They had wealth.
They had fame.
So, why did they wind up here before their time?
MANSONLAND
There are things you’ve never been told about L.A.’s most notorious murders, involving drug dealing to celebrities, organized crime ripoffs, Charles Manson’s loss of control of some of his followers and a corrupt D.A.’s office which broke the law, fearful they would not get the death penalty for Manson.
GEORGE REEVES, SUPERMAN
Television’s Superman couldn’t withstand the fatal bullet likely shot into him by his lover, Leonore Lemmon. The guests downstairs in Reeves’s house at that moment later told conflicting stories. Lemmon’s use of controversial superlawyer Edward Bennett Williams resulted in a finding of suicide, forensically impossible.
DONALD DEFREEZE AND THE S.L.A.
Schreiber’s book Revolution’s End proved Donald DeFreeze, black leader of the supposed radical group the Symbionese Liberation Army, kidnappers of heiress Patricia Hearst, was a paid LAPD informant and double agent, run by the CIA and others to undermine leftist activists and the Black Panthers in California. He and five white followers, who never knew of his past, died in a shootout and fire on live national TV, which began the spread of SWAT teams in cities across the US.