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Leslie van Houten AP Images
Leslie Van Houten

The youngest member of the Manson Family will try to be freed today

She was convicted for her role in the 1969 murders of wealthy grocer Leno La Bianca and his wife Rosemary in their Los Angeles home.

LESLIE VAN HOUTEN, the youngest of Charles Manson’s followers to take part in one of America’s most notorious killings, is trying again for parole.

The homecoming princess who descended into a life of drugs before joining Manson’s cult in the 1960s is scheduled for her 21st hearing before a parole board panel today at the California Institution for Women in Chino.

Van Houten, 66, has spent more than four decades in prison, completing college degrees and demonstrating exemplary behaviour.

She was convicted for her role in the 1969 murders of wealthy grocer Leno La Bianca and his wife Rosemary in their Los Angeles home. The La Biancas were stabbed numerous times and the word “WAR” was carved on his stomach.

The couple were killed a day after other so-called “Manson Family” members murdered actress Sharon Tate, pregnant wife of director Roman Polanski, and four others. The killings were the start of what Manson believed was a coming race war.

He dubbed it “Helter Skelter” after a Beatles song.

Van Houten’s lawyer, Rich Pfeiffer, said she presents no danger to the public and should be freed.

“The only violent thing she has ever done in her entire life was this crime and that was under the control of Charles Manson,” he said.

“She is just not a public safety risk, and when you are not a public safety risk, the law says you shall be released.”

Manson Case Susan Atkins, Patricia Krenwinkel and Leslie Van Houten, left to right, are shown en route to court in Los Angeles in 1970. The three women, displaying the symbol X on their foreheads as followers of the Manson cult family. AP / Press Association Images AP / Press Association Images / Press Association Images

The Los Angeles County District Attorney’s office declined to comment ahead of today’s hearing.

Sharon Tate’s sister, Debra, has started an online petition opposing parole for Van Houten, saying she failed to show remorse for years after the crimes and can’t be trusted.

At her last hearing in 2013, a parole commissioner told Van Houten she had failed to explain how someone as intelligent and well-bred as she could have committed such cruel and atrocious crimes.

Van Houten told the panel she had been traumatised by her parents’ divorce when she was 14, her pregnancy soon after and her mother’s insistence she have an abortion. During the hearing, she apologised to everyone she had harmed.

Van Houten did not participate in the Tate killings but went along the next night when the La Biancas were slain. She was 19 at the time.

Her defence lawyers portrayed her as a young woman from a good family who had been a homecoming princess and showed promise until she got involved with drugs and was recruited into Manson’s cult.

During the penalty phase of her trial, she confessed to joining in stabbing Rosemary La Bianca after she was dead.

Van Houten’s conviction was overturned on appeal. She was retried twice and convicted in 1978 of two counts of murder and conspiracy.

Manson, 81, and other followers involved in the killings are still jailed.

Patricia Krenwinkel and Charles “Tex” Watson have each been denied parole multiple times, while fellow defendant Susan Atkins died in prison in 2009.

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