LOS ANGELES, California (CNN) — Former Manson family member Susan Atkins has requested a “compassionate release” from prison because she has less than six months to live, a California prisons spokeswoman said Friday.

Susan Atkins: Murderer, Torturer.
Atkins, 60, was convicted in the 1969 slayings of actress Sharon Tate and four others. She had been incarcerated at the California Institution for Women in Corona, California.
But Atkins, the state’s longest- serving female inmate, has been hospitalized since March 18 and is listed in serious condition, state corrections department spokeswoman Terry Thornton said. Because of privacy laws, Thornton would not disclose the nature of Atkins’ illness.
Atkins’ husband and attorney, James Whitehouse, was quoted as saying she has been diagnosed with terminal brain cancer, according to a blog called Manson Family Today. She also has had a leg amputated, the Los Angeles Times reported Friday, citing sources close to the case.
The compassionate release request has been approved by the prison, which conducted an evaluation, and is under corrections department review, Thornton said.
If the department approves, the Board of Parole Hearings and the sentencing court in Los Angeles also must sign off on the request. There is no timeline for a decision to be made, Thornton said.
Atkins, known within the Manson family as “Sadie Mae Glutz,” has been in prison since 1971 and has been denied parole 11 times.
According to historical accounts of the murders, Atkins stabbed Tate, who was 8½ months pregnant, and scawled the word “pig” in blood on the door of the home the actress shared with director Roman Polanski.
“I don’t want to seem like a heartless creature, but in all my years, I never considered this could happen,” Debra Tate, the actress’ sister, told the Riverside Press-Enterprise.
“She showed no compassion. She told my sister as she slit her throat that she didn’t (care) for her or her unborn baby,” Tate added. (Read more.)
B.S. Report–This is why you not only have a death penalty; you need a death penalty. Decades pass and so does the memory of the victims–and their suffering. But you’re left with a picture of a broken, dying woman begging to be released so she can die at home instead of prison.
What is missing is the fact that she wants to be shown compassion while compassion was the furthest thing shown to her victims as she was butchering them.
We don’t simply look at the criminal and release them because they’re no longer a danger to society. We keep them in prison based on the crimes they commit because it’s the right thing to do. That’s justice. Justice would have been not allowing this killer; this torturer, to be allowed to live for 40 full years after she viciously took the lives of innocent people.
Nope, making her die in prison is the least we can do to honor the memory of her victims.