There's a whole lotta weirdness in this paragraph:
Steve (Clem) Grogan, 66, was in the car for the ride to the LaBianca killings but not pinned to the horrific scene inside the house. He was sentenced to death in 1971 for the killing of Shea but that sentence was later commuted to life. The presiding judge in his case declaring that Grogan was "too stupid and too hopped up on [drugs] to decide anything on his own." Manson prosecutor Vincent Bugliosi said in a 1990s afterword to his book Helter Skelter that Grogan was "by all accounts the most unhinged and spaced out" of the Family members. Grogan's rehabilitation in prison was hailed by authorities and he was paroled in 1985, playing in jazz bands since his release.
There's a whole lotta weirdness in this paragraph:
Steve (Clem) Grogan, 66, was in the car for the ride to the LaBianca killings but not pinned to the horrific scene inside the house. He was sentenced to death in 1971 for the killing of Shea but that sentence was later commuted to life. The presiding judge in his case declaring that Grogan was "too stupid and too hopped up on [drugs] to decide anything on his own." Manson prosecutor Vincent Bugliosi said in a 1990s afterword to his book Helter Skelter that Grogan was "by all accounts the most unhinged and spaced out" of the Family members. Grogan's rehabilitation in prison was hailed by authorities and he was paroled in 1985, playing in jazz bands since his release.
There's a whole lotta weirdness in this paragraph:
Steve (Clem) Grogan, 66, was in the car for the ride to the LaBianca killings but not pinned to the horrific scene inside the house. He was sentenced to death in 1971 for the killing of Shea but that sentence was later commuted to life. The presiding judge in his case declaring that Grogan was "too stupid and too hopped up on [drugs] to decide anything on his own." Manson prosecutor Vincent Bugliosi said in a 1990s afterword to his book Helter Skelter that Grogan was "by all accounts the most unhinged and spaced out" of the Family members. Grogan's rehabilitation in prison was hailed by authorities and he was paroled in 1985, playing in jazz bands since his release.
There's a whole lotta weirdness in this paragraph:
Steve (Clem) Grogan, 66, was in the car for the ride to the LaBianca killings but not pinned to the horrific scene inside the house. He was sentenced to death in 1971 for the killing of Shea but that sentence was later commuted to life. The presiding judge in his case declaring that Grogan was "too stupid and too hopped up on [drugs] to decide anything on his own." Manson prosecutor Vincent Bugliosi said in a 1990s afterword to his book Helter Skelter that Grogan was "by all accounts the most unhinged and spaced out" of the Family members. Grogan's rehabilitation in prison was hailed by authorities and he was paroled in 1985, playing in jazz bands since his release.