
The Murder of Marilyn Monroe
Case Closed
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Narrated by:
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Eric Jason Martin
Marilyn Monroe died under suspicious circumstances on the night of August 4, 1962. In The Murder of Marilyn Monroe: Case Closed, renowned MM expert Jay Margolis and New York Times best-selling author Richard Buskin finally lay to rest more than 50 years of wild speculation and misguided assertions by actually naming the screen goddess's killer. At the same time, they use the testimony of eyewitnesses to describe exactly what took place inside her house on Fifth Helena Drive in Los Angeles's Brentwood neighborhood.
Implicating Bobby Kennedy in the commission of Monroe's murder, this is the first book to name the LAPD officers who accompanied the attorney general to her home, provide details about how the Kennedys used bribes to silence one of the ambulance drivers, and specify how the subsequent cover-up was aided by a noted pathologist's outrageous lies. This blockbuster volume blows the lid off the world's most notorious and talked-about celebrity death, and in the process also exposes the third gunman in the pantry who delivered the fatal bullet to the back of RFK's head - and the third gunman's female accomplice who, until now, has only been known to the LAPD and the FBI as "the girl in the polka-dot dress".
©2011, 2014 Jay Margolis and Richard Buskin (P)2014 Audible Inc.Listeners also enjoyed...




















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Good story
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One of our family friends, the mother of one of my father's old WW2 Navy buddies, had first-hand knowledge of MM's affair with RFK. She was an artist and neighbor of Monroe's in Brentwood (we always refer to it as "Westwood" back then). This 65-ish artist was a very nice lady but a bit eccentric. She lived with two toilet-trained Siamese cats, and two large cockatoos she had taught to swear at men and wolf whistle at women when they entered her home! Her home was Spanish style with white stucco and a red tile roof (very much like Marilyn's). Her garage had been converted into her artist's studio and she could see/hear the comings and goings at Marilyn's house while she painted. We always held our July 4th picnics at this lady's house because her yard was so beautiful with a sweeping emerald green lawn and lemon and apricot trees. From her elevated back porch, if you looked left and down, you could see Marilyn's pool shimmering through the trees that bordered their properties. She told my parents that she saw RFK and Peter Lawford coming in and out of Marilyn's house TWICE that afternoon, and she heard cars coming and going at Marilyn's throughout the night. She and other neighbors heard RFK and MM shouting at each other on August 4th. She's not named in this book but I remember my mother telling me that our friend had been playing cards that afternoon with neighbors when they heard Marilyn and RFK fighting with each other. EVERYTHING my mother related to me told to her by her friend about that afternoon and evening is confirmed in Mr. Margolis' book. That's why I know that this IS what happened to Marilyn - it was no "accidental overdose" or "probable suicide." Marilyn Monroe was murdered, and if you want to know what REALLY happened to Marilyn Monroe, and WHO her killers were, READ THIS BOOK.
Lastly, Mr. Margolis' writing is superb and the narrator is one of the best I have ever heard on any Audible book.
Most Accurate book EVER on Marilyn Monroe's Murder
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Little red diary
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Interesting & sad
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Also, Dr Noguchi did not embalm bodies, he autopsied them. Book mistakenly calls him "the knife" for his many embalmings. I really wanted to like it more because the story is so shocking but the errors and repeats make me wonder about the facts the author puts forward.
Author repeats himself word -for-word
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Informative
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More about other people than Marilyn Monroe
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Interesting topic, clumsily written and edited
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Reads like forensic files
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However, I should have paid attention to a previous listener's comments about the narration. The narrator's voice is rather monotonous, which makes it difficult to tell if he is speaking as the The Narrarator, quoting someone's given statement, or reading a written article or report.
The next to last chapter, about Bobby Kennedy's shooting, is irrelevant and unnecessary. It should only be included as a footnote to the final timeline. The timeline at the end was helpful. However, the abrupt ending without resolution, speculation, or even the suggestion that the case be re-reviewed for purposes of Justice was disappointing.
This audible version would be much more interesting of read by multiple voices, or told as a discussion between a few people.
Interesting new details
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