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To: ColdOne

Based on Monroe’s activities during the last two years of her life I think it’s possible. Several very close to Monroe believed the Kennedy’s were absolutely involved and swore she was going to blow the whistle on them and others.


24 posted on 09/25/2010 2:50:26 PM PDT by dragnet2
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To: dragnet2

Over the years I had not really cared much on her. Then as the years pass and I see more and more info about her death, you wonder. One will never truly know.


26 posted on 09/25/2010 2:52:36 PM PDT by ColdOne (GOP. Gutless Old Politicians :^))......November and Beyond!)
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To: dragnet2

Sort of like Monica Lewinsky and Mary Caitrin Mahoney.


43 posted on 09/25/2010 4:11:20 PM PDT by rabidralph
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To: dragnet2; All

.

I believe the Kennedy’s either killed her or had her killed to prevent her from going public with the affairs she had with both Robert and John.
Bumping off an actress? This would have been nothing to them.
I’ve read many books and articles on MM, and almost all of them relate this same account of her death:

Donald Wolfe reports that Eunice (Marilyn’s housekeeper) and son-in-law Norman Jeffries were at Marilyn’s house during the night of her death. The two had conflicting stories concerning the events that took place that evening. Jeffries claimed that between 9:30 and 10.00 p.m., Robert Kennedy and two unknown men came to Marilyn’s door and ordered them to leave the house. According to Jeffries, they went to a neighbor’s home and waited until the men left around 10:30 p.m. When they returned home, Jeffries stated that he saw Marilyn laying face down, naked in her bed and holding what appeared to be a phone.

Jeffries said that Marilyn looked as if she were dead. Eunice allegedly called for an ambulance and then called Dr. Greenson. Wolfe states that Jeffries saw Lawford and Pat Newcomb arrive at the house. They were in a state of shock and hysterical. According to Summers, a former ambulance driver named Ken Hunter told an investigator for the DA that he arrived at Marilyn’s home “in the early morning hours” following the discovery of her body. The ambulance company chief also told the investigator that Marilyn was in fact in a coma when the ambulance arrived, due to an overdose of sleeping pills. He claimed that she was taken to Santa Monica Hospital, where she passed away. Summers suggests that Marilyn’s body was returned to her home in order to facilitate the ongoing cover-up.

Another witness account supported Jeffries’ story, but it was never included in the records of the investigation into Marilyn’s death. Elizabeth Pollard, a neighbor of Marilyn’s, told police that she saw Robert Kennedy with two unidentified men approach Marilyn’s house at about 6 or 7 p.m. One of the unidentified men was carrying a black medical case.

According to Wolfe, Pollard’s story was discredited by police and omitted from the investigation because they claimed her story was an “aberration.” If it was an aberration, it was one seen by several people because Pollard was not alone that day. Summers states that she was playing a card game with several people when they all recognized Kennedy driving up to Marilyn’s house. The identity of the other witnesses remains unclear.

Marilyn’s death was ruled a ‘probable suicide’.
The problem with this theory is that too many forensic facts are at odds with it. Quite a number of forensic experts have discarded the suicide theory as inconsistent with the facts.

Another problem with the suicide theory is that she was in good spirits at the time of her death and had been making plans for future events and movies, and if numerous reports by intimates is correct, her remarriage to Joe DiMaggio.

Key forensic experts argued that there were no traces of Nembutal in her stomach or intestinal tract. Also, there should have been specific crystals and evidence of the yellow capsules in which Nembutal is packaged. Not only were there no capsule parts, there was no yellow dye in her stomach.

The idea of an injection of barbiturates was also implausible for two reasons: there were no needle marks found on her body after very close examination, plus an injection of such a high dosage of barbiturates would have caused immediate death, leaving clear bruising.

Several experts argue that one possible explanation that was consistent with physical evidence was that the drugs were administered in an enema, which would account for the “abnormal, anomalous discoloration of the colon” as reported in the autopsy.

.


44 posted on 09/25/2010 4:13:50 PM PDT by patriot08 (TEXAS GAL- born and bred and proud of it!)
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