagnation and status
quo in my life as a result, I resolved to open myself to scrutiny to a degree
that I had not previously permitted, to reveal not only those parts that I’m
proud of, that it pleases me to show, but to shine a light into the dark shadows
where the shameful parts are as well. Essentially, I resolved to allow myself
to be an open book. I knew the risks, but it seemed to me that if I wanted the
world to open to me, I had to be willing to be open to the world. Until last
week I had no reason to doubt that my decision to begin this process had been
the right one.
If
I decide to continue along this path it would be to do so with even greater
dedication and resolve, putting myself out there in the world through my art,
my music, my writings, and being willing to answer, honestly and forthrightly,
any reasonably intelligent question posed to me by individuals or responsible
public media.
What
purpose and meaning there may ever be to my being here may be to stand alone in
the center of my own essential goodness and surrender to allowing the true
nature of who I am to radiate outward in ever widening ripples. This is my one
life, it is finite, and I become increasingly aware of this as I enter my
sunset years. What meager gifts I have to offer are nothing if I don’t give
them.
At
the very least, following this path would permit me to add to a legacy of
creative expression and some modest redeeming services. I want to be able to
give this to my loved ones, to my sons and daughters and to my grandchildren,
and to anyone who might benefit thereby. I want to be able to leave a legacy
good enough, responsible enough, and substantive enough to relegate “Manson
killer” to a mere footnote too insignificant to negatively impact their lives.
Part
of this legacy would be the effects Between Love and Fear, my book-in-progress,
could eventually have on the social conscience. If I’m a good storyteller, and
fearless in the telling, this book might initiate the sort of self-searching
community dialogue that could result in a more enlightened understanding. What
I want, what I hope, is that this work will help to ignite a beam intense
enough to bore right to the malignant heart of the imbroglio spawned by Helter
Skelter, and sink its gratuitous influence on western culture (it would be a
travesty to allow that literary monstrosity to remain the historic record of
those tragic events).
Among
the potential benefits is the possibility that these efforts could bring about
a change of heart on the part of the parole board, that they might even forgive
me for defying the recommendation Commissioner Farmer emphatically made to me
at the conclusion of the hearing. Stranger things have happened.
Which
points up Path B’s only obvious downside – running the risk of never being granted
parole, and dying in prison. It is a frightening prospect. How do I justify
choosing this path to Barbara, who has invested 24 years of her life in me (our
anniversary is today, December 18th) in the hope that I would one day come home
and be a full partner and companion to her? How can I justify this to you? Or
for that matter, to myself? Choosing this path means being willing to give up
all my dreams of being out there with you. It’s a heavy price to pay to fulfill
some vague, unmeasurable higher purpose and to create some worldly legacy.
Path
C, the middle path, appears to be a dead end and not a viable option. There’s
really not a whole lot of leeway here. If we manage to get the hearing reopened
this could change, but as things stand now it’s pretty much an all or nothing
proposition. If I try to travel a middle path neither objective can be reached
and I will likely find myself profoundly miserable and abandoned by everyone.
Like
I said earlier, it’s a serious dilemma. I’m at a crossroads, and it’s hard to
see the best way to go because I’m so close to it. I intend to approach my
decision cautiously. Each of you is invested to some degree in all this, and
therefore you each have a voice in the process of my making this decision.
Please give me the benefit of your perspectives and insights.
To
each of you, all of you, I remain grateful beyond words for your love and
support. When the world and my future seem most bleak, it is this, your light,
that sustains me.
Yours
faithfully,
Bobby
12 comments:
Thanks Kimchi!
The ghost of Kimchi strikes again!!!! LOL
Reading BB's letter seems to convey his impression that a parole board member or prosecution member had inserted mention of his porno art and derailed his parole but there is a powerful, underlying, shadowy ambience that exists in the background. Perhaps the hand of Debra Tate reached in and intimidated everyone? I think she has a lot more power than anyone realizes. No one gets out without her permission and that isn't ever going to happen. Her power even reaches into Oregon.
thanks, kimchi
Ahhh, poor Bobby.
Throughout the hearing, up to this point the specter of the Charles Manson persona loomed large, like the proverbial elephant in the room that everyone is trying to avoid talking about.
Well, there's an old saying: If you sleep with pigs, you wake up in the mud.
After a forty-minute recess for deliberation, the hearing was resumed. In rendering the decision finding me unsuitable for parole, Commissioner Farmer sited, as usual, the severity of the crime. The essential facts of the case will never change. I killed a man for reasons that seem, and were, trivial. I forfeited any say in how much punishment is enough, so I must accept, along with all of the other consequences for my actions, the repeated recitation of what I did. I have no one to blame for the choices I’ve made, and their consequences, but myself.
Yeah, he killed Gary for no reason. No drug burn, he made that up along with several other stories.
You would think that a guy that was up for parole wouldn't be drawing dirty pics of kids.
But we're talking about an egotistical asshole that thinks he can just kill a guy for no reason at all, go back and laugh because maggots are eating him and drive his stolen car up north.
Yeah, keep dreaming Bob!
Bobby made up that story about Gary selling drugs because he thought the jury would feel sorry for him.
After all, would a jury feel sorry for you if you just killed a guy because he wouldn't hand over money for no reason, or would they feel sorry for you if you killed him because he was a drug dealer?
I guess Bobby thought if he made the victim into an asshole, the jury would feel sorry for him.
Sob!
It seems that Bobby is an articulate man with a good language skills. OR...maybe he dictated it to someone who translated.
Maybe Bobby just claps his hands together and spits: "prrrrrrrrrrrrhhhhhhhhhhhh" like Dr. Hfuhruhurr says.
I just wanted to give a shout out to www.cielodrive.com. This is a tremendous place to research and read. And I love the way Cielo just gives the news without any opinion.
That's exactly what Bret G. used to do. It was phenomenal. You could just go sit and read for hours and just absorb it. And he never gave his opinion on anything.
Unlike me. HA HA.
Thanks Cielo!!
Okay I'll leave y'all with a few words from the Dali Lama (Revised):
Our prime purpose in this life is to help others. And if you can't help them, at least don't hurt them.
If it smells like a lemon, don't buy it.
Some people aren't worth messing with.
You don't need any more encyclopedias.
If you meet up with a bunch of dirty hippies, dust your feet off, and move on.
If you meet a man named Manson, run like hell.
And if people come to your house and use signals like lighters in the window, run them off like you're startin' a lawn mower.
And in the words of the immortal Dalai, I'll say goodnight....
"G'Night Jugdish!"
Mary Bruner changed her testimony yet she was vital to prosecuting Beausoleil.
I'm not saying Beausoleil isn't guilty as hell but as a matter of law or principle I strongly object to using the testimony of any witness that waffles. She should have been disallowed as a witness.
Over the decades the story Beausoleil tells of Hinman selling him bad mescaline is the only motive that has not been changed since we first heard it.
Beausoleil told two stories though. He waffled too. Nobody knows 100% whether Hinman was killed for bad mescaline or inheritance money he never had.
This is why the prosecution does not have to prove motive. Witnesses and defendants lie and are quite often mistaken. Some witnesses are intimidated into lying. Some witnesses are bribed to lie. Some witnesses are insane.
Hi Katie! Would like to email you sometime
Yes thanks Candy. I look forward to it!
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