However, the latest book published by Douglas Thompson and Mike
Rothmiller puts forth a more shocking claim, which is even substantiated
by secret files from Los Angeles Police Department. Titled 'Bombshell:
The Night Bobby Kennedy Killed Marilyn Monroe', the book names JFK's brother Bobby Kennedy
as Monroe's alleged murderer. Furthermore, it has been stated that
Bobby himself poisoned Monroe's drink while actor Peter Lawford
witnessed the entire episode. Co-author Mike Rothmiller, who happens to
be a former Los Angeles police official, claims that Monroe was assassinated to protect the Kennedy clan.
The video of Monroe sensually singing 'Happy Birthday Mr President'
to JFK, just months before her death, is etched forever in the history
of America. Donning a sequined and revealing rhinestone gown, she
enthralled a shocked audience with her singing, with a voice quivering
with eroticism. In fact, at that time, her performance was reported by a
journalist as "making love to the president in the direct view of 40
million Americans". JFK can be spotted in the front row, seated beside
his wife Jacqueline Kennedy.
At the event, Monroe was welcomed to the stage by actor Peter
Lawford, who is remembered as the person standing behind her, to whom
she hands over her lush ermine wrap, after seductively removing it. What
is not known to many was that Lawford was a part of the Kennedy family,
since he was married to JFK's sister Pat. According to Rothmiller's
book, Lawford later confessed to watching the murder of Monroe at the
hands of Bobby.
Robert 'Bobby' Kennedy was the US attorney-general at the time and
was often spotted with his president brother JFK. At JFK's 45th birthday
gala, organized 10 days prior to his actual birth date on May 29,
Monroe was almost offered as a gift to the young president. According to
the new book, "At the post-gala party, in a New York penthouse suite
provided by a Hollywood studio boss, she danced five times with JFK’s
brother Bobby, the US Attorney-General. But she left with President
Kennedy and went via a basement corridor and a private elevator to his
suite at the next-door Carlyle Hotel. Next day, she returned to
California," reports DailyMail.
The same week, Monroe reportedly received a call from Lawford. He
made the call from his home in the Kennedy Compound of Hyannis Port. His
message to Monroe was curt and brutal — she was ordered to never see
the president again and she must never try to contact him. Monroe died
mysteriously within less than three months after the call.
As per Rothmiller's bombshell claim, Lawford broke down and confessed
to the murder 20 years later. However, the story was never made public,
because it was tactically suppressed from all levels. Rothmiller
himself chose to maintain silence for decades fearing for his own life
and well being of his family. Yet, four decades later, he decided to
come forward with the shocking claim, while taking necessary
precautions.
As a 27-year-old young, dynamic LAPD detective Rothmiller once got
the chance to access files with names of famous personalities. As he
took out JFK's folder, he reportedly found that it was cross-referenced
with Monroe's folder as well as many mob bosses. Since he could not make
photocopies discreetly, the former policeman claims that he took down
notes from the files. Among the bundle of files, he found one marked
'confidential', titled 'Marilyn Monroe's Diary'. He believed it to be
her original journal the 'little red book' the actress referred to time
and again. Now comes the most shocking part.
The day before her death, on August 3, 1962, Monroe reportedly noted,
"Peter said Robert will come tomorrow. I don't know if he will."
Throughout her diary, Monroe had considered Bobby Kennedy as someone
deeply in love with her, who would even leave his wife, Ethel, to marry
her. Meanwhile, Bobby Kennedy was outwardly hailed as the ideal family
man, being honored as 'Father of the Year' in 1962. He was a married man
with seven children.
In her diary, Monroe reportedly wrote, "Bobby is gentle. He listens
to me. He’s nicer than John... Bobby says he loves me and wants to marry
me. I love him. John hasn’t called. Bobby called. Frank invited me to
the lodge. He said it will be fun. He said never to mention Sam at the
lodge. He’s Mafia." Here she meant Frank Sinatra by 'Frank' and Sam
happened to be Sam Giancana, the head of the Chicago mob at the time.
In a later entry, she wrote, "They are not calling back. Bob and John
used me. I told Peter they’re ignoring me. I’m not going to stand for
that. I’m going to tell everyone about us." In another shocking entry,
she mentions actor Jose Bolanos, saying, "I told Jose I’m going to tell
the world about them. They used me. I’m not a whore. Jose said don’t
tell anyone about this. It’s dangerous."
Around mid-July 1962, around a month before her death, Monroe is
believed to have had an abortion on Bobby's orders. The new book exposes
a dark side of Bobby, far from the intellectual politician he was
perceived to be. He reportedly had regular drunken orgies with chorus
girls and prostitutes at Peter Lawford's house. He was even infamous in
those close circles as a 'groper'.
Rothmiller pieced together all the connecting information following
one of his chance visits to Hugh Hefner's Playboy mansion in 1982.
There, he came across Peter Lawford and it immediately struck him that
Lawford might have been the last living person to see Monroe on the
evening of her death. The policeman chatted with the actor and left him
his business card. A week later, Lawford called him in a paranoid
manner. After the two secretly met at a park off Sunset Boulevard, he
slowly opened up about the night.
Rothmiller countered Lawford after he narrated the official version
of her death at first. According to DailyMail, the actress was raped by
Sam Giancana at Frank Sinatra's lodge party in an intoxicated state. She
was later sexually violated and even photographed in comprising
positions, to keep as potential blackmail material. The following day,
Sinatra bawled her out publicly, warning her strictly to never reveal
her affair with the Kennedy brothers.
But, the Hollywood icon was not one to be silenced by alleged
threats, abuse or violence. Lawford shared that on the day of her death,
he accompanied Bobby to Monroe's home, to acquire her diary. When
Monroe lost her temper and started waving a kitchen knife at Bobby,
Lawford placated her and escorted Bobby out. The two men returned later
that evening when a bigger brawl took place.
Monroe appeared dazed from the influence of some drugs or drink at
the time Lawford and Bobby visited her in the evening. She fought with
Bobby over and over again; the situation often escalating to physical
confrontation. Later, Lawford calmed her down on the sofa while Bobby
upended her drawers in search of the 'little red book'. As Bobby
reportedly kept losing his temper, Lawford pleaded with him to leave
before the neighbors called the police.
Around that time, Bobby went to the kitchen and appeared to be
stirring a glass of water with a spoon, while pouring something into it.
Lawford assumed it to be some sedative, but was snapped at by Bobby
when he asked. Soon afterward, Bobby asked Monroe, "Drink this, you'll
feel better." She complained of its unpleasant taste but reportedly
finished the drink upon Bobby's urging. As she lay back, visibly groggy
and drugged, the two men searched her house for the diary but failed to
find it.
Soon, her voice appeared feeble and her words slurred, before the
signs of life drained from her and her complexion turned waxen. As
Lawford panicked, Bobby asked him to leave her there and then left the
house. While they were leaving, LAPD detectives in plain clothes
appeared at the door. Lawford later claimed that they found and secured
her diary, and also disposed off the glass from which Monroe drank
whatever Bobby had offered.
The book delves into further details about Monroe's death, autopsy
reports and Bobby's alleged involvement. Rothmiller also reveals that
Lawford's confession nearly cost him his life in August 1982. Barely
weeks after Lawford told him "what really happened", a gunman on a
motorcycle opened fire at him from a semi-automatic pistol. Rothmiller
was hit in the back and side, and suffered spinal damage which he barely
survived.
Lawford died in 1984 from alcoholism. Rothmiller admits that he
always believed in his confession, which he also believes as the truth
behind Monroe's death.
3 comments:
The story will sell a lot of books. It might even be true.
This will never be verified because all the witnesses are dead. Those Kennedy boys really liked the ladies. Too bad one had to die at Chappaquiddick and possibly another in Hollywood.
My father's family knew the Kennedy's a bit. My late Aunt Helen told me that, except for Young Joe (who died during WW II) they were a pack of borderline alcoholic indiscriminate skirt chasers.
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