Twenty years before he became one of America's most infamous mass murderers, a teenage Charles Manson was an Indianapolis juvenile delinquent with a talent for convincing others that he just needed one more chance to turn his life around.
He was born in Cincinnati on Nov. 12, 1934, to a 16-year-old runaway from West Virginia named Kathleen Maddox. Five years later, Maddox went to prison for robbing a gas station. Charles began accumulating his own criminal record before he was 10. By the time he was 13, he'd been sent to the Gibault School for Boys in Terre Haute. He and another boy escaped and robbed a Peoria, Illinois, supermarket of $2,000. Manson made his way back to Indianapolis, where he was arrested again.
A local priest, the Rev. George Powers, who worked with troubled youths at the Marion County Juvenile Center, tried to help the earnest-seeming 14-year-old, whom he saw as "a very genuine lost little kid." Powers arranged for Manson to serve his time at Boys Town in Nebraska, which was at that time considered the best opportunity for reforming young boys in trouble.
Marion County Juvenile Judge Joseph Hoffman agreed, and the March 7, 1949, Indianapolis News shows a photo of Hoffman and Manson shaking hands under the headline: "Dream Comes True for Lad; He's Going to Boys Town."
But young Charlie Manson was never as sincere or genuine as he could appear. He skipped out of Boys Town a few days after he arrived, and before long, he was back in Indianapolis, getting arrested again. Next, he was sent to the Indiana Boys School in Plainfield, from which he escaped at least twice -- getting into the newspapers again as he accused the school of abuse. The last record of Manson in Indianapolis was a 1956 arrest for a parole violation when he was 21.
Boys Town staff would later recall the scrawny teenager as a con man and "smooth talker" who "had a way of convincing people."
Manson spent most of the next decade in prison, and when he got out in 1967, he started blending in with the hippie culture around San Francisco, and again relied on his captivating personality -- this time to build around him a cult-like following of young people willing to do anything for him. On the nights of Aug. 8-9, 1969, they did, killing actress Sharon Tate and six other people. Manson and several of his followers were found guilty and sentenced to life in prison.
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