Catherine Share
Catherine Louise Share | |
---|---|
Born |
Paris, France | December 10, 1942
Known for | former member of Charles Manson's "Family" |
Catherine Louise "Gypsy" Share (born December 10, 1942) is a former member of Charles Manson's "Family".[1][2][3] She was convicted of one or more crimes and served five years in prison. Following her release in 1975, she disassociated herself from the "Family" and sought surgical treatment to remove the "X" that she and others had burned and carved into her forehead on Manson's orders during his trial.
Early life
Share was born in Paris to a Hungarian violinist father and a German mother. Her parents were both members of the French Resistance movement during World War II, and both committed suicide when their daughter was two. Share's maternal grandmother died in a ghetto in Eastern Europe and both of Share's paternal grandparents died in concentration camps. Before her parents' suicides, her father made arrangements with a French lawyer who was secretly helping the underground to plan his daughter's escape.[4]
Through her father's arrangements, Share was adopted by a French woman who later married an American psychologist and they relocated to Hollywood, California. Share graduated from Hollywood High School in 1961.[4] Share's childhood in America was, according to Share, a relatively happy one until her adoptive mother was diagnosed with cancer and committed suicide when Share was 16. Share then lived with her by then blind adoptive father.[5] After her adoptive father remarried, Share dropped out of college and began wandering California, immersed in the 1960s counterculture. In 1965, Catherine Share cut a single for the Autumn label in San Francisco who were already riding high with the Beau Brummels. The recording, under the name of Charity Shayne, was issued in the UK in the 2000s as a track on the Ace/Big Beat CD "Someone to Love".
Involvement with the Manson Family
In early 1967, Share met Bobby Beausoleil on the set of a softcore porn movie entitled Ramrodder. She eventually began an affair with the aspiring musician and, after meeting Charles Manson through Beausoleil, moved to the "Family"'s location on Spahn's Ranch, where the other Family members nicknamed her "Gypsy".[1] She was not directly involved in the Tate-LaBianca murders but would testify at the 1970 trial that Family member Linda Kasabian was the mastermind behind the murders in an effort to absolve Manson of any involvement in the crimes.[5]
In 1971, Share, along with four other Manson followers: Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme, Dennis Rice, Steve "Clem" Grogan and Ruth Ann "Ouisch" Moorehouse were charged with attempted murder after they devised a plot to murder former fellow Manson Family member Barbara Hoyt to prevent her from testifying for the prosecution against Manson, Susan Atkins, Leslie van Houten and Patricia Krenwinkel during the Tate/LaBianca murder trial. Moorehouse was to lure Hoyt to Honolulu, Hawaii so that she would be unable to testify. If Hoyt could not be convinced in Hawaii to not testify, Moorehouse was to kill her.[6] On September 9, 1971, as Hoyt was preparing to board her flight back to California, Moorehouse bought Hoyt a hamburger and laced it with a multi-dose of LSD then left her and flew back to California. Hoyt survived the attempt on her life and Share and the others were initially charged with attempted murder. The charge was later reduced to conspiracy to dissuade a witness from testifying. Share, Fromme, Rice and Grogan served 90-day sentences at the Los Angeles County Jail. Moorehouse never served her sentence, as she failed to appear at the sentencing hearing.[6]
While incarcerated Share gave birth to a son, Phoenix Son on January 5, 1971. The baby was taken from Share and placed into foster care. For years Share refused to confirm the paternity of her son, although refuting that Manson was the father. After her release from prison, she was reunited with her son and confirmed that Steve "Clem" Grogan was the father.[7]
On August 21, 1971, Share, accompanied by her then-husband Kenneth Como and Family members Mary Brunner, Dennis Rice, Charles Lovett, and Larry Bailey drove a white van to a Hawthorne, California Western Surplus Store. Once inside the store, the group brandished guns and ordered the store patrons and clerks to lie on the ground. They then went about taking 143 rifles from the premises, loading them into their van, while a store clerk managed to trip the silent alarm. The group had previously held up a liquor store.[8][8] When a police squad car arrived, Share opened fire on the vehicle, putting a hole in the top corner of the windshield. Police gunfire injured Brunner, Share and Bailey.[8][9]
Brunner and Share were convicted of one or more crimes and incarcerated at the special unit created at California Institution for Women as a death row for Leslie Van Houten, Susan Atkins, and Patricia Krenwinkel sentenced to be executed for at the main Manson trial. Share served five years for her participation in the Hawthorne shootout and was released in 1975. Following her release from prison, Share disassociated herself from the "Family" and sought surgical treatment to remove the "X" that she and others had burned and carved into her forehead on Manson's orders during his trial.
After the Manson Family
In 1979, Share was convicted in absentia in the state of California on six counts of mail fraud, interstate transportation of stolen property, and fraudulent use of a credit card. Share had initially fled to Canada and then returned to the United States to serve out her sentence.[4] In July 2006, Share returned to the remnants of Spahn Ranch to be interviewed about her role in the Manson Family for the series Our Generation on The History Channel.[10] In 2007, Share was interviewed about her involvement with the Manson Family by forensic psychologist Dr. Michael Stone for the American television series Most Evil on the Investigation Discovery network. Today, Share is a self-proclaimed Christian who has a close relationship with her son and speaks out against cults.[4]
References
- 1 2 Catherine Louise Share, Evidence: The Story of the Manson Family and Their Victims, CieloDrive.com
- ↑ Manson Cultist Tries New Life, Associated Press, Los Angeles, April 15, 1975
- ↑ FBI Seeks Ex-Manson Clan Member Sacramento Bee, March 1, 1979
- 1 2 3 4 Manson2Jesus
- 1 2 Crime/Punishment
- 1 2 Bugliosi, Vincent: Helter Skelter, 1974. pg. 601.
- ↑ Crime Library: The Manson Family
- 1 2 3 Sanders, Ed. The Family. 2002. pg. 474
- ↑ Crime/Punishment – Mary Brunner
- ↑ CharlieManson.com
External links
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