Gary Hinman (photo: charlesmanson.com) |
On July 25, 1969, Gary Allen Hinman was 34 years old, a UCLA student who was aiming to add a PhD in Sociology to his existing degree in chemistry. To support himself, he worked at a music shop teaching piano, drums, the trombone and the bagpipes. He also reportedly sold relatively small amounts of mescaline and/or marijuana for extra money.
A year earlier, he had become interested in Nichiren Shoshu Buddhism and by the summer of 1969, he was planning a religious pilgrimage to Japan with his parents, who were going to pay for the trip. A kind and gentle soul, Gary was known to open his Topanga Canyon house to friends and acquaintances in need. Unfortunately, this generosity would cost him his life.
He had met Bobby Beausoleil and other so-called Manson Family members through the commune scene and counterculture that enveloped Los Angeles in the late Sixties. An open-minded man who had once played at Carnegie Hall, Gary allowed Bobby (and others) to stay in the basement of his home in 1968.
Beausoleil was 20 years old when he met and moved in with Gary. He was a musician and an actor, having appeared in Mondo Hollywood and Kenneth Anger's 1967 film Lucifer Rising, as well as contributing to the movie's soundtrack, which was a condition in order for him to appear in the film. (He would eventually produce the soundtrack from prison.) He was living with Gary when he was cast in a supporting role in the X-rated The Ramrodder, which was filmed at Spahn Ranch in late 1968. It was Beausoleil's first introduction to Charles Manson and his so-called "Family." Although he would never become a full-fledged member, he did associate with them and the girls.
At some point, an invitation to join The Family was reportedly extended to Gary, who, being devoted to Buddhism, declined. However, he did give Beausoleil and Manson guitar lessons.
Gary's home at 964 Old Topanga Canyon Road (photo: cielodrive.com) |
The trio found that Gary did not have the money to refund Beausoleil. Nor, apparently, did he have any recent financial gains, much less $30,000. He showed the people he considered friends that he only had $50 in his checking account. When threats with a gun didn't work, Beausoleil beat the peace-loving Gary, while Mary and Susan apparently looked for anything worth selling in his home. At some point, Gary either voluntarily signed over title to his two vehicles or did so by force.
Mary Brunner recalled later that Manson was called at the Ranch and informed that Gary was not forthcoming with any money. Shortly afterward, Manson, armed with a Samurai sword and fellow Family member Bruce Davis, arrived at Gary's residence and after walking through the front door, without a word, slashed Gary's left ear and down the side of his face. It bled profusely. According to Beausoleil, Manson told him he had cut Gary to show Beausoleil "how to be a man." Manson then left in one of Gary's vehicles, leaving the bleeding and pleading man with Beausoleil, Brunner, and Atkins.
Over the next 24 hours, Brunner and Atkins stitched up Gary's damaged ear with dental floss while Gary chanted and prayed. According to Mary Brunner, he told the trio he would forget what had happened and would call his wound just a scratch, so long as they just left.
Reporting following another phone conversation with Manson, Beausoleil informed Brunner that he was going to kill Gary.
Beausoleil said that Gary had insisted on receiving medical attention, leaving Beausoleil to realize there was no way out of the situation he had gotten himself into.
At some point on July 27, 1969, Beausoleil stabbed Gary twice in the chest. However, Gary lingered for hours with the wounds before Beausoleil, Brunner, and Atkins took turns holding a pillow over Gary's face to speed his death along. It was Atkins that was holding the pillow when Gary took his last breaths. Once he had died, they used his blood to write "Political Piggy," along with a cat's paw, on the wall, thinking it would implicate the Black Panthers.
The three then left the home with the whopping $20 they managed to score from their crime. They used the money to buy coffee and strawberry cake.
On Thursday, July 31, authorities received a report of a possible homicide and found the body of Gary Hinman. He was still clutching his prayer beads in his hand.
A week later, on August 7, 1969, Beausoleil was found on the 101, between San Luis Obispo and Atascadero, sleeping in Gary's other vehicle, with the murder weapon secreted in the tire well. He was arrested for the murder and on April 18, 1970 he was found guilty of first-degree murder and sentenced to death. His sentence was commuted in 1972 to life imprisonment with the possibility of parole.
Beausoleil under arrest (photo: thejuicyreport.com) |
Over the years, it was speculated that the Tate-LaBianca murders, occurring on the evenings of August 8-9, 1969 and August 10, 1969, were committed in a haphazard attempt to free Beausoleil by showing copycat murders happening while he was in jail on charges for Gary's murder.
Beausoleil himself would change details regarding the killing of Gary. In 1981, he would claim that the murder was solely the result of a botched drug transaction, although a drug deal was never brought up during his trial. He also claimed that he had unknowingly supplied members of the Straight Satans motorcycle gang with a bad batch of drugs and they had demanded their money back from Beausoleil. In that interview, he denied that Manson had ever come to Gary's home and that it was Beausoleil himself who had cut Gary's face with a knife when the two were struggling over the gun.
In 1998, Beausoleil reversed course again, saying that it was indeed Manson who had inflicted the facial wounds.
Before her death in 2009, Susan Atkins said she had never heard mention that the trio went to Gary's home over drugs. "In hindsight," she said, "the death of Gary is perhaps the hardest thing to understand or make sense of."
Gary in life (screenshots from Helter Skelter: An American Myth) |
Bobby Beausoleil remains incarcerated for taking the life of Gary Hinman. He was recommended for parole on his 19th suitability hearing, in January of 2019, although the governor of California reversed that decision in April that same year. Today, he claims to regret what he did to Gary Hinman, a man he considered a friend, and says he should have faced the music but "instead, I killed him."
Gary's final resting place in Glenwood Springs, Colorado (photo: findagrave.com) |
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