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Friday, December 18, 2009 - 1:08 PM
LAPD Officer Jerry DeRosa arrived first. He walked up to the
Rambler and found a young man slumped toward the passenger side,
drenched in blood. At this point, Officer William Whisenhunt joined
DeRosa. The two officers, with guns drawn searched the other
automobiles and the garage, while a third officer Robert Burbridge
caught up with them. There on the beautifully
manicured lawn with its magnificent panorama of Los Angeles lay two
bodies. One was a white man that appeared to be in his thirties.
Someone had battered in his head and face, while savagely puncturing
the rest of his body with dozens of wounds. The other body was that of a young woman with long brown hair lying in a full-length nightgown with multiple stab wounds. The
three officers cautiously approached the house. No telling what or who
may be waiting in there for them. It would have been foolhardy for all
of them to enter through the front door. However, as they went near the
front door, they saw that one of the front window screens had been
removed. Whisenhunt found an open window on the side of the house where
he and Burbridge made their entry. Once the other
two officers were inside, DeRosa approached the front door. On the
lower half of the door, he saw scrawled in blood the word "PIG." In the
hallway they found two large steamer trunks, a pair of horned rimmed
glasses and pieces of a broken gun grip. Then when
they reached the couch, they were in for a real shock. A young blond
woman, very pregnant, was lying on the floor, smeared all over with
blood, a rope around her neck that extended over a rafter in the
ceiling. The other end of the rope was around the neck of a man lying
nearby, also drenched in blood. As they looked
through the rest of the house they heard a man's voice and the sound of
a dog. It was William Garretson the caretaker. The officers handcuffed
him and put him under arrest. Later that Saturday
night, Leno and Rosemary LaBianca and Susan Struthers, Rosemary's
21-year-old daughter, drove back from vacation trailering their boat. They dropped off Susan at her apartment and drove home to 3301 Waverly Drive in the Los Feliz area of L.A. They stopped to pick up a newspaper between 1 and 2 A.M. It wasn't until the next day that anybody came to the house to see them. Frank Struthers, Rosemary's son by a previous marriage, got a ride home. Around 8:30 P.M., as he carried his camping equipment up the driveway, he noticed things that worried him. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire first the speedboat was still in the driveway. It was very unlike his stepfather not to put the boat in the garage. Then Frank noticed that all the window shades were down — something his parents never did. He
knocked on the door, but got no answer, so he went to a pay phone and
called, but again with no response. He finally got in touch with his
sister, who came with her boyfriend to their parents' house. Frank
and the boyfriend found the back door open. They left Susan in the
kitchen until they had a chance to look around. When the two young men
walked into the living room, they saw Leno in his pajamas, lying with a
pillow over his head and a cord around his neck. Something was sticking
out from his stomach They rushed out of the house, dragging Susan with them and called the police at the neighbors' house. Soon
an ambulance and police cars arrived. Leno was found with a
blood-drenched pillowcase over his head and the cord of a large lamp
tied tightly around his neck. His hands had been tied behind him with a
leather thong. A carving fork protruded from his stomach and the word
"WAR" had been carved in his flesh. In the master
bedroom, they found his wife Rosemary lying on the floor, her nightgown
up over her head. She too had a pillowcase over her head and a lamp
cord tied tightly around her neck. In three places
in the house, there was writing which appeared to be in the victims'
blood: on the living room wall, "DEATH TO PIGS;" on another wall in the
living room, the single word "RISE;" and in the refrigerator door,
"HEALTHER SKELTER," misspelled.
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