Sandra Good | |
---|---|
Mug shot taken in 1969 |
|
Born | February 20, 1944 San Diego, California, USA |
Charge(s) | Conspiracy to send threatening letters |
Penalty | 15 years in prison (served less than 10) |
Status | Paroled in 1985 |
Children | Ivan Pugh |
Sandra Collins Good (born February 20, 1944) is a long-time member of the Manson Family and a close friend of Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme. Good's Manson Family nickname is "Blue," given to her by Charles Manson because of her blue eyes.
Despite her association with Manson and his followers, she did not take part in the 1969 Tate-LaBianca murders because she was in jail at the time for using stolen credit cards. However, Good says she respects those who committed the murders and demonstrated her support for Manson during his trial by shaving her head and carving an X on her forehead.
Contents |
She was born in San Diego, California, the daughter of a stock broker. Her parents divorced when she was four years old. Good attended Point Loma High School and was a member of the Student Opinion Club, along with Margaret Avery, the actress (Shug in Spielberg's The Color Purple), but it is not known if they knew each other.
Good attended California State University Sacramento, the University of Oregon and San Francisco State College off and on for seven years, but never received a degree.
Good joined the Manson Family in April 1968, and a month later she found them a new home at Spahn Ranch, in the mountains west of Chatsworth. She was in jail with Mary Brunner for attempting to use stolen credit cards when the Tate/La Bianca murders took place, but was back at the ranch in time to get arrested on the August 16th raid.[1]
She has a son named Ivan S. Pugh (born September 16, 1969).[2] Various men have been named as the father, most notably Joel Pugh (June 7, 1940–December 1, 1969),[3] who was found dead in a London hotel room under suspicious circumstances[4]
In an interview with Barbara Frum of the CBC radio program As It Happens immediately after Lynette Fromme's attempted assassination of Gerald Ford, Good promised "a wave of assassins" to kill people responsible for the killing of trees.
On December 22, 1975, Good and another Manson devotee, Susan Murphy, were indicted for "conspiracy to send threatening letters through the mail" by a Federal Grand Jury in Sacramento, in connection with death threats against more than 170 corporate executives who Good believed (see ATWA) were polluting the earth.[5]
Found guilty on March 16, 1976,[6] Good was sentenced on April 13,[7] to 15 years in prison.
Good was paroled in early December 1985, after having served nearly 10 years. Unlike many of the Family members, Good still professed total allegiance to Manson.[8] A stipulation of her parole was that she could not return to California. She moved to Vermont, where she lived quietly under the name Sandra Collins until 1989, when her environmental activism made the news and her identity was made public.
After her time on parole ended, Good moved to Hanford, California, near Corcoran State Prison, to be closer to Manson, although she was not allowed to visit him. On January 26, 1996, she and George Stimson began a pro-Manson website,[9] on which they claimed to have the true source of Manson thought. She also supported Manson's environmental movement, ATWA (Air Trees Water Animals). The website went offline in 2001, but as of 2011, it is running again.[10]
Sandra Good has since left Hanford, and she and Stimson have made no public statements in support of Manson.
|