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A depressing and pathetic battle is going on in a Los Angeles courtroom to win control of the paltry belongings of the notorious murderer and cult leader Charles Manson.
All that is at stake in the dispute over his will are the clothes he owned and maybe two or three guitars — the stuff he had at Corcoran State Prison when he died in 2017. Some personal writings. Maybe the rights to a couple of songs he wrote that were commercially recorded.
Not much. But enough to generate five years — so far — of legal battling. It starts up again in a hearing Friday in L.A. County Superior Court.
Why would anyone care about the few remaining possessions of a deranged man who spent more than 40 years in prison?
Well, because they're worth more than they should be, of course. Even the used clothes of the old psychopath, it turns out, have a value to collectors of true-crime related souvenirs. The scribblings could bring in substantially more.
"Murderabilia," as it's sometimes known, does a lively trade. Just two weeks ago, a wristwatch that belonged to Adolf Hitler sold for $1.1 million at an auction in Maryland.