<P>Susan Atkins, a follower of cult leader Charles Manson
whose remorseless witness stand confession to killing pregnant
actress Sharon Tate in 1969 shocked the world, has died. She was 61
and had been suffering from brain cancer.</P>
<P>Atkins' death comes less than a month after a parole board
turned down the terminally ill woman's last chance at freedom on
Sept. 2. She was brought to the hearing on a gurney and slept
through most of it.</P> <P>California Department of
Corrections spokeswoman Terry Thornton said that Atkins died late
Thursday night. She had been diagnosed with brain cancer in 2008,
had a leg amputated and was given only a few months to
live.</P> <P>She underwent brain surgery, and in her
last months was paralyzed and had difficulty speaking. But she
managed to speak briefly at the Sept. 2 hearing, reciting religious
verse with the help of her husband, attorney James
Whitehouse.</P> <P><a
href="http://www.foxnews.com/slideshow/2009/08/05/charles-manson/">Click
for photos of the Manson Murders.</a></P> <P>She
had been transferred to a skilled nursing facility at the
California Central Women's Facility at Chowchilla exactly one year
before she died.</P> <P>Tate, the 26-year-old actress
who appeared in the movie "Valley of the Dolls" and was the wife of
famed director Roman Polanski, was one of six murdered in two Los
Angeles homes during the Manson cult's bloody rampage in August
1969.</P> <P>Atkins was the first of the convicted
killers to die. Manson and three others involved in the murders
— Patricia Krenwinkel, Leslie Van Houten and Charles
"Tex" Watson — remain imprisoned under life sentences.
Thornton said that at the time of Atkins death she had been in
prison longer than any woman currently incarcerated in
California.</P> <P>Atkins, who confessed from the
witness stand during her trial, had apologized for her acts
numerous times over the years. But 40 years after the murders, she
learned that few had forgotten or forgiven what she and other
members of the cult had done.</P> <P>Debra Tate, the
slain actress's younger sister, told the parole commissioners Sept.
2 that she "will pray for (Atkins') soul when she draws her last
breath, but until then I think she should remain in this controlled
situation." Debra Tate noted that she would have a 40-year-old
nephew if her sister had lived.</P> <P>Atkins'
prosecutor, Vincent Bugliosi, had spoken out earlier in favor of
release, saying the mercy requested was "minuscule" because Atkins
was on her deathbed.</P> <P>Atkins and her
co-defendants were originally sentenced to death but their
sentences were reduced to life in prison when capital punishment
was briefly outlawed by the U.S. Supreme Court in the
1970s.</P> <P>During the sensational 10-month trial,
Atkins, Manson and co-defendants Krenwinkel and Van Houten
maintained their innocence. But once they were convicted, the
so-called "Manson girls" confessed in graphic detail.</P>
<P>They tried to absolve Manson, the ex-convict who had
gathered a "family" of dropouts and runaways to a ranch outside Los
Angeles, where he cast himself as the Messiah and led them in an
aberrant lifestyle fueled by drugs and communal sex.</P>
<P>Watson had a separate trial and was convicted.</P>
<P>One night in August 1969, Matson dispatched Atkins and
others to a wealthy residential section of Los Angeles, telling
them, as they recalled, to "do something witchy."</P>
<P>They went to the home of Tate and her husband. He was not
home, but Tate, who was 8 1/2 months pregnant, and four others were
killed. "Pigs" was scrawled on a door in blood.</P>
<P>The next night, a wealthy grocer and his wife were found
stabbed to death in their home across town. "Helter Skelter" was
written in blood on the refrigerator.</P> <P>"I was
stoned, man, stoned on acid," Atkins testified during the trial's
penalty phase.</P> <P>"I don't know how many times I
stabbed (Tate) and I don't know why I stabbed her," she said. "She
kept begging and pleading and begging and pleading and I got sick
of listening to it, so I stabbed her."</P> <P>She said
she felt "no guilt for what I've done. It was right then and I
still believe it was right." Asked how it could be right to kill,
she replied in a dreamy voice, "How can it not be right when it's
done with love?"</P> <P>The matronly, gray-haired
Atkins who appeared before a parole board in 2000 cut a far
different figure than that of the cocky young defendant some 30
years earlier.</P> <P>"I don't have to just make amends
to the victims and families," she said softly. "I have to make
amends to society. I sinned against God and everything this country
stands for." She said she had found redemption in
Christianity.</P> <P>The last words she spoke in public
at the September hearing were to say in unison with her husband:
"My God is an amazing God."</P> <P>She spent 37 years
in the California Institution for Women at Frontera. When she fell
ill, she was moved to a medical unit at the Central California
Women's Facility in Chowchilla. She died there.</P>
<P>Susan Denise Atkins was born May 7, 1948, in the Los
Angeles suburb of San Gabriel. Her mother was stricken with cancer
and died when she was 15. Her father, reportedly an alcoholic, sent
her and her brother to live with relatives.</P>
<P>While still in her teens, she ran away to San Francisco
where she wound up dancing in a topless bar and using drugs. She
moved into a commune in the Haight Ashbury district and it was
there that she met Manson.</P> <P>He gave her a cult
name, Sadie Mae Glutz, and, when she became pregnant by a "family"
member, he helped deliver the baby boy, naming it Zezozoze
Zadfrack. His whereabouts are unknown.</P> <P>The
Manson slayings remained unsolved for three months, until Atkins
confessed to a cellmate following her arrest on an unrelated
charge. Police found Manson and other cult members living in a
ranch commune in Death Valley, outside Los Angeles.</P>
<P>Besides Tate, their other victims were celebrity
hairdresser Jay Sebring, coffee heiress Abigail Folger, filmmaker
Voityck Frykowski and Steven Parent, a friend of Tate's caretaker;
and grocery owners Leno and Rosemary LaBianca. Atkins also was
convicted with Manson of still another murder, of musician Gary
Hinman, in July 1969.</P> <P>Atkins married twice while
in prison. Her first husband, Donald Lee Laisure, purported to be
an eccentric Texas millionaire. They quickly divorced. Whitehouse,
her second husband, is a Harvard Law School graduate and had
recently served as one of her attorneys.</P> <p>See
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href="http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,555370,00.html">Jaycee
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</ul>