As cult leader Charles Manson — who died Sunday — knocks on the gates of hell, members of his “Manson Family” are still rotting behind earthly bars for their roles in several brutal and high-profile murders that he plotted in the late 1960s.

Five people are serving out death sentences commuted to life imprisonment for their roles in the Aug. 9 killing of Roman Polanski’s wife Sharon Tate and four others, as well as the Aug. 10 killing of supermarket magnate Leno LaBianca and wife, Rosemary.

Two more are serving life sentences for other crimes committed in Manson’s name.

Leslie Van Houten — who at 19 was the youngest of the killers — was granted parole in September.

But Gov. Jerry Brown still has to sign off on the parole — something he refused to do when a board last granted Van Houten, now 68, release in 2016.

Patricia Krenwinkel, 69, was denied her 14th bid for parole in June after she claimed battered women’s syndrome lead her to help butcher Tate and the LaBiancas.

After 47 years behind bars, she is California’s longest-serving female inmate.

Manson right-hand man Charles “Tex” Watson, 71, converted to Christianity while locked up near Sacremento, where he became an ordained prison minister in 1981 and founded the “Abounding Love Ministry.”

Susan Atkins, described by prosecutors as the most violent of Manson’s women, died of brain cancer in 2009 while she was doing her time at Central California Women’s Facility in Chowchilla.

Several other former cult members are also serving time for other Manson-related murders.

Bobby Beausoleil is living out a life sentence for slaying “family” friend Gary Hinman. A parole board denied his requests for release 17 times, including as recently as last year.

Bruce Davis, 75, was convicted in the killing Manson associates Donald Shea and Gary Hinman in killings directed by Manson. He has been denied parole 28 times, and won’t have another shot until 2027.

Steve Grogan, 66, was convicted of assisting Manson, Watson and Davis in the Shea murder. He was paroled in 1985 and lives in California.

And Lynette ‘Squeaky’ Fromme, 68, who did not take part in the murders, now lives in Marcy, NY, after serving 34 years on a life sentence for trying to assassinate President Gerald Ford.