Former Charles Manson follows Leslie Van Houten learned her fate this weekend after California Governor Gavin Newsom ruled on whether or not she would be paroled.

Fox News reported that the news was not good for Van Houten, 71, as Newsom reversed the parole board’s recent decision to grant her release. This was the fourth time that a California governor had blocked the release of Van Houten, with Newsom doing so once before and his predecessor Jerry Brown doing so twice.

In explaining his decision to reverse her parole, Newsom said that “evidence shows that she currently poses an unreasonable danger to society if released from prison.”

Rich Pfeiffer, Van Houten’s lawyer, said afterwards that they will be appealing the governor’s decision.

“This reversal will demonstrate to the courts that there is no way Newsom will let her out,” Pfeiffer said. “So they have to enforce the law or it will never be enforced.”

Van Houten is serving a life sentence for her role in the Manson family murders of Los Angeles grocer Leno LaBianca and his wife, Rosemary, in August of 1969. Van Houten was only 19 years-old when she and various other members of Manson’s cult brutally stabbed the couple to death in their home and smeared their blood all over their walls.

The murders of the LaBiancas happened just one day after the Manson family murdered pregnant actress Sharon Tate and four others. Van Houten was not involved in the Tate murders, however, and only participated in the killings of the LaBiancas.

During a parole hearing in 2017, Van Houten talked about how a difficult childhood led to her joining Manson’s cult as a teenager. She said that she was devastated by her parents’ divorce when she was 14, and that she began using drugs soon afterwards. Van Houten added that she ran away from home with a boyfriend when she was 17, and that she fell into Manson’s clutches while she was traveling along the west coast.

Throughout the 1960s, Manson lived on the outskirts of Los Angeles with the “family” he recruited to survive a race war that he claimed would be sparked thanks to random, horrifying murders. Manson died in 2017 at the age of 83 while serving a life sentence for his crimes.

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