Charles  Manson, the wild-eyed 1960s cult leader whose followers committed  heinous murders that terrorized Los Angeles and shocked the nation, died  Sunday of natural causes, according to the California Department of  Corrections. He was 83.
The  diminutive and charismatic Manson orchestrated a wave of violence in  August 1969 that took the lives of seven people, spawned headlines  worldwide and landed him and his "Manson Family" of followers in prison  for most of the remainder of their lives.
Manson served nine life terms  in California prisons and was denied parole 12 times. His notoriety,  boosted by popular books and films, made him a cult figure to those  fascinated by his dark apocalyptic visions.
"He  was the dictatorial ruler of the (Manson) family, the king, the  Maharaja. And the members of the family were slavishly obedient to him,"  former Manson prosecutor Vincent Bugliosi told CNN in 2015.
