Charles Milles Manson, the leader of a band of hippie followers known as the Manson Family who committed a string of murders in California in the late 1960s, has died aged 83
Main image: Charles Manson is escorted by guards to court in Los Angeles to be informed of his death sentence in 1971. Photograph: Rolls Press/Popperfoto/Getty Images
Mon 20 Nov 2017 02.08 EST Last modified on Mon 20 Nov 2017 08.16 EST
Charles Manson as a child at Boy’s Town, an Indianapolis juvenile center where he spent time for burglary before he subsequently ran away
The Spahn movie ranch near Chatsworth, a Los Angeles suburb, where Manson and his followers were living when they committed a series of murders in 1969, and where Manson and others murdered a ranch hand, Donald ‘Shorty’ Shea
Police stand outside the home of film director Roman Polanski in Los Angeles where his wife, Sharon Tate, and four other people were killed in August 1969
Susan Atkins, Patricia Krenwinkel, and Leslie Van Houten attending court in 1971 during the Tate-La Bianca murder trial, during which Manson was convicted of first degree murder and conspiracy to commit murder
Manson has given a series of high-profile interviews while incarcerated, the first of which was in 1981 when interviewed by Tom Snyder for The Tomorrow Show
A copy of the book Helter Skelter, written by Vincent Bugliosi, who prosecuted Manson. It became one of the bestselling true crime stories ever published
Manson with Afton Elaine Burton. He applied for a marriage license in 2014, but the relationship fell apart after it was claimed she wanted possession of his corpse to put on display