Secret government documents confirm that Marilyn Monroe was poisoned

06. 01. 2024
6th international conference of exopolitics, history and spirituality

Disclaimer: This document was provided by a former government agent who, however, cannot guarantee its authenticity or the authenticity of the source from which this information originates.

The meeting between Robert Kennedy and Marilyn Monroe took place in Hollywood, at the instigation of Kennedy's sister and her husband, Peter Lawford. The love affair that arose from this acquaintance lasted for several months. Robert Kennedy lived here in late 1961 and also in early 1962, as he longed to convert the story of his book, which described his service in the army in 1943 on a torpedo boat, to silver screen. For this purpose, he also met with film producer Jerry Wald, among other things. However, he did not acquire the rights to the film PT 109 in the end, which made him sick with jealousy.

Over time, Robert Kennedy became very emotionally attached to Marilyn Monroe and repeatedly promised to leave his wife. However, Marilyn later found out that she was not really going to divorce. This discovery made her very emotionally upset and made her very unreliable actress at work, which caused her to start filming late. The 20th Century Fox studio therefore decided to terminate its contract, and the reason for the cancellation of the collaboration was not only the actress' unprofessionalism, but also the financial problems that the film studio had due to the production of Cleopatra.

Marilyn heard the news of the termination of the contract in the middle of filming. She was replaced by actress Lee Remick. Monroe responded to the situation by deciding to call - from her home in Brentwood, California - Kennedy to the Department of Justice to tell him the bad news. He told her not to worry about anything and to take care of everything. However, everything remained the same, so Marilyn decided to call Kennedy again, but this time she was upset, and so she greeted him with insults and threats to publish their relationship unless her film contract was renewed. On the day Marilyn Monroe died, Robert Kennedy was accommodated at the Beverly Hills Hotel. Interestingly, the hotel was located opposite the house where his father lived with his girlfriend Gloria Swanson.

Robert Kennedy's brother-in-law, Peter Lawford, a well-known friend of Marilyn Monroe's, said the actress had a frequent tendency to commit demonstrative suicides to arouse their sympathy, interest and sympathy in other people. One of Marilyn's friends was also her psychiatrist Dr. Ralph Greenson, who had a kind of "special deal" with Lawford. He was supposed to treat her for emotional imbalance and barbiturate addiction, but on her last visit she paradoxically prescribed a recipe for packing up to sixty Seconal sedative tablets, which the actress took regularly.

On the day of Marilyn Monroe's death, April 4, 1962, her housekeeper, Eunice Murray, placed Seconal tablets on the actress's bedside table. Later testimonies show that in this - already fatal - attempted demonstrative suicide, the housekeeper was an accomplice, along with a spokeswoman for Marilyn, named Pat Newcomb. For her contribution to the actress' suicide, she was rewarded with a very high position on the US government payroll, as a personal assistant to George Stevens Jr., president of the Motion Pictures Film Academy, which worked with the US government's promotion department. His father was George Stevens Sr., a left-wing Hollywood director. One of his films was also the story of Anna Frank. In the 48 hours before Marilyn Monroe's death, her spokeswoman Pat Newcomb flew from Los Angeles Airport to Hyannisport, Massachusetts, just hours after Lawford flew to the same location. Robert Kennedy did not check out of the Beverly Hills Hotel until the day of the actress' death, then flew from Los Angeles on Western Airlines to San Francisco, where he stayed at the St. Louis Hotel. Francis. The owner of this hotel, Mr London, was a friend of Kennedy's. Kennedy called Peter Lawford from the hotel to see if Marilyn was dead. Lawford called the actress on this impulse, but she was still alive, so he repeated his phone call after a while, and Monroe no longer answered the phone. Housekeeper Eunice Murray, after the actress took her sedatives, called her psychiatrist Ralph Greenson to tell him that the actress had ingested the entire pack of these tablets. Marilyn saw the situation as another demonstrative suicide that would once again provide her with another influx of sympathy from those around her. However, Greenson advised the housekeeper to only take the actress to fresh air, he did not come to her house until after Monroe was declared dead. Even before her death, Joe Dimaggio Jr., who was serving at the US Navy's Pendleton Base in California at the time, had called her. It was a very friendly conversation. Among other things, Marilyn told him that she was very sleepy. The last call the actress made was a call back to Peter Lawford. Joe Dimaggio Sr., who knew the whole situation about the actress' relationship, testified that he intended to kill Kennedy for his behavior toward Marilyn.

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Marilyn Monroe

The next paragraph of this report is almost completely blacked out, however, it can be read from the available lines that the spokesperson for the actress Pat Newcomb introduced her to the Beat culture in San Francisco and also to one singer who represented the USA in Poland.

It was also found that Marilyn Monroe had an occasional lesbian relationship (her mistress's name was blackened again), with Robert Kennedy also taking part in some of their sexual parties. This information came from wiretapping calls made by Los Angeles Police Chief Parker stored in his safe at headquarters. Another person who knew about Kennedy's relationship with Monroe was the journalist Florabel Muist, as she had the opportunity to see with her own eyes the incriminated telephone interceptions. As mentioned earlier, the actress' psychiatrist knew that she had taken a life-threatening amount of pills, however, despite this indisputable fact, he did not visit her at home until she was pronounced dead. He then contacted the coroner to secure his appointment to the commission of inquiry, which was considered a very non-standard procedure in such a case. However, thanks to this agreement, it was possible to discredit all the statements made by Marilyn Monroe before her death by claiming that she was under the influence of sedatives.

The rest of the document is again blacked out, but the available information suggests that the paragraph deals with George Stevens Jr. and his work for government propaganda, as mentioned above.

The document concludes that a recording of the sexual intercourse between Kennedy and Monroe was also made. This recording was secretly made and stored in a private detective agency in Los Angeles. Detectives demanded five thousand dollars for a copy, even though the voices on the recording are difficult to recognize.

The death of Marilyn Monroe was

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