Squeaky Fromme to be Released from Prison After 34 Years

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Squeaky Fromme to be Released from Prison After 34 Years

Post by Bella Fortuna » Thu Aug 06, 2009 2:20 am

The president she once pointed a gun at has been dead for nearly three years, and her longtime idol and leader, Charles Manson, remains in prison.

However, Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme is about to get her first taste of real freedom in more than three decades.

According to the Federal Bureau of Prisons, Fromme, now 60, is set to be released on parole August 16.

Fromme is housed at the Federal Medical Center at Carswell, Texas.

For years, she was one of Manson's few remaining followers, as many other "Manson Family" members have shunned him. A prison spokeswoman would not say whether Fromme continues to correspond with Manson.

Fromme was convicted in 1975 of pointing a gun at then-President Gerald Ford in Sacramento, California. Secret Service agents prevented her from firing, but the gun was later found to have no bullet in the chamber, although it contained a clip of ammunition.

In a 1987 interview with CNN affiliate WCHS, Fromme, then housed in West Virginia, recalled the president "had his hands out and was waving ... and he looked like cardboard to me. But at the same time, I had ejected the bullet in my apartment and I used the gun as it was."

She said she knew Ford was in town and near her, "and I said, 'I gotta go and talk to him,' and then I thought, 'That's foolish. He's not going to stop and talk to you.' People have already shown you can lay blood in front of them and they're not, you know, they don't think anything of it. I said, 'Maybe I'll take the gun,' and I thought, 'I have to do this. This is the time.' "

She said it never occurred to her that she could wind up in prison. Asked whether she had any regrets, Fromme said, "No. No, I don't. I feel it was fate." However, she said she thought that her incarceration was "unnecessary" and that she couldn't see herself repeating her offense.

"My argument to the jury was, if she wanted to kill him, she would have shot him," John Virga, a Sacramento attorney appointed to defend Fromme, told CNN on Tuesday. "She'd been around guns. And let's be realistic: We know the Manson family, at least some of them, are killers."

Fromme was sentenced to life in prison, but parole was an option at the time, although the federal system later abolished it, said Felicia Ponce, spokeswoman for the Bureau of Prisons. Inmates do receive "good time" -- for every year and one day they serve, Ponce said, 54 days are lopped off their sentence.

Fromme became eligible for parole in 1985, Ponce said. According to reports, she for years waived her right to a parole hearing. The Bureau of Prisons would not say whether she changed her mind and requested a hearing, but the U.S. Parole Commission's Web site says that everyone who wishes to be considered for parole, except those committed under juvenile delinquency procedures, must complete a parole application.

Federal inmates serving life are generally paroled after 30 years, unless the parole commission decides to block the release, according to a commission spokesman. Inmates who are paroled remain under supervision until the commission decides to terminate the sentence.

Fromme was not granted parole until July 2008, Ponce said. She was not released then, however, because of extra time added to her sentence for a 1987 escape from the West Virginia prison, which occurred after her interview that same year. She was found two days later, only a few miles from the prison. At the time, prison officials said they were looking into rumors that Fromme escaped after hearing Manson was ill, according to news reports.

FMC-Carswell spokeswoman Maria Douglas would not comment on Fromme's behavior in prison in recent years.

Fromme reportedly joined Manson's family after meeting him in California in 1967. She was not involved in the murders of seven people, including pregnant actress Sharon Tate, on August 9 and 10, 1969, that landed Manson and other followers in prison. However, she and other Manson followers maintained a vigil outside the courthouse during his trial.

In the WCHS interview, Fromme said that Manson should not be incarcerated because "he didn't kill anybody. ... I would rather be in, because I know I laid a lot of my thinking in his mind."

Virga said he told the jury that Fromme assaulted Ford, but did not attempt to assassinate him. If Fromme had killed the president, no one would have listened to her, he said. "She didn't want people to think she was a kook."

And she wasn't, he said, recalling that Fromme was very cooperative during her trial and describing her as "a bright, intelligent young woman" from a middle-class family. "It's just hard to imagine how she got all caught up with Manson," he said.

Fromme wanted to be heard on issues including the environment, he said. "She had certain causes that she wanted to talk about. But first and foremost in her mind was always Manson."

Explaining herself after the attempt, according to the book "Real Life at the White House," Fromme said, "Well, you know, when people treat you like a child and pay no attention to the things you say, you have to do something."

During her trial, Virga traveled to Washington to depose Ford, who testified on videotape about the incident.

In the 1978 interview, Fromme called Manson "a once-in-a-lifetime soul. ... He's got more heart and spirit than anyone I've ever met." She said she still corresponded with him. "He's got everything he wants coming from me, 'cause he gave me everything."

She said then she didn't plan to seek a parole hearing: "The parole board does not hold my life in its hands. And I don't want to be too critical, but men tend to think they do. Charlie never thought he did. He never expressed all this desire for power, this desire for acceptance."

Ford died in 2006 at age 93. The Gerald R. Ford Presidential Foundation did not respond to CNN requests for comment on Fromme's release.

Virga, who is still practicing in Sacramento, said he had not heard from Fromme since her sentencing in 1975. "I wish her the best, and hope everything works out for her, and hope she stays out of trouble," he said. "She needs to stay out of trouble. She's been in prison a long time ... it was, in my mind, a tragedy that she wound up a disciple of Manson.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/32305450/ns ... ?GT1=43001

http://www.cnn.com/2009/CRIME/08/05/squ ... e.release/

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Squeaky Fromme soon out of prison in Ford case

Post by Gawdzilla Sama » Thu Aug 06, 2009 2:28 pm

Squeaky Fromme soon out of prison in Ford case

(08-05) 20:32 PDT -- Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme, the waif-like Charles Manson follower who tried to shoot President Gerald Ford outside the Capitol in Sacramento in 1975, will be released from prison as early as Aug. 14, authorities said Wednesday.

Fromme, now 60, has been serving a life sentence in Texas. A federal parole board granted her parole last year, but her release was delayed because she got extra time after trying to escape from a West Virginia facility in 1987.

Traci Billingsley, spokeswoman for the U.S. Bureau of Prisons, said Fromme remains at a prison for women with special medical or mental health needs in Fort Worth, Texas. Billingsley said her agency had the authority to release Fromme Aug. 14, 15 or 16. She said she did not have any information about Fromme's plans.

The 1975 assassination attempt came six years after Manson followers committed the "Helter Skelter" murders of actress Sharon Tate and six others - killings that happened 40 years ago this weekend. Fromme did not take part in those killings, authorities said. She was arrested in connection with another homicide, but the charges were dropped for lack of evidence.

Fromme stood vigil at the Manson trial and, like other supporters, carved an "X" on her forehead as a sign of solidarity. Manson, who had recruited her off the streets in Southern California, called her "Squeaky" because of her voice.

Speaking of the Manson Family and his influence over them, Fromme once said, "Charlie's in love with love. And I'm in love with love, so I'm in love with Charlie. All of us are."

When Manson was serving time in Folsom Prison, she moved to nearby Sacramento, where she tried to interest reporters in her cause.

On Sept. 5, 1975, as Ford was on his way to address the California Legislature, Fromme was in the crowd, wearing a red dress, turban and purse. As Ford drew near, Fromme pulled a .45-caliber semiautomatic pistol, aimed it at the president and pulled the trigger.

Witnesses nearby heard the "click" of the hammer dropping. Secret Service agents later found that the pistol had four rounds in its magazine, but the chamber was empty.

Agents quickly swarmed the 105-pound Fromme and wrestled the weapon from her hand. She was heard to shout at the time, "Don't get excited! It didn't go off! It didn't go off!"

Fromme, 27 at the time of her trial, tried to serve as her own attorney but was so disruptive that she spent most of the trial watching the proceedings on a TV in her jail cell.

She argued with the attorneys and the judge, and during her sentencing threw an apple at the prosecuting attorney, hitting him in the head.

"All of you lawyers throw words around from what I've seen," she said during the sentencing hearing. "If I lay out my heart to you, it's like throwing it away.

"I want Manson out. I want my world at peace. I know that none of you can bring it."

Fromme was sentenced to life in prison. She served a couple of years in the women's prison in Dublin, but was transferred after attacking another inmate with a claw hammer.

Jess Bravin, a Wall Street Journal reporter who wrote the book "Squeaky: The Life and Times of Lynette Alice Fromme," said Fromme was trying desperately to gain attention for causes she considered important.

"She felt there were a number of injustices in the world, primarily the continued incarceration of Manson and his followers for murder. She also considered herself to be an environmentalist," Bravin said.

To Fromme, President Ford "symbolized this unjust society," he said.

"She said she had no personal anger toward Gerald Ford. ... By assaulting him, she could seize attention for these issues."

She once denounced the president in an interview with the Associated Press, saying, "If Nixon's reality, wearing a new Ford face, continues to run the country against the law, our homes will be bloodier than the Tate-LaBianca houses and My Lai put together."

Just 17 days after Fromme tried to shoot Ford, another woman, Sara Jane Moore, fired at him outside the St. Francis Hotel in San Francisco. But a disabled ex-Marine grabbed her arm, causing the bullet to miss, ricochet off a building and strike a bystander.

Ford died of natural causes at age 93 on Dec. 26, 2006.

Manson remains behind bars at Corcoran State Prison.

E-mail the writers at dulwa@sfchronicle.com and jkoopman@sfchronicle.com.

This article appeared on page A - 1 of the San Francisco Chronicle

Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.c ... z0NPg23VDN
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Re: Squeaky Fromme to be Released from Prison After 34 Years

Post by Bella Fortuna » Thu Aug 06, 2009 4:00 pm

I've read extensively on the Manson family and I must say I'm surprised they're letting her out. Doris Tate (Sharon Tate's mother, who campaigned tirelessly to keep them all in prison) must be rolling in her grave. I think I had a curiosity about the case because she lived near me when I was back home, and also because I know someone who picked up Manson as a hitchhiker back in the 60s who recounted how Manson tried to convince him to go with him to the Spahn Ranch! :shock: (otherwise known as Brush with Ignominy)
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Re: Squeaky Fromme to be Released from Prison After 34 Years

Post by Gawdzilla Sama » Thu Aug 06, 2009 4:03 pm

Bella Fortuna wrote:I've read extensively on the Manson family and I must say I'm surprised they're letting her out. Doris Tate (Sharon Tate's mother, who campaigned tirelessly to keep them all in prison) must be rolling in her grave. I think I had a curiosity about the case because she lived near me when I was back home, and also because I know someone who picked up Manson as a hitchhiker back in the 60s who recounted how Manson tried to convince him to go with him to the Spahn Ranch! :shock: (otherwise known as Brush with Ignominy)
My lead prof, Randy Roberts, has been on TV talking about the Family. He was filmed on the Ranch.
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