
Was Marilyn Monroe Murdered to Be Silenced?
Marilyn Monroe in 1953. Photo by Sam Shaw. Public domain.
Marilyn Monroe was the most desired woman on earth — radiant on screen, tragic behind the curtain. When she died in 1962 at just 36, the official verdict was suicide. But more than six decades later, whispers of murder still echo. Was Hollywood's golden girl silenced because she knew too much? Recently resurfaced recordings, declassified documents, and decades of conflicting testimony keep one question alive: Did Monroe's knowledge of powerful men's secrets lead to her untimely and suspicious end?
The Last Days of Hollywood's Darling
In the final days of her life, Monroe was reportedly both hopeful and despondent. She planned new projects and told friends she was in love — even claiming she might marry Robert Kennedy. But others sensed she was unraveling, hurt by the cold rejection from the Kennedy brothers, with whom she'd had high-profile, albeit secretive, relationships.
On Aug. 4, 1962, just hours before her death, Monroe called friends sounding distraught. She reportedly told one confidant she had been threatened by a woman who told her to "leave Bobby alone," according to Vanity Fair.
Newly uncovered audio tapes allegedly capture heated arguments between Monroe and Robert Kennedy on the day she died. According to surveillance expert Fred Otash, Monroe was demanding answers from Kennedy. He reportedly demanded she hand over her "little red book," according to Inquisitr, believed to contain sensitive political notes.
Dangerous Secrets, Deadly Consequences?
Those who knew Monroe claimed she was privy to secrets about the Kennedys that could "shock the whole world," according to Vanity Fair. She allegedly told friends she feared betrayal and hinted at blackmail. FBI records released decades later show Monroe was being monitored for her left-leaning political views and connections.
Neighbors recalled hearing a loud argument the night she died, then silence, then whispers. According to Vanity Fair, friends recounted that Monroe spoke of "men in high places," betrayals, and "dangerous secrets" in her last phone calls.
Hours later, she was found dead, face down on her bed, clutching a telephone. Officially, it was barbiturate overdose — a suicide. But inconsistencies in phone records, contradictory witness statements, and missing evidence fueled suspicions that the truth had been buried with her.
The Kennedys, the Mob, and the Bugs
Monroe's ties to both President John F. Kennedy and Attorney General Robert Kennedy have been well-documented. What's less clear is the extent of their influence over her final hours. According to accounts, surveillance devices captured Kennedy and Monroe's last encounters — allegedly showing heated confrontations and desperate demands from Kennedy to retrieve her diary before she could go public.
The FBI, mafia figures like Sam Giancana, and private investigators were all said to have bugged Monroe's home and phones. In one chilling account, Kennedy is allegedly heard shouting at Monroe, while she screams back, before a struggle ensues.
According to Vanity Fair, a former FBI agent claimed that after Monroe's death, orders came from either the attorney general or the president to remove call records that might reveal who had contacted her that day.
Canceled Investigations and Censored Stories
The theories didn't end with Monroe's funeral. Investigators and journalists have since pursued the story, but many avenues were blocked. FBI files were heavily redacted, and a 1980s TV special alleging Monroe was murdered at the behest of the Kennedys was reportedly pulled before broadcast — its cancellation raising further questions about political influence.
The absence of conclusive evidence — no definitive tapes, no clear confession — leaves the mystery unsolved. What remains are haunting clues: a woman desperate to be heard, men desperate to silence her, and a world still fascinated by what really happened that August night.
References: Was Marilyn Monroe Silenced? Her Chilling Final Words About the Kennedys Could Expose a Powerful Cover-Up | Marilyn Monroe's Final Hours: Nuke Fears, Mob Spies, and a Secret Kennedy Visitor