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Doris Tate

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Cause of death
  
Brain Tumor

Spouse
  
Paul Tate (m. 1942–1992)

Role
  
Sharon Tate's mother


Name
  
Doris Tate

Known for
  
Mother of Sharon Tate

Doris Tate Love is Something You Feel Paul and Doris Tate the

Full Name
  
Doris Gwendolyn WillettDoris Willett

Born
  
January 16, 1924 (
1924-01-16
)
Houston, Texas

Died
  
July 10, 1992, Los Angeles, California, United States

Children
  
Sharon Tate, Debra Tate, Patricia Tate

Grandchildren
  
Paul Richard Polanski, Arieana Tate Mussenden

Similar People
  
Sharon Tate, Debra Tate, Susan Atkins, Leslie Van Houten, Paul Tate

Resting place
  

Manson family special report part 3 doris tate s crusade


Doris Gwendolyn Tate (born Willett; January 16, 1924 – July 10, 1992), was an American activist for the rights of crime victims, was best known as the mother of actress Sharon Tate. After Sharon Tate and several others were murdered by members of the Manson Family in 1969, Doris Tate began working to raise public awareness about the U.S. corrections system. She was influential in a court decision that amended California criminal laws relating to the rights of victims of violent crime.

Contents

Doris Tate Sharon Tate and mother Doris Sharon Tate Pinterest

Doris tate interview


Biography

Doris Tate Sharon Tate and her mother Doris Tate pose for a photo

Born in Houston, Texas, Tate was the second daughter of Dorris W. Willett and his wife, Fannie R. Leuch. She had a sister, Genevieve. Doris was a housewife and mother of three daughters. In 1969, her eldest daughter, Sharon, was at the beginning of a film career, and married to film director Roman Polanski. Eight months pregnant with their first child, Tate and four others were murdered at the Polanskis' rented Beverly Hills home in a case that was sensationalized throughout the world. The killers were eventually identified as Charles 'Tex' Watson, Susan Atkins and Patricia Krenwinkel, acting on behalf of the leader of their group, Charles Manson. All four were found guilty of the murders and sentenced to death, along with Leslie Van Houten, who had not participated in the murder of the Tate victims, but had participated in the murder of a Los Angeles couple the following night. The death sentences were overturned before they could be applied when the State of California temporarily abolished the death penalty.

For more than a decade after the murders, Tate battled depression and was withdrawn and unable to discuss her daughter's death. In 1982 she was told that Leslie Van Houten had obtained 900 signatures supporting her quest to achieve parole. Tate mounted a public campaign against Van Houten, winning the support of the National Enquirer, which printed coupons in its magazine for people to sign and send to Doris Tate. With more than 350,000 signatures, Tate demonstrated that a considerable number of people opposed Van Houten's parole, which was denied.

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Tate then appeared on various television talk shows, discussing her opinion of the corrections system and the impact her daughter's murder had had on her family. She joined the Los Angeles chapter of the "Parents of Murdered Children" organization, and while she drew support from the group, also found that she was rewarded by assuming the role of counsellor. She later became an active member of the Victim Offender Reconciliation and Justice for Homicide Victims groups. She founded COVER, the Coalition on Victim's Equal Rights, and served on the California State Advisory Committee on Correctional Services as a victims' representative.

Doris Tate Tex WatsonDoris Tate Face to Face YouTube

She was part of a group that worked toward the passage of Proposition 8, the Victim's Rights Bill, which was passed in 1982. It allowed the presentation of victim impact statements during the sentencing of violent attackers. Tate became the first Californian to make such a statement after the law was passed, when she spoke at the parole hearing of one of her daughter's killers.

In 1984 she ran for the California State Assembly as an advocate for victim's rights. Though unsuccessful, she continued to campaign for changes to existing laws, and was involved in the passage of Proposition 89, which allowed the governor of the state to overturn decisions made by the Board of Prison Terms.

Tate's assessment of Manson, Watson, Atkins, Krenwinkel and Van Houten was that their crimes were so vicious as to warrant execution. Addressing Charles Watson at his 1984 parole hearing, she said, "What mercy, Sir, did you show my daughter when she was begging for her life? What mercy did you show my daughter when she said give me two weeks to have my baby and then you can kill me? ... When will Sharon come up for parole?... Will these seven victims and possibly more walk out of their graves if you get paroled? You cannot be trusted." She confronted Watson again at his 1990 parole hearing.

Death

Doris Tate's health began to deteriorate after she was diagnosed with a brain tumour. In 1992, she was one of several volunteer workers recognized by President George H. W. Bush as one of a "Thousand Points of Light." The ceremony, during which Tate and her family were honored by the President for their work in promoting victims' rights, marked Tate's final public appearance. She died later that year at the age of 68.

Her work was taken over by her younger daughters, Debra and Patricia. The Doris Tate Crime Victims Bureau, a non-profit organization with the aim of monitoring criminal legislation and raising public awareness began in Sacramento, California in July 1993. In 1995, the Doris Tate Crime Victims Foundation was established with the aim of providing assistance to victims and their families. Patti began to represent the Tate family at parole hearings. In 2000 Patricia died. In 1997 Debra Tate attended the parole hearing of Patricia Krenwinkel and since then has attended the parole hearings of every member of the Manson family currently imprisoned for the Tate-Labianca murders. She actively campaigns against the release of any of the Manson family convicted of murder.

References

Doris Tate Wikipedia