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Details of the tragic final hours of Hollywood’s film star are revealed almost 52 years after she died of a sleeping pill overdose at the age of 36 on Saturday, August 4, 1962.
“There was a premeditated plan to murder her on the part of Robert Kennedy, Ralph Greenson and Peter Lawford,” allege the authors.
The star of The Seven Year Itch and Some Like It Hot had been having a secret affair with JFK, and then his brother Bobby the book claims.
Then he had a doctor give Monroe a lethal injection and with his brother-in-law, British actor Peter Lawford, orchestrated a massive cover-up that led the coroner to declare her death a suicide.
That is the astonishing claim of a new book, The Murder Of Marilyn Monroe: Case Closed by Jay Margolis and Richard Buskin.
“Marilyn has got to be silenced,” Robert Kennedy told Monroe’s psychiatrist Dr Ralph Greenson (with whom she was also having a sordid affair), disclosed Lawford in a secretly taped confession.
“Bobby was determined to shut her up, regardless of the consequences.”
But Monroe was spinning out of control, battling depression and anxiety as she struggled with the failure of three marriages, ageing in Hollywood where she feared typecasting as a “sex kitten”, and studios that were wearying of her diva antics.
Monroe lamented to her psychiatrist that the Kennedys were “passing her around like a football” and threatened to hold a press conference revealing her affairs.
According to the book, Robert Kennedy and Lawford arrived at the actress’s Spanish-style home in Los Angeles early in the afternoon on that Saturday, hoping to calm her down.
“Marilyn announced that she was in love with Bobby and that he had promised to marry her,” said Lawford.
Monroe refused to be tossed aside, vowing to expose the Kennedy brothers.
“Marilyn presently lost it, screaming obscenities and flailing wildly away at Bobby with her fists,” recalled Lawford.
“In her fury she picked up a small kitchen knife and lunged at him.
“I was with them at this time so I tried to grab Marilyn’s arm.

I believe we’ll still be arguing over this 100 years after Marilyn’s death but the reality is, the case is closed
Jay Margolis, author

By the next day the Secret Service had seized and sealed the telephone company records for Monroe’s home.
Despite evidence of injections on Monroe’s knees, armpit and chest, the coroner’s report stated “No needle mark.”
Mysteriously, all of Monroe’s autopsy tissue samples vanished from the coroner’s office.
Her incriminating diary, which coroner’s officers found in her home on the Monday, disappeared the next day, never to be seen again.
“The evidence is conclusive,” says Margolis.
“Marilyn Monroe was murdered by Dr Greenson on the orders of Bobby Kennedy.
She was not only killed but slandered in death by making it appear she had committed suicide.
“But so many people refuse to believe that it was murder or suicide and want to think it was an accidental overdose, which isn’t medically possible.
“I believe we’ll still be arguing over this 100 years after Marilyn’s death but the reality is, the case is closed.
“Marilyn Monroe was murdered.”














We were in England during an extended research trip to Europe, for The Animated Man: A Life of Walt Disney. I had been in touch with Todd by mail and email for some months, and we had agreed to meet for lunch at Grantham, in Lincolnshire, about an hour’s train trip north of London, near Little Humby, the village where Todd was living then. We’d had no confirmation from Todd of our plans in the days just before our scheduled meeting, and so Phyllis and I felt some apprehension when we got off the train at Grantham.

















