-Caveat Lector-

>From the New Statesman

www.newstatesman.co.uk/199909130054.htm


> Farewell, my lovely
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> The Assassination of Marilyn Monroe
> Donald H Wolfe Warner Books, 660pp, £7.99
> ISBN 0751526525
> <Picture: Buy this book now!>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Nicola Upson
>
>
> <Picture>How can Americans still live so contentedly with the Kennedy myth?
> While Monica Lewinsky can sleep safely in the knowledge that cover-ups aren't
> what they used to be, the the truth behind the death of Marilyn Monroe remains a
> blur of rumour, lies and misinformation. Although we may have despaired of
> knowing the truth about her, we've never grown weary of searching it out.
>
> Despite its provocative title and the shocking revelations that Monroe was
> brutally raped in front of Frank Sinatra just a week before being given a lethal
> injection by her former lover, Bobby Kennedy, The Assassination of Marilyn
> Monroe (now out in paperback) is a quietly written testimony that moves
> relentlessly towards a conclusion that is both plausible and convincing. Until
> politics loses its self-interest (and Birnam Wood removes to Dunsinane) there
> will not be a definitive book on the Monroe case, but this chilling account,
> drawing on key witnesses who have never before spoken out, may well be as good
> as it gets. Sensational though it is, this is the most plausible account of all
> the Monroe books I have read.
>
> Wolfe provides an exhaustive exploration of Monroe's life, but the value of his
> work lies, inevitably, in the light he sheds on her death. Taking advantage of
> 40 years of medical advances and the testimony of prominent medical examiners,
> he blows apart the original autopsy verdict of "probable suicide" by showing
> that, although Monroe had a high level of barbiturates in her blood, no trace
> was found in her digestive tract, and the fatal dose could only have been
> administered by injection. The verdict: homicide, with enough drugs in her body
> to kill 15 to 26 people.
>
> Hollywood and the Kennedys were quick to publicise reasons why Monroe should
> take her life. Her dismissal by 20th Century Fox for "spectacular absenteeism"
> from the filming of Something' s Got to Give - and in particular for leaving the
> set to sing at the president's birthday gala - was documented in the press at
> the time. But the rumours, fuelled by Bobby's brother-in-law, the actor Peter
> Lawford, were unfounded; 16 days after her humiliating dismissal, Fox's star was
> reinstated on a higher salary. Far from being depressed and suicidal, Monroe was
> flying high.
>
> Her triumph was the beginning of the end. Cut off from the presidency as a
> security threat and encouraged by her victory with Fox, Monroe called a press
> conference for the Monday after her death, to expose the Kennedys. The threat
> was enough to incite efforts to keep her quiet. She was invited to Cal-Neva for
> a party orchestrated to ensure her silence. There, in the presence of Sinatra, a
> Kennedy supporter, and the mafia boss Sam Giancana, she was drugged, sexually
> abused and photographed. The pictures, claims Sinatra's photographer, were to be
> used to discredit her and stop her going to the press.
>
> They were never needed, because a week later Monroe was dead. Wolfe's concluding
> account of her final hours is compulsive, revealing, through the testimony of
> Norman Jeffries, Monroe's caretaker, and corroborative statements from police
> and neighbours, that what looked to the world like a 4am suicide was, in fact, a
> 10.45pm murder with a five-hour cover-up operation. According to Wolfe's new
> evidence, Bobby was in LA that weekend. He visited Monroe with Lawford on
> Saturday afternoon, and a violent argument took place. Bobby left, returning at
> 10pm with two LAPD security men while Monroe was on the phone to her Mexican
> boyfriend; she put the phone down to let them in but never came back. Her
> late-night visitors stayed for just 20 minutes. After they left, Jeffries and
> Monroe's housekeeper found her comatose and naked on the bed in the guest
> cottage, clutching the telephone but still alive. An ambulance was called, but
> attempts to resuscitate her failed, and she died at 10.45pm.
>
> Wolfe's account of what happened between Monroe's death and the official call to
> the police is the key to the case. Monroe's pink hacienda was a time bomb
> waiting to explode and incriminate the Kennedys; it had to be cleared, and a
> suicide scene had to be created, before the public heard of her death. In an
> operation masterminded by the LAPD intelligence chief, the body was moved to the
> bedroom while the house was ransacked and Monroe's "little book of secrets",
> which recorded conversations with the Kennedys, was safely removed. It has never
> been found.
>
> Perhaps the last word should go to Monroe herself. "The truth is that I've never
> fooled anyone," she once said. "I've sometimes let men fool themselves."
>
> Nicola Upson is the author of "Mythologies: the sculpture of Helaine Blumenfeld"
> (Overlook Press)


A<>E<>R
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