Escolar Documentos
Profissional Documentos
Cultura Documentos
77-755RC
RECORDED INTERVIEWS WITH
LESLIE VAN HOUTEN
ON NOVEMBER 26, 1969 and NOVEMBER 28, 1969
AT SYBIL BRAND INSTITUTE
QUESTIONING BY:
SERGEANT MICHAEL J. McGANN, 10329
ROBBERY-HOMICIDE DIVISION
LOS ANGELES POLICE DEPARTMENT
TAPE TRANSCRIBED BY:
JENNIE CRISCI
ALICE MacARTHUR
VIRGINIA M. DUMAS
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, NOVEMBER 26, 1969
-o0oSERGEANT McGANN:
(Unintelligible) weve got all kinds of goodies (Unintelligible)
weve got all kinds of goodies (Unintelligible) Leslie, is your last name Sankston?
Is that your true name?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah.
SERGEANT McGANN:
What other names have you used?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Ah the last one was Louella Alexandria.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Louella Alexandria?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah.
And ah ah It was either Linda ah Alexander and either either Linda Linda
something Owens or (Unintelligible) something I dont remember (Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN:
It was it was a few, huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Every arrest (Unintelligible) different ones.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Right now, youre going under the name of Leslie L-e-s-l-i-e?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
l-i-e. Uh-huh. Marie Sankston.
SERGEANT McGANN:
S-a-n-
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yes. k-s-t-o-n.
SERGEANT McGANN:
And that is your true name?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah. Umhum.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay. Okay.
11/26/69.
Okay.
Well, whats the other names, now, youve used?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Alexandria.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Ah Thats the last name?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Whats the first name you used with that one?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
L-o-u-e-l-l-a.
SERGEANT McGANN:
L-o-u-e-
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
-l-l-a.
SERGEANT McGANN:
l-a.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Right.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Louella, huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Uh-huh Alexandria.
SERGEANT McGANN:
And any others?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah, Louise Susan Alexandria.
SERGEANT McGANN:
S-u-s-e-n?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
a-n. S-u-s-a-n. Susan.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Alexander?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Alexandria?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Alexander.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You like that Alexander, huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
It just kept popping in my mind.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Anything else? Any others?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah.
But, I dont know if it was Leslie or Linda.
It might have been Linda, Linda Owens.
SERGEANT McGANN:
O-w-e-n-s?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
That was (Unintelligible) yes.
O-w-e-n-s.
That was sometime in either
Well, that was during the Spahns Ranch raid.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Thats the name you used when you were arrested up there at
Spahn, huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay.
Any others?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
No, not that I can think of.
SERGEANT McGANN:
What do they
Whats your nickname?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Lou.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Lou?
Just L-ou, huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Unhum.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Do you use Leslie?
Is that one of your
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Umhum.
SERGEANT McGANN:
name they call you (Unintelligible) people normally at the
Ranch?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Umhum.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Barker and Spahn, do they call you Leslie, when they
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah.
But, more towards the end, I was Lou.
But, a lot of the times, I was Leslie.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Thats just L-e-s-l-i-e?
ah
But, then, again, we need we need someone that to fill in the spaces that we dont know
about.
So, we might start out as when you first got to the Spahn Ranch.
When did you first go up there?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
About This is this is where it gets rough, trying to remember.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, if you can only just
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Its been Its been over a year, but I couldnt tell you the exact
So, I figured it was a pretty good deal cause ah San Francisco was horrible.
SERGEANT McGANN:
What was the problem in San Francisco?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Oh Shoosh Filth.
SERGEANT McGANN:
It was filthy, huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah. (Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN:
When you say we, did you go down with anyone?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
No. Huh-huh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Howd you get down here?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
I hitchhiked.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Hitchhiked?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Umhum.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Did you get a ride all the way down, or
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah.
SERGEANT McGANN:
One ride?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah.
Its pretty easy to get one ride from San Francisco to L. A.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Hum.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
At least, it was (Unintelligible) for a while.
SERGEANT McGANN:
So, anyway, you arrive down to the Ranch.
And what happened when you got there?
What was the What were you to do?
What what was your duties there?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Oh, I cooked and cleaned up.
I didnt really do too much.
SERGEANT McGANN:
So, then, the girls were kind of just ah more or less girl
friends for all of the guys who were there.
Right?
Kind of you know
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah.
SERGEANT McGANN:
just
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
There wasnt really
SERGEANT McGANN:
everybody kind of
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
much going on.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Yeah.
Well, apparently, Charlie and ah Tex He was there when you got there, was he?
Charles Montgomery?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Ah I really dont remember if he was there or not.
SERGEANT McGANN:
When do you first remember him showing up at the place?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
I didnt really meet him until about hum hum maybe
Christmas.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Not too long after you arrived, then, at the Ranch?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Yeah.
And how did he arrive?
How did he come about that he arrived there?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
I dont I dont remember.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You just remember him being there, huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah.
I just remember I saw him there.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Who el-
What other men were there that you remember when you got there?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Ah a guy by the name of Paul and ah
All of the guys that were there are gone.
Paul and there was a guy named (Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN:
Was Clem there?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah.
SERGEANT McGANN:
He was there when you got there?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Umhum.
SERGEANT McGANN:
How about Bruce Davis?
Was he there when you got there?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Huh-huh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
When did he come around?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Oh, not until hum probably Summer.
SERGEANT McGANN:
During the Summer, he showed up, huh?
What part of the Summer?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
I dont remember.
I think it was towards the beginning
SERGEANT McGANN:
Towards the beginning of the Summer.
Thats be 69. Summer of 69 of this year.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Im pretty sure.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay.
How about Bill Vance?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
He would come and go.
In fact, I dont really ever remember him actually living there.
SERGEANT McGANN:
When did you first see him?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
When did I first (Unintelligible) him.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Umhum.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Probably around early Spring early Spring.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Early Spring.
All right.
How about ah
Now, the girls that were there, all the girls you were arrested with, in addition to to ah
some of the guys
I thought there was a motorcycle club that came up there, too, during the Summer of this year.
Right?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Umhum.
SERGEANT McGANN:
What were what were their names, any ones that you
remember?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
I dont remember none of the names, but I remember it was ah
Straight Satans.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Straight Satans?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Umhum.
SERGEANT McGANN:
That was the name of the group?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Umham.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Different ones you know would
come up (Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN:
Umhum.
Well, as I understand it, the girls were to ah
There was a lot of weapons up there, a lot of guns and a lot of knives and stuff.
And the girls were to hide these weapons and, more or less, take charge of some of the weapons,
not all of the weapons.
Some of them were in an arsenal and some of them were taken by the girls.
Apparently, the ones that they used in crimes and such would be taken down to some place and
buried by the girls.
Is that pretty much right?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
I didnt know about any weapons.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You never did any of that?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Huh-huh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Hum?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
No way.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay.
What weapons up there can you tell me about?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
There was ah
I dont remember you know names of rifles and stuff like that.
I never learned them.
But, there was ah
Whew One time, there was about six rifles.
There was a machine gun and thats about all I remember as far as the you know
(Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN:
What about handguns?
There were some handguns, werent there?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Ah I dont remember seeing any.
See, in the in the bunk house, they had a rack.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Umhum.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
There were about six rifles there.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay.
Well, Charlie had a handgun thats been described to me people seeing it and such.
Do you remember that handgun that he practiced with?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Huh-huh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You dont remember any handgun at all (Unintelligible)
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Well
SERGEANT McGANN:
(Unintelligible) that he practiced with out there, shooting at ah
barrels and (Unintelligible)
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
No.
But, I remember ah one time, a couple of Straight Satans came over and they brought over
guns.
SERGEANT McGANN:
What? Handguns?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Middle of July until the beginning of August, huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Around in there.
So ah you know I was sort of walking around in a
For about four days, I was completely out.
Id wake up just enough to go to the restroom and Id black out again.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Umhum.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
And then ah all the rest of the time, I had to stay in bed.
I couldnt walk.
So, I really dont know too much of what was going on.
I was in the back farmhouse you know
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
So, I really dont know. I dont really remember.
But, the knives, there were all kinds of them.
Some with ivory handles you know some with (Unintelligible) around them.
There were some with blades that went this way, and some with blades that went straight up
all kinds.
SERGEANT McGANN:
All kinds of knives, huh?
How about the ah
Do you have any idea (Unintelligible) what a clasp knife is?
A clasp knife is one that closes
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Umhum.
SERGEANT McGANN:
like a pocketknife, only it would be
The one Im referring to is larger than the normal pocketknife.
Its about this long and it folds up you know
In total length, it would be about maybe ten inches, with a blade of maybe four or five, and the
handle four or five inches. And it would fold up.
Do you (Unintelligible) do you recall seeing a knife like that up there?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
There was one really big one.
Is that what you mean?
It was it was like a regular pocketknife you know but it was bigger. 25
It was heavy.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Umhum.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
And it was hard to pull out
SERGEANT McGANN:
I see.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
(Unintelligible) pull it out.
That could have been it
SERGEANT McGANN:
Umhum.
Whose knife was that?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Hum I dont remember.
I dont think anybody really ever claimed anything as you know theirs.
SERGEANT McGANN:
But, you recall seeing one of those, something like Ive described
to you?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yes.
SERGEANT McGANN:
How about bayonets?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
You mean, guns with the thing that sticks up on it?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Yeah, the bayonet sticks on the end of the rifle.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Right.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
for the road.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Do you know
Do you remember Bob Beausoleil?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Hum?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Do you remember Sadie Mae?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Umhum.
I saw her at breakfast today.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Oh, did you?
Talk to her?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
No, a little hellos
SERGEANT McGANN:
Did you ah
Mary Brunner? Remember her?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Uh-huh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Sometime in the very first of
August, do you remember when Bobby and Sadie and Mary Brunner left (Unintelligible) the
Ranch?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Hum towards that time, a lot of the people were you know
going out and coming back in little groups of
SERGEANT McGANN:
And who would that be?
Who who would be the groups?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Oh, I dont
SERGEANT McGANN:
Who made up the groups?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
oh
SERGEANT McGANN:
You know Who?
What individuals made up particular groups that you remember going out?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Well, I remember I went out with ah ah a girl named
Kathy.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Kathy?
Which Kathy is that?
Theres a couple of them.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
A blonde.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Which blonde is that? One of the blondes that came down with
you?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
She was released.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Would that be Lutesinger?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
No.
I dont remember her last name.
But, we went out for a while and ah
SERGEANT McGANN:
Oh, I know who you mean.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
I dont know her last name.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Marnie Reeves?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Huh-huh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Is that that the Katie the Ka- Thats Katie.
Diane Blustein?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Huh-huh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Is that the Kathy youre talking about?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Huh-huh (Unintelligible) try Patty.
Look under there under Patty.
SERGEANT McGANN:
P-a-t-t-y?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Uh-huh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well you know
Oh, yeah, Baldwin. Linda Linda (Unintelligible) Baldwin.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
No.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Is that the right one?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
No.
This one was Kathy alias Patty, or Patty alias Kathy.
Im not too sure.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You gals used so many names, I dont know.
Ive probably got it here, but I dont know if I have it listed that way (Unintelligible) anyway,
you and Patty, also known as Kathy, went out.
that you overheard between Charlie and and and ah Bobby and Sadie and Mary?
There may have been different conversations between the the four of them.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Well, I never heard any actual conversations.
But, I had heard that the three of them went to visit Gary.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Gary who?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Hinman.
But, I
SERGEANT McGANN:
Oh, Gary Hinman.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
didnt know his name at that time. They just went to visit
SERGEANT McGANN:
You overheard
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
some guy in Topanga Canyon (Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN:
named Gary, huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah, and I didnt know him, so I didnt pay no attention.
SERGEANT McGANN:
All right.
Well, then, they went up there and they they had
Apparently, they tried to get his money.
I believe he picked them up at the Ranch.
Is that right?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Well, I wouldnt know.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You dont know, huh?
You have no way of knowing this?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Huh-huh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You you never heard any conversation or mentioned that or
anything?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Huh-huh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, you know that Sadie and Bobby and and Mary, they went
up there to Hinman and they kind of knocked him around a little bit trying to have him tell where
the money was.
You know about that?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Well, I heard that they that they had killed him.
Thats what the detectives told me.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Yeah.
But, I want to know what you heard about it, what you, yourself, heard about it.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Oh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
I mean, from the Ranch, from the people at the Ranch, from that
group.
I dont care what the coppers told you.
But, I want to know what the
But, I want to know what the what the group said.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Nothing really. I really
They came back and ah then we went up to the cave; but, I never It was
Nothing was ever really said about it.
Because, when they came back, the police were going to come were coming to the house, so
we went up to a cave.
Then, after that, everything just sort of spread apart.
SERGEANT McGANN:
(Unintelligible)
We dont know if its a VW bus or not, but did you ever see that thing again?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Ah I dont think so.
SERGEANT McGANN:
And Bobby just said he was going away.
Did you see him drive off in the in the compact car, the white car?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
I didnt actually see him drive off, but I remember he said ah
Get me a sleeping bag.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Umhum.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
And it There was
He had this eagle that wed been embroidering for him.
And he said:
And get me that.
Because I had been embroidering on it until he was going somewhere.
So, I got him the sleeping bag and I gave him the eagle.
And then, he just took off.
He left the farmhouse.
But, I didnt actually see him drive off.
SERGEANT McGANN:
But, the next thing you knew, the the small compact car was
gone?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
I didnt see it after that.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You didnt see it after that.
And it had been there before that?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Id been sitting out front that night.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Was Bobby a pretty nice guy?
Apparently, all the
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah.
SERGEANT McGANN:
most all the girls thought Bobby was a pretty nice guy.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Very easy to get along with and kind of nice to the girls and all
that stuff.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah.
He was real nice.
SERGEANT McGANN:
He was, huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Now about the other guys?
Were they pretty nice to the girls, or were they kind of kind of hard-nosed?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
No.
They all treated us real good.
SERGEANT McGANN:
They all treated you good, huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Sure they did, because, well, we did everything for them.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, Bobby must have been kind of a favorite, though, because
most most of the girls that Ive talked to kind of thought that Bobby was a little
bit nicer than the other guy other guys a little bit.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Hum yeah.
SERGEANT McGANN: Did you think that, too?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: They were all pretty much the same.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Pretty much the same.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Hum I heard something about that Bobby had called.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Whod you hear that from?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: I dont remember.
There was a lot of easy talk going on in the kitchen.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Was it Manson that had answered the call from Bobby?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: I dont know.
SERGEANT McGANN:
I mean or Charlie left for a while.
Right?
I think Clem (Unintelligible) did, too.
Charlie left the Ranch for a little bit, then, after that phone call?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: It was a big secret while
SERGEANT McGANN:
No. Well, but, I mean, he went to the Hinman place
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Oh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
for a little bit?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: He could have, but I I couldnt say for sure.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Because you didnt hear any conversation about it at all?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Huh-huh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
How about any
Did he speak of writing on the walls at the Hinman place after he got back?
I mean, you were up there with Sadie and Mary Brunner, after the deal went down.
What did Sadie and Mary have to say about it?
I mean, they didnt just come back there and and keep quiet about it.
They said (Unintelligible)
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah, they did.
SERGEANT McGANN:
What did they say?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
No.
They were pretty quiet, maybe a little jumpy.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Whatd they say on it?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Nothing that I can remember.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, now, youre spoofing me a little bit on that, Leslie, because I
think they talked about it.
And I know that
Im pretty sure they did, in fact, because Ive got some people that told me they did.
But, what what do you remember about it?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Hum well, not much.
They didnt say hardly nothing.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay.
Tell me what they did say about it.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: They didnt say anything that they did to Gary.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay.
Whatd they say after that?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: I didnt ask.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, but they
You didnt have to ask. Theyd be telling.
I know that, now.
UNIDENTIFIED VOICE: (Unintelligible) for sure (Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN:
They were just
They were kind of talking about it.
Now, I know they were.
So, I know you were there and I know you heard something.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
You probably know it already, too.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, Id like to hear it from you.
UNIDENTIFIED VOICE: (Unintelligible) I cant say that I dont, but I (Unintelligible)
MISS VAN HOUTEN: That Just that it had gotten a little
UNIDENTIFIED VOICE: (Unintelligible) well, good (Unintelligible)
MISS VAN HOUTEN: a little touchy.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay.
Well, why dont you
Tell me what they said. Tell me what they said.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Well, I didnt actually hear any distinct things
SERGEANT McGANN: Well, just tell me what you
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
cause it was you know sort of like psst-psst-psst
and I wasnt in on the other side of the psst-psst-psst.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, they werent all that quiet.
I know some girls that were there that heard a couple of things, but ah And they werent
one of the ones that was being whispered to.
It was kind of just It was out in the open.
You were up there. You were one
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Well, I knew that they had written on the walls.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay.
What did they write on the walls?
Whatd they say about writing on the walls?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: They said that they had written Pig on the wall.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Just Pig? Just Pig?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Thats what I remember.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Who had written that?
Who said that?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Ah I dont know who writ- who wrote it.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Are you sure that you didnt overhear that Sadie had said she had
written it, or did she just say, We had written it?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
I just heard it was written.
SERGEANT McGANN:
(Unintelligible) did she say that she had stabbed stabbed
Hinman?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Huh-huh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Hum?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Huh-huh, not that I heard.
See, I didnt hear any of those three talking about it, but I I heard people talking, so I asked
them.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay.
Well, what what did you ask them, or what did they say?
I mean, the people that you asked about what they were talking about.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
They said that ah that he was dead
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: and that ah the word Pig was written on the wall.
SERGEANT McGANN:
All right.
They said that Hinman was dead and that they had the word Pig was written on the wall.
Now, what else did they say that they had heard from Sadie and Mary about the thing?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Not much.
I dont even think I remember any more.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, did they say anything about Charlie coming up there and
smacking the guy upside the head with that sword he used all the time?
Anything
Did they say anything about that?
That was kind of the talk of the place.
Everybody was talking about that.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Huh-huh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Hum?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Huh-huh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Ever hear anything like that?
Aw, I think youre putting me on a little bit, Leslie.
Huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: No, I havent (Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN:
Oh, yeah.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
(Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN:
I I think youre putting me on now.
I think weve really ought to level with each other. Ah
As I told you before, you were you were given immunity.
I mean, nothings going to happen to you you know?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Umhum.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You dont have anything to be afraid afraid of.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Umhum.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You want to get out of all this stuff, dont you, get out on the street
again, one of these days?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Yeah.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, then, I really and truly think you ought to lay things on the
line and I dont think youre quite doing that, right now.
Hum?
Some of these people are in really big trouble already on this, I mean really big trouble.
I mean you know like theyve already had it, so to speak.
And as I told you when I came in, were just trying to fit the other little pieces in together.
And to do that, we need your help.
And for that help, we are willing to give you immunity in any part that you might have taken and
ah get you out of here at the conclusion of it.
Now, thats our deal.
I And ah
Thats the only thing I can promise you.
Im promising you the the whole works here.
Youre just a free gal when this things all worked out.
SERGEANT McGANN:
One evening up at the house in Malibu, huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah, but we couldnt find the doorbell.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You couldnt find the doorbell?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Huh-huh.
I went with ah Nancy and Manon.
SERGEANT McGANN: Uh-huh.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: But, we we were just going to go visit and we couldnt find the
doorbell, so we decided that wed leave (Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN:
Its right by the beach. Its right close to the beach.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Its on it.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Its on the beach, huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: A great, big house across from the liquor store.
SERGEANT McGANN:
When was this?
When did you go there?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Ah Right after I got out of jail for burglary.
So, that would be, I think, towards the end of September, maybe the beginning of October.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, I think weve pinned it down pretty much that you first saw
him around the first of Summer?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah.
Ive Ive only actually seen Terry about maybe three times.
He he came to the Ranch maybe I dont know three times.
SERGEANT McGANN:
What kind of car does he drive?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Oh, I never saw it.
I was at the campsite when he came and left.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Oh.
Did you ever go up to the house there on the hill up on a hill?
Did you ever go to the house looking for him?
Did you ever hear him talk about the house on the hill?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: No.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Did Charlie ever talk about it?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Huh-huh.
The most I ever heard mentioned about Terry was ah this guy by the name of Greg
(Unintelligible) Greg
SERGEANT McGANN:
Greg?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Yeah.
Theres a Greg mentioned.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Well, Greg would come over to our house you know and go
you know
Now, Terry Marshmallow you I mean
Terry Melcher will come over and listen to you and Im sure hell record you.
And, for months, Greg would come over and go:
Now, Terry Melchers coming over
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, this Greg I dont know Hes the one with the little
sports car, either blue or black.
Remember that little sports car?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Yeah, well, so that he could record in natural surroundings, or
something. I dont know.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Oh.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Get the echoes and all that stuff.
And then, after that, neither of them were seen anymore.
They didnt come You know They didnt come around.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Was Charlie kind of upset with all that?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
No.
Charlie hardly never got upset, as far as I could tell.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Not too much, huh?
Tell me what you heard about the Tate murders up there?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Not much.
SERGEANT McGANN:
I know you heard quite a bit ah Leslie, and all that
(Unintelligible)
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Were just going to keep coming right back to this.
SERGEANT McGANN:
I know it.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Two
SERGEANT McGANN:
Thats right.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: two detectives and I kept this up for three hours one time
(Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, yeah, I know (Unintelligible) its very important.
I mean, we know how (Unintelligible) because, I think you can tell probably (Unintelligible)
because people will talk to us.
And I know you know an awful lot, Leslie.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Im deaf. I cant hear nothing.
SERGEANT McGANN:
No, no.
You heard a lot.
Now, theres the thing:
Five people were killed up there on that deal and I know three for sure that went up there, and I
think I know the fourth, and I dont know the fifth.
And I know pretty much just how it went down, and they were from your group out there.
Now, I dont know Are your parents still alive?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Ah I really couldnt tell you.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You really dont know?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Huh-huh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You have no feeling for them, at all?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Oh, I love them, but
SERGEANT McGANN:
Would you want to see them, for no reason at all, just no reason at
all (Unintelligible) somebody went, thinking he was doing the right thing, go up there and kill
them kill your parents or your brothers or sisters, if you if you have any?
Do you think thats right, really when you
MISS VAN HOUTEN: No.
SERGEANT McGANN:
No. You dont think its right.
I mean, if you were ever a kid start a family and went up to some house and live, there with
your husband and children, if you had any, do you think it would be right for somebody to come
up there and just for no reason at all and you didnt do a thing to these people come up and
stab you and cut you and kill you, your husband and your children?
Do you think that would be right?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Huh-huh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, I dont either.
And thats exactly what happened.
And you know that as well as I do.
But, you know better than I do.
But, you know exactly who did it and exactly how it went down, because they talked of this,
Leslie.
They talked of it after they came back to the Spahn Ranch and they talked about it up there at
Barker Ranch.
And I know you know about it and I dont I dont think that you ah I mean, youve told me
that you dont think this is right and I dont think it is either.
But, Charlie may have thought he was right, but I think you can see, yourself, that the man needs
help if he thinks this is the right thing to do because its not.
Youre a smart girl.
You know its not the its not the right thing to do.
Im not saying that Charlie maybe didnt think he was doing the right thing.
Maybe he did, but I dont think it was the right thing to do and you dont either.
Now, maybe maybe he does need help.
I dont know.
Im sure that the psychiatrists and everybody else will examine him, because if he hes
hes blind, otherwise, and some other ones too.
I know that you know them.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Who are they?
SERGEANT McGANN:
You tell me.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
I couldnt tell you.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Yeah, you can.
Again, Leslie, youre not youre not being honest with me.
Youre not telling me the whole truth.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
What happened to Christopher Jesus?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Christopher Jesus?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Zero.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, Zero was was ah I dont know if he was one that got
killed or not.
There were about three of them killed you know
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Who?
SERGEANT McGANN:
You know Tinerelli?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Who?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Tinerelli?
Do you know him?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: (Unintelligible) what was his first name?
SERGEANT McGANN:
I dont remember offhand. He was part of the group, anyway
(Unintelligible) two or three of them did.
But, none of the ones that were involved in the murders are dead.
Theyre all alive.
maybe.
Thats one thing.
But, to go up there and just to kill five people for nothing no reason whatsoever its not
right.
And this is and you know its its not right and you know who was there and you know
how they did it exactly how they did it and, yet, for some reason, unknown to me, you
dont want to talk about it.
Why not?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
I just dont. I dont want to do nothing.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, youre going to have to talk about it some day, Leslie.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Well, not today.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, it doesnt make any difference whether its today
I mean, I might prefer it today than later.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Umhum. I know it.
You guys would have preferred it the first day I talked to you.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, they werent really they werent handling the Tate case.
They were handling another case.
But, its boiled down to the fact that ah we know just about what went on and we
(Unintelligible) Im (Unintelligible) leveling with you.
We dont know every detail and you do and Id like to know.
Thats all. Thats all.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
But, I dont want to tell you.
SERGEANT McGANN:
But, thats all Im asking you for.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah, I know it.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Why did you leave the Spahn Ranch and go up to Barker for?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Why?
Because I liked it.
SERGEANT McGANN:
All right.
But, you just didnt go alone.
You went with the whole group that went up there.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Howd you go up?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Howd I get up there?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Umhum.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: In a ah Volkswagen.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Whose Volkswagen?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
I dont remember the girls name. Shed just come to the Ranch the
day I got out of jail.
SERGEANT McGANN:
That was for the
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Burglary.
SERGEANT McGANN:
burglary (Unintelligible) well, you went, and who else was in
the car with you?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Ah Tex, Marnie, Jeanine and ah a new girl a new girl.
SERGEANT McGANN:
The one whose Volkswagen it was?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Yeah.
SERGEANT McGANN:
There was Tex and Marnie and you and the new girl.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Umhum.
What weapons they took.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: I couldnt tell you.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You could tell me if you wanted to.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: I could not.
SERGEANT McGANN:
All right.
Tell me who went up, then.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: I couldnt tell you that.
SERGEANT McGANN:
No, now, youre youre wrong there and I know that you could
tell me that.
You could tell me exactly who went up there.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: (Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN:
Charlie and one of the guys, three of the girls went up there, took
an old car, drove up to the Tate house, parked a little ways from the house.
Then, they did their thing.
Right?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Could be.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Did they use Schwartzs car that night?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Could have. It was around.
SERGEANT McGANN:
It was one of the only ones running at that time, wasnt it?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Hum there was Shortys car, too.
SERGEANT McGANN:
What color is Shortys car?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
I dont remember.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Schwartzs car is white kind of light or kind of yellowish,
wasnt it? Schwartz, John Schwartz.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: It could have been yellow. It was either that pale, pale yellow, or it was a
dirty white.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Was it two-toned?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
It could have been both Yeah.
SERGEANT McGANN:
It was two-toned. Do you think?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: It had mostly white on it, as far as I can remember.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, do you think they used Schwartzs car that night?
I know you know what car they used.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Its possible.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, you think they did?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Do I think they did?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Umhum.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: I never saw anyone drive out of the yard or (Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN:
Whod you see getting ready to go, or you thought they were going
to leave the Ranch that night, the 8th of August?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Oh, I went to bed really early that night.
SERGEANT McGANN:
(Unintelligible)
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Really, I dont you know like I dont want to talk about it.
SERGEANT McGANN:
I think youll feel better if you do.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
I feel pretty good.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Yeah, but youll never know how good you could feel until you
tell me.
Right?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Well, Im not so sure.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Im not so sure.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Im not going to tell anybody you told me, Leslie.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: You could tell the whole world and I wouldnt care.
SERGEANT McGANN:
I havent told you whos telling me and telling me all this stuff so
far, have I?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: I know who has.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Who?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Im not going to tell you.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, theres been more than one.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Yeah.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You know that, huh?
How do you know that?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Because you said youve talked to a lot of people.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Oh.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
One of the detectives told me he talked to a hundred people about
it.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Oh, well, on the case, Ive talked to six or seven hundred people,
but I havent talked to that many people about you, specifically and your group; but I have talked
to several more than one one or two and Ive got quite a bit.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Yes.
Im a very noticeable person, I imagine.
SERGEANT McGANN:
As I told you before, the Family is no more.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Yeah.
SERGEANT McGANN:
So, there really is no reason not to to tell me about it.
Right?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Possibly.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Ive noticed while were sitting here, youre a pretty sharp little gal
and I think you know an awful lot about it.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Im really stupid.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Aw (Unintelligible)
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Ive been called the dumbest woman in the world.
SERGEANT McGANN:
It must have been a dummy telling you that, then.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: No.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Huh-huh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
No, I I think not ah Leslie.
They might have told you that, but think I think you just kind of out-slickered them a little bit.
Right?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Could be.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You mean a young gal like you would get around all over the
country from Iowa What is it? Waterloo, Iowa?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Umhum.
SERGEANT McGANN:
and down here, up to San Francisco and make out up there for
apparently longer than just a couple of months, make it down here to the Spahn Ranch.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Right into good old Sybil Brand.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, yeah, you did make it to Sybil Brand.
That that was a bad move on your part.
*********
SERGEANT McGANN: (Unintelligible) but you never know what little detail might prove
important at a later time.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
How did you ever trace it back to Spahns?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Like I say, Leslie, Ive been working on this silly case for three
and a half over three and a half months.
It went down August the ninth, and its just about four months now. Just about four months.
Ive covered a lot of ground in four months. Ive been all over the country.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Yeah?
Europe, too, huh?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Never made it to Europe.
Made it ah all over the east coast and down to South America
MISS VAN HOUTEN: South America?
And its all
SERGEANT McGANN:
cha chasing
MISS VAN HOUTEN: And its all
SERGEANT McGANN:
chasing
MISS VAN HOUTEN: And its all (Unintelligible) on me?
SERGEANT McGANN:
No, well, chasing phoney leads down there.
Ive been chasing drug leads for about three weeks now, four weeks.
And Ive come up with a lot of information, and, like I say, all I need is just to I want to hear
what you know, what you heard, everything youve heard.
Thats all Im asking you for.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Well, I heard that Sharon Tate had been murdered
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: by and for the people.
And I heard that or I saw in a magazine that pig was written on the front door.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Just like they did Hinman.
Just like old Sadie Mae did.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: And ah I heard that the Folgers girl had been stabbed something like
eighty seven times.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Kind of vicious, huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Yeah.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Not too good.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: No.
Overdoing it a little.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Yes, yeah, yeah, Leslie.
I think so.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: And thats about all.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Not true now, Leslie, not true, not true.
You heard a lot of things from up at the ranch about it, from all or some of the participants that
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, it was sure taken up by your group then, by Clem, and
Charlie, Ruth.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: You mean Rachel?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Uh-huh.
Well, I had exhausted my cigar here anyway, huh.
Well, Leslie, when are you going to be ready to tell me?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: I couldnt tell you.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Hum.
You cant tell me when you are going to be ready to tell me you mean?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Yes, I may never.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You want some more coffee?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Yeah, that would be nice.
Am I going to be in here that (Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN:
You bet your life.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Oh, boy.
Can I go to the restroom again, too?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Yeah.
Just hold just wait a second and Ill get the sergeant in here.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Yeah, is this the sergeant?
No, huh?
This is McGann. Im in the captains office here.
You thought it was who?
No. What I wanted ah the gal that I have in here ah Leslie, shed like to have ah
another cup of coffee and she wanted to go to the restroom and I just
Okay.
Leslie wants another cup of coffee and ah and ah she wants to go to the restroom
again.
I hope so.
Oh, not too much.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, that sounds good, yeah.
Okay. Fine.
And she wants to go to the restroom when she gets ah when the sarge gets
Okay. All right. Bye.
Shell be in. The sergeant walked down to the other end of the hall, so it will be a minute and
then shell be back and take care of that.
You got (Unintelligible) I guess, huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Yeah.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay.
Oh, a guy can have a stroke in here, leave all this good stuff in here I guess, huh?
Lets see, those were my ashes there (Unintelligible) cigar.
UNIDENTIFIED VOICE: Hi. Come on. You know the way. Im behind you.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: (Unintelligible) painting.
SERGEANT McGANN: Isnt that nice?
It really is (Unintelligible) who painted that thing.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: It looks like a jigsaw puzzle I put together.
SERGEANT McGANN:
(Unintelligible) does it?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Oh, yeah, Ive put together (Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN:
You like jigsaw puzzles?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Well, it passes the time.
SERGEANT McGANN:
(Unintelligible) thats right.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: I think in the last two months Ive read about fifteen novels and ah
Ive put together about at least thirty jigsaw puzzles.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Where, at the ranch?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: And I Huh?
SERGEANT McGANN:
The ranch? Where?
Oh, while since youve been in jail.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Yeah. And I
SERGEANT McGANN:
Oh.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: You know (Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN:
Time passes slow, I imagine, huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Oh, its going quick. Its slower here, but ooh those women are
such hotheads.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Where?
What women?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: In 1552 or 51 (Unintelligible) here.
SERGEANT McGANN:
The inmates?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Yeah.
They are all kind of mad because theyre here and (Unintelligible)
UNIDENTIFIED VOICE: (Unintelligible) here you go, Leslie.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: All right.
SERGEANT McGANN: (Unintelligible)
UNIDENTIFIED VOICE: Okay. Hum.
SERGEANT McGANN:
(Unintelligible) does that do it?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Yeah, it tastes good.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay.
Good.
Not too bad. Thats all right.
This is like winter in here with that air conditioner on, huh?
Kind of cold.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah.
Well ah can you can you explain to me about the grand jury?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, the grand jury is a secret proceedings.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: What do you mean secret proceedings?
SERGEANT McGANN:
In other no one knows about it, no one knows what is said in
there. Its not open to the public about the people that are going to testify.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: (Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN:
Thats the deal.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Do you have all the suspects now (Unintelligible) call suspects?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Lets see.
All of the suspects that I know of are in custody.
Now, that doesnt mean there are not some (Unintelligible) of thing that I dont know about.
Right?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: I guess so.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, you know.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Huh?
SERGEANT McGANN:
You know.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Who?
Did all the people cooperate with (Unintelligible) the other detective told me I was the only one
that wants to cooperate.
SERGEANT McGANN:
No, Im not going to lie to you. Youre not I think youre too
smart a girl for me to sit here and lie to you.
Ah everyone hasnt cooperated 100 percent.
But ah some of them have.
In other words, enough people have cooperated for us to fit the bits and pieces together.
Like I told you ah you may know something that somebody else didnt know as well as
what they did know, but I really think that you were you had a personality thats your
personality was such that they told you just about everything that went on and you knew of
everything that went on because you were kind of trusted and and ah you had a
favorable personality, friendly, easy to get along with.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
That would be even more reason for me not to tell.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well
MISS VAN HOUTEN: If I were trusted.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, trusted in a sense that ah they they spoke freely.
In other words ah they knew you werent going to run down right then.
But the Family is no longer, Leslie (Unintelligible) something these these people, regardless
of what you want to ah call it, are are killers, and, you know, killers.
There is no way to ah get around it, Leslie.
Nobody is safe on the streets.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: It looks that way.
And hearing about Zero has sort of thrown me for a loop because I know I knew Zero and I
know that Zero wouldnt play Russian roulette.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Thats what I think, too.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Well, I know that that Zero wouldnt because I saw him the day he
got released.
Ive never seen a happier person.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Its officially listed as a suicide.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Im sure.
But I I really dont know.
I dont know who would be doing that.
SERGEANT McGANN:
What do you think about Bruce Davis?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Bruce?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Uh-huh (Unintelligible)
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Bruce is a lot of talk.
SERGEANT McGANN:
He was there.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: He was there when Zero shot himself?
SERGEANT McGANN:
What do you think about that?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Bruce was?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Uh-huh.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Did you question him?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Not about that. I didnt personally. Its not my jurisdiction.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Yeah.
Gee, thats weird.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You think so, huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Yeah, I do.
Was he playing it, too?
SERGEANT McGANN:
I dont know.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Zero was playing Russian roulette all by himself.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Kind of odd, isnt it?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Yeah, its odd.
And Bruce was there?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Hum.
He sure was.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Do you know where Bruce is now?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Uh-huh.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: In jail?
SERGEANT McGANN:
No.
Is he the other man that went up there with Charlie?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Not that I know of.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You know, Leslie, you know who it was.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: I could take the chickens way out and say it was Zero, but I wont.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Good.
Because I dont think it was Zero.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: But, it wasnt Bruce either.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay.
I didnt think it was, but
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Like I say, Bruce was a lot of talk.
SERGEANT McGANN:
I think it was either Clem or Tex that was with him.
Id buy Clem a little more because he I think he does really need some help.
I think hes kind of funny.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Yeah, Clems a little weird in the head (Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN:
If youre going to tell me it wasnt Clem, it would have to be Tex.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Uh-huh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Hum?
Youre not telling me it wasnt Clem?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Uh-uh.
Im not telling you it wasnt or it was.
Im not telling you nothing about him.
Its just that I dont think either of those two (Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN:
Ah come on, now, youre putting me on again.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Clems touched in the head, but hes gentle. I mean I dont
SERGEANT McGANN:
I dont think he went into the place.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: (Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN:
I think he waited in the car.
SERGEANT McGANN:
She used to be in with her, or what?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Uh-huh.
And then she got she got ah she did something wrong so she cant be a trustee anymore.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Who did, Sadie?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Uh-huh, this other girl because shes in with us now.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Oh.
Whats her name?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: I dont know. I didnt find out her name.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Hum.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: (Unintelligible) deported to England.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Is that right?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Uh-huh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Thats pretty keen. Wish theyd deport me there, huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Hum.
I could go for that right now.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You could, huh?
Ill get you some matches, too.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
(Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN:
(Unintelligible) got any cigarettes left?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Uh-huh, I got a couple. I smoke a lot.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You do, huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Uh-huh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, Ill fix you up before we go. Remind me.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Okay.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Get you through the tonight anyway, huh, maybe tomorrow?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Uh-huh.
SERGEANT McGANN: (Unintelligible)
MISS VAN HOUTEN: You get a day off tomorrow, dont you?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Oh, you really dont get days off though.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Were supposed to have (Unintelligible) holiday, were supposed
to have Sundays Saturdays and Sundays and holi- and holidays off, but we dont we
very seldom get them off.
We
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Yeah, well, what if something is
SERGEANT McGANN:
get called, you know.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: on your mind?
Its sort of hard for with your kind of work to consider it work, it would seem to me.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, its a good job. I mean
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Oh, yeah.
SERGEANT McGANN:
I like I like the job. Im Im real happy with it. I enjoy the
work.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Oh, its its interesting.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Its a very interesting job.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: But, it seems to me, like you, you know, when youd just be sitting at
home youd still be thinking about it, trying to
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, you are.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: put everything together.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Lately when Ive been at home though, Ive Ive been sleeping
because Ive been working about sixteen hours a day twelve hours.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Like the detective stories?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Theres no difference.
Where do you think they get those stories from?
Huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Yeah, it makes sense.
SERGEANT McGANN:
They dont make that stuff up about the detective working sixteen
hours a day, or twenty four.
See, for the first five days after these people were murdered, I was I worked around the clock
practically.
I was sleeping three or four hours a day is all.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
I heard that there were about so many people, I dont remember,
working twenty four hours a day on it.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, that wasnt entirely true. I was one of the one of the ones
working twenty four hours a day.
But there really
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Couldnt that
SERGEANT McGANN:
werent that many
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Uh-huh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
working on it.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Couldnt that psychic guy help you out any?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Who, Peter Hurkos?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: The one that all the great train robberies.
Thats another thing that I read.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Listen, these psychics dont know. Theyve got a lot of publicity,
but they are not know all this stuff.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Yeah.
SERGEANT McGANN:
What time is lights out here, do you know?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Hum, I think about nine oclock.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You can have these, too, if you want.
So, they fed you a pretty good dinner, huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Uh-huh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Do you think you will have turkey tomorrow night?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Oh, yeah.
(Missing page)
SERGEANT McGANN:
Spiced it up, huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Yeah.
It will take some getting used to, but once I get used to it, it will be all right.
SERGEANT McGANN:
No spices in the other jail, huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Hum (Unintelligible) salt and pepper.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Did ah did you eat the ham tonight?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Uh-uh.
SERGEANT McGANN: Thats pork. Thats not meat.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, thats a start.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Okay.
Ah I dont I dont think Charlie was in on any of them.
SERGEANT McGANN:
None of them?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Well, he might have been in on ah you know ah
SERGEANT McGANN:
On the Tate and LaBianca, huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: No, I dont think he was.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, I know he was.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Oh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
So there is one that was there that whist
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Yeah, well see, and I I honestly didnt know that.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay.
Well, we cant eliminate him.
So well go on from there.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Okay.
And I dont think it would be Bruce Davis because Bruce is mostly ah talk, you know.
Hed sit around the ranch and talk about nitro you know, all these big words, you know, and
fixing up.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Nitroglycerin and stuff like that?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Yeah, his his imagination in other words, was, you know, just sort of
sitting around, thinking about ways of doing really weird things.
But I dont think he would have it in him to do something like that because obviously the person
who did it would have to, from what the other detectives told me, like about the Folgers girl,
being stabbed that many times, one of the people had to really be, you know, just on the point of
really freaking out.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, I think they did freak out.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Well, they must have because
SERGEANT McGANN:
I think thats one of the problems (Unintelligible)
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah, because, you know, by being with the people every day I
wouldnt suspect any of them of doing it.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Uh-huh. Okay.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: But, obviously, someone had to of and they had to be, you know, like
that kind of a person.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Yeah, youre right.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: And I know that ah I know that Bill Vance wouldnt do it.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, why wouldnt Bill do it?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Cause ah well, I I know that Bill has had other records and
things like that, you know, and he seems more interested in ah
UNIDENTIFIED VOICE: (Unintelligible)
MISS VAN HOUTEN: you know, the businessman bad guy, you know, the the hoodlum.
SERGEANT McGANN:
The hoodlum, huh, a big time ah
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Yeah.
SERGEANT McGANN:
hoodlum type, huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Yeah, the kind that would, you know
SERGEANT McGANN:
The shoot-em-up type, you know, bang, bang, shoot em up and all
that jazz.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: No, not not so much that, but just, you know
SERGEANT McGANN:
Oh.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
with business affairs, you know.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Oh, the smooth the the the bank ah embezzler and
stuff like that.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Yeah, like a like a mafia kind of guy, only not all the killing, but, you
know, working with the money and and all, you know
SERGEANT McGANN:
All that.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
that kind of thing.
Thats how Bill was because lots of times Id see him with, you know, a briefcase or something
(Unintelligible) walk around (Unintelligible) and ah Tex to me seemed more like a college
student.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Tex is a funny guy as far as I can tell. I I really havent I
havent talked to him.
But just from what Ive heard about him, hes kind of a Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde type affair, huh?
You know what I mean?
Good guy
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Good guy, bad guy.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah, well, the the most I ever saw him was Dr. Jekyll cause he
always, you know, sort of had the manner of ah being pretty well learned, you know.
He was always working on the dune buggies and was more into the mechanical kind of stuff.
He didnt really seem to me like he would do that.
SERGEANT McGANN:
He was some type of mechanic, huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah.
He was always fixing up the dune buggies.
He had about five of them. Everyday he would be fixing them.
SERGEANT McGANN:
He really knew his stuff about the mechanics side of a car, and
stuff like that, huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Well
SERGEANT McGANN:
Did he seem to, did he keep them running all right?
Huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: For one for one go round and then theyd break down again.
SERGEANT McGANN: Then then hed have to go again, huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Yeah, and ah of course, Scottie wouldnt.
Scottie wouldnt he wasnt even built to do something like that.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, dont forget now that they had weapons when theyd go out
there.
They had weapons when they go out there and they ah theres not just one, remember
theres five we are talking about, right?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Uh-huh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
So, you know (Unintelligible)
MISS VAN HOUTEN: But I understood three of them were girls.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: I understood probably that there were more girls involved than men.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Yeah, I think there were three girls.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Who did you hear that went?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Hum.
UNIDENTIFIED VOICE: (Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN:
My goodness.
Maybe that chocolate did you in, huh?
Go ahead and smoke what you got and I can get you some before I leave.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Okay.
I could tell you that I couldnt remember.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Yeah, but wed both know youd be spoofing me.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Hows about if I were just to tell you if I was you how I would go about
figuring out who it was?
SERGEANT McGANN:
All right.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Okay.
Now, lets see, youd be figuring that And from the way you talk, it you figure it was
mostly Charlies idea.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Uh-huh.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
And so the people that did it would have to be pretty close to
with him.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Right.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
And be under pretty good influence
SERGEANT McGANN:
Right.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: of of him.
In other words, be associated with him, close to him, feel the same way he did.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Right.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: So that would be the people that were most like him.
SERGEANT McGANN:
I think we could assume that.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Thats still a pretty broad thing cause
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay, now tell me
MISS VAN HOUTEN: (Unintelligible) quite a few.
SERGEANT McGANN: (Unintelligible) tell me who you think that might be.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: That would that would either be That would have to be either
Charlie himself
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Bruce, Clem, or Tex.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: And not Im not too much Bill.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Too much Bill.
All right (Unintelligible) tell (Unintelligible)
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Bill.
SERGEANT McGANN:
It would have to be Bruce pardon me .. Tex, Clem and
Charlie
Okay.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Thinking back on on the guys that would go, although Im almost
positive that Charlie wasnt there, but
SERGEANT McGANN:
He wasnt on Hinman.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: No, Im Im not talking about the (Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay. On the Tate and LaBiancas.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Right.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay.
He was on But he was on the Tate murder (Unintelligible) tell you that.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Are you sure of it?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Im positive. Absolutely positive, absolutely positive.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Because, you know, like I was I couldnt have told you that one.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Uh-huh.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Then the girls, it could have been any of us.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, lets talk about the men still and we can get down here and
find out who the other
guy was with them.
Weve got it eliminated down to three other guys, Bruce Davis, Clem and Tex.
You can eliminate two for me.
That makes it easy.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Uh-huh.
How many did you have it limited down to before you came in here?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Three.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: The same three.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Uh-huh.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Well, I never saw Tex as a Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, but, you know,
someone told you,
you know, that he had them tendencies, those tendencies.
SERGEANT McGANN:
No, they really didnt tell me.
This was just something that I, from hearing different things from different people that Ive
talked to, kind of picked this out, that that he could have.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Like, well, can you tell me some of the things that he did that was like
Mr. Hyde?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, he he seemed to be ah well, hes pretty smart for
one thing.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: I I think he went pretty far in college.
SERGEANT McGANN:
I think he was pretty smart and the reason why was he never got
caught.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: He I I noticed that, too.
He wasnt in on this last Barker raid.
SERGEANT McGANN:
He wasnt on the Spahn Ranch raid either.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: He wasnt?
SERGEANT McGANN:
No.
Pretty smooth, huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Youve got to hand it to him, it is.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Thats right.
Ive got to hand it to him.Pretty smooth.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Do you know where he is now?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Not exactly.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Hes smarter than I thought.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Hes pretty smart (Unintelligible) you got to give him credit.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well
MISS VAN HOUTEN: But, thats, you know.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay.
You heard Linda went up there.
What does she look like? What does Linda look like?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Oh, shorter than me.
SERGEANT McGANN:
How tall are you?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Five six.
SERGEANT McGANN:
So, shed be what?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: I dont just I dont know, but shes shorter.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Two inches, or a foot, or
MISS VAN HOUTEN: No, not maybe about this much.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Six to eight inches?
Four inches?
Shed be pretty short if she Youre five six.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Well, it would be about like this. I dont know.
SERGEANT McGANN:
About four inches, huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Yeah.
SERGEANT McGANN:
About five two?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Maybe.
SERGEANT McGANN:
How much did she weigh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Oh, not too much.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Thin?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Yeah, pretty thin.
SERGEANT McGANN:
How old a girl?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Shes pretty young.
SERGEANT McGANN:
About your age?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: (Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN:
What color hair?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Hum, light, but not light.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Light, but not blonde, you mean, or light brown, very blonde?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: She had more brown.
SERGEANT McGANN:
More brown.
Light brown, huh?
Did she have a car?
What did she do up there, what was her duties or
MISS VAN HOUTEN: She was just she was just one of the girls.
SERGEANT McGANN:
One of the girls, huh?
Was she close to Charlie?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Uh-uh.
It seemed funny, you know, that I that thats thats why it seemed funny to me, you know,
when I heard her name know, when I heard her name
SERGEANT McGANN:
Uh-huh.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: I was wondering. In fact
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay.
We got old Linda then. Shes one of the girls.
He did it.
No question about it.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Well, yeah, but it doesnt seem to me like Hes pretty small.
SERGEANT McGANN:
But youre ten feet tall when youre pointing a gun at somebody.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Well, I heard that guns are usually like old (Unintelligible) unless you
get a huge shotgun.
SERGEANT McGANN:
A small caliber gun can do a lot more damage sometimes than a
big caliber gun, Leslie.
A big caliber gun might just go the bullet just might go through you and a small caliber might
just go around inside and hit all your vital organs.
See?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Uh-huh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
The gun Charlie had was a pretty big gun anyway, not in not in
caliber, but in stature.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Was it what, long?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Its the one he used to shoot up there at the ranch.
Do you know the one Im talking about?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Uh-uh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
If I showed you a picture of a gun just like he had up there, would
you tell me if it was true or not true, would you
MISS VAN HOUTEN: If you mean if
SERGEANT McGANN:
If I showed you a picture
MISS VAN HOUTEN: you showed me a picture
SERGEANT McGANN:
of a gun like the one he had up there, would you would you
level with me and tell me if its the gun he used to use up there or not the gun he used to use up
there?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Well, I couldnt tell you because I wasnt there.
SERGEANT McGANN:
At the Spahn Ranch?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Oh, yeah, I thought you were talking about
SERGEANT McGANN:
The Spahn Ranch.
He used this gun all the time to He used to practice.
He used to shoot at a barrel affair up there, I think up by the where the corrals are, or
something. He used to shoot it up there.
Remember that?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Uh-uh.
I remember sometimes when ah George would leave, all the guys they used to be so
stupid all the guys would run in the bunk house these were mostly bikers
SERGEANT McGANN:
Uh-huh.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
that would come and visit for the day
SERGEANT McGANN:
Uh-huh.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
and for some reason they always wanted to show off their, you
know, their artillery, or
something, you know.
And theyd come and shoot at the hill across the
You want me to go to the door?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Yeah (Unintelligible) will you.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Dont think you can do what, Leslie?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Look at the picture cause ah
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, all I want you to do is look at the picture. I want to show you
the picture pardon me and you can say that youve seen other guys up there with it, too,
which is fine.
But I want you to say that if you saw Charlie with a gun like this if you will tell me you saw him
with a gun like this.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Well, why why is it so important that I say him specifically?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, you can say you saw the other guys with it, too.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Uh-huh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Fine. But I think you will say yes, because I am sure you saw him
with the gun.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Well, I dont understand why him in particular.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, because I think thats the gun he used on the killing.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Which one?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Tate.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: But if any of the guys had the gun, it could have been any of the guys
who did used it on Tate, where somebody has told you that he was there.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Uh-huh, sure.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Then I honestly couldnt tell you who the others were that were there.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Oh.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Cause I was sure that he wasnt there.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You can tell me if you want to, Leslie.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Are you sure someone wasnt fibbing to you?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Im Im positive.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Shoosh. Really, really I didnt think that he was there.
SERGEANT McGANN:
He was there.
And he used this particular gun, I think, and he used to practice with it, or shoot it, up at the
ranch, as well as other guys shot the gun, too, up there.
The only reason I want you to look at the picture is to tell me if you ever did see him with a gun
like that up there, although you may have seen other guys up there too with one I mean with
the same gun shooting.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You tell me the other one that I know.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Uh-uh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
If I tell you one of the girls that was there, will you tell me the
other two?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Uh-uh, cause I dont know.
SERGEANT McGANN: Yes, you do, Leslie.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: See, now this is where I dont see why I come into the picture, if one of
the girls was there, that was there, told you that Charlie was there, certainly she told you who all
the others were, too.
SERGEANT McGANN:
No, she didnt.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: She didnt?
That seems pretty one-sided on her part.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Yeah, it is.
Thats what we have, unfortunately. You know the rules of evidence, you know the rules of law,
in the last ten years has really prohibited the police department from doing most anything.
So, consequently, a lot of stuff that we get we cant use except that we we know what were
talking about.
I know you know who was up there. You know you know that I could show you a picture there
and Charlie used this gun to test fire things with.
You could look at it and you could tell me if you wanted to.
One of the girls lost her knife upthere.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Thats pretty careless.
SERGEANT McGANN:
It was kind of careless.
I understand Charlie got a little upset about it, too.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Did he?
SERGEANT McGANN: Didnt he?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: I dont know.
SERGEANT McGANN: You know, your eyes are telling fibs on you again, Leslie.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Maybe they arent. Maybe thats the way my eyes always look.
SERGEANT McGANN: Oh, no.
They light up like Christmas trees when you spook me a little bit.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Does everybodys, or just mine?
SERGEANT McGANN: Some people dont have the expression in their eyes that you do.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: I know my face gives me away a million times.
SERGEANT McGANN: Thats right, it does.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: (Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN: Well, I know you know who was up there, Leslie (Unintelligible) and I
know you know how it went down.
You dont think they did the right thing up there.
I dont think they did the right thing up there.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: If I know how much so much, why arent I down as one of the girls?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, because I dont think you were there.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: I wasnt.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay.
I offered you immunity although I didnt think it was necessary because I didnt think you were
there.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: It sounds like a turkey in the next room.
SERGEANT McGANN: (Unintelligible) what?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: It sounds like a turkey in the next room.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Oh.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Oh (Unintelligible) youve probably got enough evidence without me.
SERGEANT McGANN:
No, I dont. I really dont, Leslie.
I need you very badly. Its true.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: You cant use any of the other girls besides me?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Hum, well, I personally believe, and I have reason to believe, that
you know maybe a little more than the other girls.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Why is that?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Hum, some conversation that I have had and and by talking to
you and and just a little
hunch that I got.
SERGEANT McGANN:
I know
MISS VAN HOUTEN: normal to me.
SERGEANT McGANN:
I know, Leslie, but they all didnt take part part in the
murders. I know that.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: And Charlie to me seems normal.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, there aint any normal.
Hum?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: What was the question?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Ah I dont know. There they got my train of thought
confused out there with their hooting and a hollering.
Hum.
Want a break, want to go to the restroom or anything?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Yeah, Ill go to the restroom (Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN: Can she go to the restroom?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Well, I know where it is. You cant (Unintelligible) there.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay.
Well, come on (Unintelligible) you can wait right here.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Do you have some candy?
SERGEANT McGANN: Here (Unintelligible)
MISS VAN HOUTEN: (Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN: Shes got some.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: A Hershey with almonds.
Are you going to talk to her next?
SERGEANT McGANN:
No, Im not going to talk to anyone.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Oh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Somebody else is going to talk to her.
Yeah, whats going on?
You are, huh?
Uh-uh. Hum (Unintelligible) yeah, in a little while.
Okay. Bye.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: You going home?
SERGEANT McGANN:
No, not yet.
Well, what do you think?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Nothing.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Here you can take that.
Do you want to ah talk some more Friday?
Do you want to talk tomorrow?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: No, tomorrow is Thanksgiving.
SERGEANT McGANN:
I know.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Well, you should have a day home.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Youre right, but ah
MISS VAN HOUTEN: I wouldnt want to talk on Thanksgiving.
I I dont really want to talk at all about anything.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, Leslie, I dont know, I I think really (Unintelligible)
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
At all about anything.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, Leslie, I dont know, I
*********
SERGEANT McGANN:
Want to talk some more Friday?
Do you want to talk tomorrow?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: (Unintelligible) tomorrow is Thanksgiving.
SERGEANT McGANN:
I know.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Well, you should have a day home.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Youre right, but, ah
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
I wouldnt want to talk on Thanksgiving. I dont I dont really
want to talk at all, about
anything.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, Leslie, I dont know. I think really I really think you
ah should. I truly think you know an awful lot about the thing. Youve been hanging around
up there.
You have your philosophy; you have your personality. Everybody liked you; everybody talked to
you.
Yes.
Do you think you could get that deputy sheriff to perform the interview somewhere else with that
young lady shes got out there?
Okay.
Well, like I was saying, Im on call all the time, so, you know, Ill come in tomorrow. Itd be
worth my while.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Not tomorrow. It wouldnt be worth your while.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You dont want to talk on Thanksgiving, huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Uh uh.
Youve got to have it at home.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You sound like my wife.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Dont you Dont you got anybody else you want to talk to other than
me, or any other leads you could follow for awhile other than me?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Ive talked to a lot of people, Leslie, already.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Ive heard youve talked to over a hundred.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Four.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Four hundred people about us?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Oh, well, not that many about you ah probably talked to I
dont believe we talked to a hundred, but we talked to a lot of people.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Just getting ideas about what we were about?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Uh huh.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
What made you trace it to us in the first place?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Writings on the wall, similarities between jobs. Beausoleil got
caught (Unintelligible)
MISS VAN HOUTEN: One and one makes three, hum
SERGEANT McGANN:
What
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
I read that in the detective story, too. One and one makes three.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Do you read detective stories a lot?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: I did, and ah in Inyo County, I read a couple of Perry Masons
(Unintelligible) and ah
some ah What was (Unintelligible) I read The Creepers.
Ive read The Creepers find out how you guys work.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You did.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
No.
SERGEANT McGANN:
I dont think (Unintelligible) true.
You know, I was involved in a case, or its been some years ago, and it it (Unintelligible)
detective (Unintelligible) detective. It went in another magazine, too, but it wasnt anything like
what really happened.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
No. I know its not, because like in The Creepers, one murder
happened and a detective got on the case and before and he (Unintelligible) at least five
murders.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Oh.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
But when they (Unintelligible) it, ah, youd know it.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Not too good, huh.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Oh, its not you guys would be sure (Unintelligible) every day
there would be somebody getting shot.
No. I wouldnt come on Thanksgiving if I were you, and I really dont think Im going to be
much help.
SERGEANT McGANN:
I think you are. Id like to think so.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Well, Im Im telling you, Im not going to be much help.
SERGEANT McGANN:
I think your eyes are giving you away. I think you are going to
give me some help.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: They arent giving me away this time because
SERGEANT McGANN:
I know
MISS VAN HOUTEN: I know Im (Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN:
I know you want to tell me.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: You know I want to?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Because if it was on my mind, Id want to tell you, if you were
sitting in my spot.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Okay.
So again, who was present at the Tate murder?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well. weve already talked about this.
Lets see now.
I think shortly after they got back up there, they told you who was there and they said that
Charlie and Mr. X and three girls
MISS VAN HOUTEN: You said that.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Yeah. (Unintelligible) thats what Im telling you how it went
down.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Oh, yeah.
SERGEANT McGANN:
They drove up to the not too far from where the gate separates
the street from the property. And they, ah, got out of the car and one guy stayed in the car. Three
girls and Charlie went into the house.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Wouldnt it make more sense that one girl stayed in the car and two guys
(Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN: Well, it might make more sense, but this is the way how I think it
happened, the way I heard it while I was sitting around the campfire.
And, ah, the three girls and Charlie go on up and they go in and they cut the telephone wires.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Well, a lot of people sure do luck out more than I do in looks.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Other people have told us a lot of things, too.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
But I havent told you nothing.
SERGEANT McGANN:
No, but you want to. And again you were a blossoming personality
(Unintelligible) people liked you. So they talk talked a lot, not necessarily to you, but just
talking all the time, not even aware you were around. They were talking about it.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
(Unintelligible) I was around.
SERGEANT McGANN:
(Unintelligible) around (Unintelligible) something like that, but
they might not have been talking directly to you, but they were just talking and you overheard
things.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Uh uh. I really I dont want to say anything, cause if that much
importance lies on me, I dont I dont want any part of it.
SERGEANT McGANN:
It doesnt just on you, ah, Leslie. It doesnt just lie on you alone.
Like I say, weve been talking to people all day.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Did you have any success?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Uh huh.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
You did?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Uh huh.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Okay. Im glad to know it.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Five people were killed (Unintelligible) killed. It doesnt sound
reasonable to me. I think youre a reasonable girl and I think youre pretty level-headed. I think
you are pretty darn smart, too.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
How you mean smart?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well (Unintelligible)
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Huh?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Ah, I think youre just smart enough to you knew what
happened. We talked this morning. Youve been around. You managed to stay out of jail pretty
much until this Spahn Ranch deal and this Barker Ranch thing.
That takes some smarts, dont you think?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: To stay out of jail?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, to stay out of getting killed or raped or robbed or what
have you, hitchhiking around
the country.
Thats what you told me you did, you hitchhiked down from San Francisco.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
That was only once. I generally had a ride.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well
MISS VAN HOUTEN: I had friends.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: And I stayed pretty close to security, because thats, you know, one of
my larger fears.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Oh. So anyway, thats thats (Unintelligible) one thing and your
personality is such that people talked around you. Youre not, ah, mental.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Mental?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Yeah, mental.
Like I think the people that went on this killing were.
Dont you agree, or you dont just ah
You dont want to go kill five people, do you? Or seven people, or nine people or ten people?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
No.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You dont think its right?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
No.
I mean, yes, I dont think its right.
SERGEANT McGANN:
But yet you sit there and you know the people that were involved
in the thing. You know how it
went down.
Correct?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Uh uh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You (Unintelligible) do. I really think you do.
Do you want to think about it for a day?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Well, sure.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Sure.
But Im not promising nothing if you come up Friday.
SERGEANT McGANN:
(Unintelligible) Ill take my chances.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Youre not wasting all your time on me, are you?
SERGEANT McGANN:
No. I dont think Im wasting time at all talking to you. But Im
not, Im not wasting my time on you. Ive talked to a lot of people. And I think you know a lot,
Leslie, and I dont I dont expect any promises from you.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah. Cause I dont want to make any deals, and I and I dont
want you to expect anything. If anything, come back Friday expecting me not to say a word.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Pardon me.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
If anything, come back Friday not expecting me to say a word. So
(Unintelligible) dont look forward to anything.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Well
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Id hate to disappoint you.
SERGEANT McGANN:
I dont think you will. I think you really want to tell me. I think
you realize the necessity for it. I dont think you want to see the people the people that killed
ten, eleven people walk away free.
I really dont think you want that. Do you?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Well, no.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You know, I got in your eyes then that you really didnt care much
whether they did or not.
I just cant believe that, Leslie. I cant believe that a girl
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
You know, like, here I lived with some people for a year
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
and they become my whole you know. I do everything for
them and I mean get my own, you know, gratitude out of doing it. It It wasnt just like a
commune, you know, a group of people.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Thats right.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
It was, like you got to know all the people and and love them as
much as you would your brother or your sister. And its a hard thing to have someone all of a
sudden say, you know, which which one of your brothers, you know, did this and that, you
know.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
And have you go, Well, yes. It was (Unintelligible) you know, so
and so and so and so. You know. It I cant do it now.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, they are not really your brothers and sisters. Youre a young
girl, impressionable
(Unintelligible)
Ah, Charlie Charlie had a philosophy in which he wanted to recruit people and he got a
young people because they were more pliable to his needs and to his his goals. Ah, just so to
speak, ah, brainwashed them into thinking all these people up there were his brothers and sisters,
and theyre not their brothers and sisters.They are not your brothers and sisters.
Ah, Charlie, I think, had a way with words probably and he and he kind of made this thing set
in everybodys mind, again, because you were young and impressionable.
Do you agree to that youre a young girl?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Uh huh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Probably impressionable?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Uh huh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
And molded He molded you, ah, into thinking these people
were your brothers and sisters, and they are not.
So he made He tried to make out that he was Jesus Christ, which he is not. Hes just a man.
Hes sitting up there in Inyo County jail right now. Hes going to be prosecuted for murder too.
Seven of them.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Which ones are those?
SERGEANT McGANN:
The Tates and the LaBiancas.
So, hes a human; Hes not a Jesus Christ. Hes a
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Ill (Unintelligible) you hes not Jesus Christ. I hadnt even heard him
called that
SERGEANT McGANN:
Oh, Leslie.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: until
Honest.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Honest?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Honest, until that raid in Barkers when they said that they said to me,
Wheres Jesus Christ?
I says I said, Who?
Cause I had never, you know He spoke, sometimes he spoke words that were, you know,
very well spoken. He was a very well spoken person.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Uh huh.
MISS VAN HOUTEN: And But I had never even thought of him like that.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Hes been in jail most of his adult life life and almost all of his
juvenile life.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah. I know.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You knew that?
MISS VAN HOUTEN: Uh huh.
But for some reason, that didnt, you know, phase me one way or the other.
SERGEANT McGANN:
(Unintelligible) there are
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
I guess it was my upbringing.
SERGEANT McGANN:
because there are people that get (Unintelligible) out of jail. No
problem. They they serve their time for whatever they did and had no problem. Not Charlie.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Sounds like hes been quite a problem.
SERGEANT McGANN:
I think anytime you kill that many people, youve got to be
considered a. problem; no question about it.
And hes not your brother or your sister not your brother or your dad or your uncle, cousin.
I really dont think the things he did up there proved he was much of a friend at all, really.
Now, you may disagree with me. Im sure you do. But I think you can see what Im trying to
say, that he that you have no (Unintelligible) of those (Unintelligible) people, all all those
people that did this killing (Unintelligible) no morality at all that I can see.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Uh hum.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You held your own up there. Apparently you did some work
because they
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
I did a lot.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay. You did a lot of work. I agree. Im sure you did. Im sure
with your attitude, in in your way, you probably did a hell of a lot more work than the rest of
them did.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Well, I wouldnt say that.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
But I did my share.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, lets say you held your own anyway.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yes.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Enough to be happy.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Enough to be happy. And you, ah
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
But youve also got to look at it this way: If if, like you say, he
did do some brainwashing, then that means that its going to take a while to undo what he did.
SERGEANT McGANN:
(Unintelligible) but, still, its wrong. It still is wrong.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Cause he sounded pretty convincing to me.
I can even look back on it now and and see how, you know, it was.
SERGEANT McGANN:
But you think he lied to you a little bit?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Uh huh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay, Leslie, I think he did. He wasnt the man that he said he
was, I dont think. And he used people.
He used you as a tool to get what he wanted, what he thought he wanted. He wanted to be
another Hitler or something, I guess. I dont know what his final goals were. You may know. I
really
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
His final goals dont matter much from the way it sounds.
SERGEANT McGANN:
No. They dont. They really dont.
But when he kills people like that and does things with absolutely no cause, theres something
wrong. And the people that went along, theres something wrong with them, too. Maybe they
need help. Maybe theyre sick. I dont know. Maybe they need help. Maybe they are not sick.
Maybe theyre just mean and onery.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
They if they if that were true, theyd have to be awfully
schizophrenic, cause someone mean and onery couldnt have lived there more than
(Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, Im Im saying that maybe he thought he was doing the
right things. He was killing pigs, the middle class white person. Apparently, this was his
philosophy, to kill the middle class white people and upper class of white people, I suppose. I
dont know where he drew the line.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Thats cold-blooded.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Sure is. But thats what he wanted to do. Its not right either. It just
isnt right and I dont think you think its right either, down deep in your own mind and in your
own heart.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Do you read my mind?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, Im not sure.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
What do you think its saying?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, what I think its saying its not right. Down deep way
back there
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
That might take us a couple of weeks to reach back there
SERGEANT McGANN:
Ah
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
But at least a nice turkey dinner at home with your family.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Leslie, Ive worked on this thing so hard. When did it happen
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Four months.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Four months. I havent had a vacation. My vacation was cancelled.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Well, youll get a longer one.
SERGEANT McGANN:
I needed one then.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Huh?
SERGEANT McGANN:
I needed one then.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Oh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
After a month on this case, I after the first month, I needed one.
But thats thats neither here nor there.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Well, its looking pretty good for you (Unintelligible) coming to an
end.
SERGEANT McGANN:
I hope so. I certainly hope so.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Well, you told me that you got just about everything.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Oh, we got a lot, but we need more. We need more. A good
detective never rests his case until hes got everything.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
You wouldnt settle for one?
SERGEANT McGANN:
No way. Wed settle for two. Weve got two now.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Did the girl get immunity?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Hu hu.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
She didnt?
SERGEANT McGANN:
(Unintelligible)
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
I dont believe shes telling you the truth about (Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN:
I think so. Yeah.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
You do?
SERGEANT McGANN:
I know so.
I cant tell you how I know, but I know shes telling the truth.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Okay. Well, I mean I dont care.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay.
Well, Id tell you if I could, Leslie. I really would.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Well, I dont want
SERGEANT McGANN:
(Unintelligible)
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
I dont want to know nothing anymore. I dont care.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, you know some things, Leslie.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Oh. Im forgetting.
SERGEANT McGANN:
No. I dont want you to forget. I want you to (Unintelligible) Why
dont you tell me?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
I honestly dont know what happened in that house.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You know who went out there, though. Thats whats important to
me right now.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Well, the more I try to remember it, the more I forget.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, no (Unintelligible) thats not right either; thats not true now.
Lets be honest with each other. Huh.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
What?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Lets be honest with each other. You do know who went up there
that night. You know some of the facts, too, as to what happened.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
How come I have to know?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Because you do. Thats why (Unintelligible) why am I here; what
am I (Unintelligible)
Because you know. Thats why.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Even if I tell you I know that Charlie didnt go, then that means I
wasnt telling you the truth.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, Leslie, still in your own mind and ah you may
(Unintelligible) out oh me here in the next day or two or (Unintelligible) die in the next fifteen
minutes. I dont know
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
But I honestly
SERGEANT McGANN:
I think you are really trying to protect Charlie.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
No. I honestly
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay.
He may be a father image to you I dont know what or big brother image or something. I
really dont know what is what it is now. But I think if youll really reach back in your mind,
youll realize he not not that father, not that brother. At least, not one that youd really want
to have. Ah, I I just dont think so. Maybe Im wrong, but I think you can reach back in your
mind and know that Im telling you the truth. I mean youll realize its the truth too, if youd just
think about it. So
Maybe youre trying to protect him for that reason. I dont know if thats it or not. Thats My
crystal ball tells me that might be it.
I know that Charlie was there and I (Unintelligible) one of the girls was there. I got
(Unintelligible) that it could be Marnie Reeves. I dont know. You know. You know who the
other girl was and who the guy was.
Right?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Huh?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Right?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
It could be. It could be, but I couldnt say for sure. Id like to tell
you that it could be, but I couldnt tell you for sure. It could be because Im not sure.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You can say for sure it was because I you know you can.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
You must feel like taking me and bashing me against the wall
Talk
SERGEANT McGANN:
No
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
talk, talk.
SERGEANT McGANN:
No, I dont, Leslie. I
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Youve got a lot of patience.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, youve got to have patience sometimes.
I think ah I think you know what Ive been telling you is the truth.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Well, if it is, itll start sinking in.
SERGEANT McGANN:
All right. That fair enough.
I will help you. I I will. Ah
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
What do you mean, youll help me?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, Im trying to help you get squared If you want to get
helped if you want to go I mean, whatever you want to do, Ill try to help you with
whatever you want to do.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
You mean if I (Unintelligible) to get out of here?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Yeah (Unintelligible)
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
I know what I have to do when I get out of here. Ill have to buy
ah a wig with greying hair it and get a pair of glasses and walk around like a librarian for the
next ten years.
SERGEANT McGANN:
No, you wouldnt, Leslie. You really wouldnt.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Sounds like it from the way you people are getting
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, well well wrap it up.
But, weve got to have weve got to know everything about everybody before we can wrap it
up completely.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Yeah.
I guess that was the one I was thinking about. It slipped my mind when I talked to you. Well, I
guess it was a little while ago we talked about it.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Hum. Ive never even heard (Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well anyway, hes dead.
But if we get them all wrapped up, no problem. You dont have to worry.
And then again (Unintelligible) Ill help you when you get out. Ill do what I can. Whatever you
want to do or try to do I can help you with. Thats true.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Umhum.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Im not, you know, shooting you a line of baloney or anything.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
I dont feel up to it (Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN:
You tired?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah, a little. I I drank a lot of coffee today about seven
cups.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Do you have that card I gave you?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Umhum. Got it here in my pocket.
SERGEANT McGANN:
(Unintelligible) Can you read that (Unintelligible)
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
If no one answers exchange on front of card. ask for DHQ.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Uh huh. Detective Headquarters Division. See, our office is closed
normally at night.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Tell whoever answers to contact McGann at home.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Tell them you would like to talk to (Unintelligible) Okay?
SERGEANT McGANN:
You are still protecting Charlie.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Hu hu.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Hu hu.
(Unintelligible) there.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, you know Charlie was there (Unintelligible)
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
I could swear on a stack of Bibles that he wasnt there, to my
knowledge.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Charlies your father image and why, I dont know. How you
could possibly want a ah cold-blooded killer as your father image, Ill never know.
Hes a killer. You know hes a killer. Hes a vicious cold-blooded killer.
In addition, he kills for nothing no reason. Hes worse than an animal. An animal at least kills for
food. He didnt eat the people up there.
Is that the kind of father image you want?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
No.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, why then are you taking his doctrine, or following his
doctrine?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
I dont know for sure that he was there.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay.
What did you hear? What did you hear sitting around the campfire up there about that?
Everyone whose name that was mentioned, okay, you dont have positive knowledge. You didnt
see them commit these acts.
What did you hear (Unintelligible) as to who was there. You heard, Leslie. You know you did.
You saw Charlie shoot this gun, this particular gun Im telling you about, up there at the ranch.
This gun was used in the murders, along with
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
I didnt know that.
SERGEANT McGANN:
along with a lot of bayonets that they used to do the actual
stabbings.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
See, youre telling me things that I didnt know.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You knew they who went on the murders though, because they
told you. They told you how they killed them and the whole thing. At least, they told you they
killed them. They told you they got five piggies.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Well, the first I heard about it was on the TV.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, you were taking care of one of the girls babies, Zezo to say
that they saw it because I Im not saying anything.
Now, Leslie, look, I know you did see it, though. And you are credible.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
You mean Im good (Unintelligible)?
SERGEANT McGANN:
No. I mean youre honest. You were there and you saw this.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Whatd I see?
SERGEANT McGANN:
You saw him firing this gun.
Correct?
Didnt you? Huh?
Sadies already told fifteen people in this jailhouse that she was there; she took part in it and
everything else.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Didnt she mention anybody else?
SERGEANT McGANN:
No, she didnt, except for Charlie and Katie.
life.
If thats what you want, Leslie, thats fine and dandy, but I dont really think you want that.
Youre no dummy. When you get down to the nitty gritty, that old Family jazz goes right out the
window.
Im serious. Dont laugh.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
I believe you and I dont see how it could possibly get back
together if everyones doing all that stuff. But I have nothing to say.
It sounds like youve got it pretty well wrapped up.
SERGEANT McGANN:
No. I dont have it wrapped up yet. I dont know who the rest of
the people are. That what I need you to tell me. I need to know if you saw Charlie shooting a
certain gun and I need to know where the weapons are buried that were used.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Well, I dont know where the weapons are, honest.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Okay.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
And ah and I wont I wont say nothing about the picture.
I wont even look at it because I dont want to be in that type of a situation. I know I dont have
much choice but
SERGEANT McGANN:
Youre in that type of situation now.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Yeah, I know it but still I dont want to be in that type I I
dont want to look at it.
And I And Ill tell you that from what Ive heard, you guys dont have the other girl that was
there.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, are you speaking of Marnie, now? We dont have her in
custody yet, but we know who she is.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Well, Im not talking about Marnie.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Youre not talking about Marnie.
Were you leveling the other night when you told me that Linda, the new girl, was the other one
or were you spoofing me?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Hum. I dont know ? for sure.
SERGEANT McGANN:
What did you hear?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
I heard that there was another girl.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Whats her name?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
I was spoofing you.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Hum? Whats her name? Is it Linda?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
No.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Who then?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
I dont know.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Who was the other one that you heard was up there?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Howd you know there were three girls and one guy?
SERGEANT McGANN:
(Unintelligible) Sadie said.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Three girls and one guy.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, she said three girls and Charlie.
Who was the other girl? You know. Huh? Who was it?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Cant you ask Sadie?
SERGEANT McGANN:
(Unintelligible)
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Why cant you?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Because I cant talk to her.
You, yourself, said you went over with this What is it? The Satans? You went with that bike
group.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Umhum.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, you, yourself, said you went over there and (Unintelligible)
of the Family for awhile.
You didnt need the Family.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Uh huh. But, Im still not going to tell you (Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN: Do you think youre doing the right thing?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
(Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN:
Well, what do you think?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
I think youd better go work on your other things, because Im not
Im not budging.
SERGEANT McGANN:
You think these people ought to get away with killing all these
people, huh?
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Well, if they did it, youll be able to prove it without me and
(Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN:
Cant do it.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
The whole thing rests on my shoulders.
SERGEANT McGANN:
The other people do.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
That would amount to one girl.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Oh, theres some other people too. We need more than one. We
have some now.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Some what?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Some people to testify they heard things.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Oh.
SERGEANT McGANN:
But you just cant have one or two. We need more than one or two.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Oh, (Unintelligible) I dont (Unintelligible)
SERGEANT McGANN:
You know, if you want to ride all your beefs alone, thats your
business, but I think youre being very foolish to do it.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Then, Im a fool.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Hum whatevers right, I guess.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Umhum.
SERGEANT McGANN:
Im going to give you some time to think about it. Ill come back
and talk to you later.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Today?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Either today, tomorrow or Sunday.
MISS VAN HOUTEN:
Okay.
I hope you find some stuff without me. because Im (Unintelligible) is it all right if I take these?
SERGEANT McGANN:
Umhum.
Ready?
*********