Bruce Davis, Charles Manson's 'right-hand man' denied parole for 7th time

LOS ANGELES - A convict described as Charles Manson's "right-hand man" won't be walking out of San Quentin State Prison after his recommendation for parole was again rejected by California's governor.

Gov. Gavin Newsom on Friday reversed parole for Bruce Davis, who was convicted of two brutal murders carried out in 1969 with Manson "family" members who terrorized Southern Californians. The governor said in his decision that Davis "currently poses an unreasonable danger to society" if released.

A state panel in January recommended parole for Davis, now 78, marking the seventh time he has been deemed suitable for release, only to have it subsequently blocked. Former Govs. Jerry Brown and Arnold Schwarzenegger also previously reversed the parole board's decisions.

Michael Beckman, an attorney for Davis, said Monday that he wasn't surprised by the reversal, calling it the latest example of California leaders playing politics with his client's life.

Beckman called Davis "the most rehabilitated inmate I've ever represented," and accused Newsom of not wishing to create waves amid his recall.

Davis was convicted in 1972 for the brutal slayings of Gary Hinman, an aspiring musician, and Donald "Shorty" Shea, a stuntman and a ranch hand at the Chatsworth ranch where Manson and his followers lived.

He was not involved with other infamous murders carried out by the Manson family cult, including the killing of pregnant actress Sharon Tate and six others, also in 1969.

Manson, who died in 2017, was repeatedly denied parole, as have most of his onetime acolytes.

During his 50 years behind bars, Davis has never been disciplined for violence and completed multiple self-help programs, his attorney said. He has earned several degrees, including a master's and a doctorate, and vocational certificates.

Newsom acknowledged that Davis "has made efforts to improve himself," but said they were outweighed by "negative factors" that made him unsuitable for release, including the heinous nature of the crimes that spread terror during that summer.

Davis "joined one of the most notorious cults in American history and actively aided in furthering Charles Manson's goal of triggering an apocalyptic war arising from racial tensions and with the goal of creating societal disorder," Newsom wrote.

Manson and several followers identified Hinman in July 1969 as a potential source to support their cult's move to the desert, according to the parole release review. Davis dropped off three members of the Manson group at Hinman's Topanga Canyon home.

After Hinman refused to comply, Davis and Manson returned to the home, where Davis held a gun on the victim and Manson sliced his face from ear to chin. Two days later, fellow Manson follower Robert Beausoleil stabbed Hinman in the chest and smothered him with a pillow. The group wrote "political piggy" and drew an animal paw print on the walls using Hinman's blood.

The next month, Manson told his followers that Shea was a police informant and was working with a neighbor to remove the group from the movie ranch where they were living.

Manson and Davis, with fellow cult followers Steve Grogan and Charles Watson, drove Shea to a secluded area, where he was stabbed to death. Davis admitted that he cut Shea with a knife from his collarbone to his armpit, claiming Manson ordered him to cut the victim's head off, according to the parole release review.

Grogan, who was also convicted in Shea's murder and helped lead authorities to the site where the victim was buried, was paroled from prison in 1985.

Newsom wrote that Davis continues to minimize his role in the two killings he participated in and lacks insight into how he became implicated in such grisly crimes.

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