Marilyn Monroeâs legendary red diary, long thought to be a myth, has finally emerged, and its revelations are staggering, RadarOnline.com reports.
Retired Los Angeles Police Department detective Mike Rothmiller asserts that this diary is genuine. He claims to have found 70 photocopied pages within an LAPD intelligence dossier marked âMonroeâs Diary.â
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Dangerous Romances
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Retired LAPD detective Mike Rothmiller claimed Marilyn Monroeâs long-rumored diary was found in an intelligence file labeled âMonroeâs Diary.â
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Written in block letters, the diary supposedly reveals Monroeâs innermost thoughts, personal stories, and intimate memories filled with passion, treachery, and heartache. The pages are said to have been removed from a binder and mention influential figures identified only as âJohnâ and âBobby,â who Rothmiller suspects were President John F. Kennedy and Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy.
Rothmiller states that the diary outlines Monroeâs connections with both men, including intimate conversations about significant political issues, like a rumored plan to assassinate Cuban leader Fidel Castro.
Monroeâs interactions with the Kennedys reportedly began when Hollywood and Washington circles intersected through Peter Lawford, a member of the Rat Pack and brother-in-law to JFK and RFK. Lavish gatherings at Lawfordâs Santa Monica residence, featuring celebrities like Frank Sinatra and Robert Wagner, were where Monroe first encountered the powerful siblings.
According to Rothmiller, Monroe wrote, âBobby and I made love at Peters. He wants to see me again. This is our secret. Bobby is gentle. He listens to me. Heâs nicer than John. Bobby said he loves me and wants to marry me. I love him.â
Her sentiments toward JFK, however, were reportedly less affectionate.
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Entries allegedly link Monroe to âJohnâ and âBobby,â believed by Mike Rothmiller to be John F. Kennedy and Robert F. Kennedy.
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Monroe reportedly expressed dissatisfaction with JFK, writing, âJFK always wants me to bâ him. We just kiss and have sex. I wish it was more but itâs not.â
Rothmiller notes that Monroeâs writings depict the Kennedy brothers as living dangerously, engaging in affairs, attending sex parties, and associating with criminals, all while involved with Monroe, one of the worldâs most famous women.
Rothmiller remarked, âThey were both living a very reckless life for politicians. Their affairs could have ended their careers. Her diary also showed how, for want of a better term, one brother just turned Marilyn over to the other brother.â
In 1962, their lifestyle was on the brink of causing a scandal. On August 1, just three days before Monroeâs death, journalist Dorothy Kilgallen reportedly contacted the Department of Justice to inquire if RFK would confirm an affair with Monroe.
This, according to Rothmiller, was the breaking point. The Kennedys allegedly cut ties with Monroe, with Lawford warning her not to contact them again. Monroe was reportedly âcut offâ by both the White House and the DOJ, as per her diary and LAPD files from the Organized Crime Intelligence Division (OCID).
Feeling betrayed, Monroeâs diary entries suggest she was consumed by revenge. Rothmiller notes that one entry reads: âThey are not calling back. Bob and John used me. I told Peter theyâre ignoring me. Iâm not going to stand for that. Iâm going to tell everyone about us.â
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They Used Me
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Through Peter Lawford, Monroe met the Kennedy brothers at Hollywood gatherings with Frank Sinatra among the attendees.
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According to phone transcripts allegedly monitored by the OCID, Monroe intended to hold a press conference to reveal her affairs and expose secrets about Cuba and Castro. After talking to screenwriter Jose Bolanos, she wrote, âI told Jose Iâm going to tell the world about them. They used me. Iâm not a whore. Jose said, donât tell anyone about this. Itâs dangerous.â
Rothmiller believes Monroe was at a breaking point, stating, âShe was livid and really angry when she thought she was being tossed aside.â
Her diary allegedly shows she was ready to make her grievances public. She noted, âJohn hasnât called. Bobby called. Heâs coming to California. He wants to see me.â
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In diary excerpts, Monroe wrote âJFK always wants me to bâ him,â describing her relationship with John.
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Rothmiller believes one of the final diary entries is particularly striking. On August 3, 1962, Monroe wrote, âPeter said Robert will come tomorrow. I donât know if he will.â These were among her last documented words.
On August 5, Monroe was found dead at 36 in her Brentwood home, with empty prescription bottles nearby. Her death was ruled a probable suicide from a barbiturate overdose.
The press conference she planned did not occur, but her death has sparked conspiracy theories for decades, many involving the Kennedys.
No Kennedy family member has been charged in connection with her death. By the time these theories gained traction, JFK had already died, and Robert F. Kennedy never publicly addressed the claims.
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Her Killer Finally Exposed
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Journalist Dorothy Kilgallen reportedly contacted the Department of Justice about RFK days before Monroeâs death.
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Rothmiller has come to a startling conclusion: Monroeâs death was the work of U.S. Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy. He challenges the official ruling of probable suicide, citing Monroeâs diary entry from August 3: âPeter said Robert will come tomorrow.â
Using documents, surveillance records, interviews, and other sources, Rothmiller developed a theory about what happened to Monroe. He claims Lawford, burdened by guilt, confessed in 1982 that RFK secretly flew to Los Angeles on August 4 to meet Monroe, as indicated in her diary.
Rothmiller asserts RFK visited Monroe twice that day, attempting to prevent her from going public.
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Monroe allegedly planned to expose JFK and RFK in a press conference, according to diary entries cited by Rothmiller.
READ MORE ON EXCLUSIVES
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During the second visit, Rothmiller claims events spiraled out of control.
Lawford allegedly told Rothmiller that Monroe became enraged, shouting she would no longer be treated âlike a whoreâ by the Kennedys. RFK, according to Lawford, then threw her to the floor.
Lawford reportedly said RFK searched Monroeâs belongings, demanding, âWhere is it?â referring to the diary.
Rothmiller recounts that Lawford became emotional as he described RFK stirring a glass of water and giving it to Monroe, who noted it tasted strange.
According to Lawford, he and RFK left Monroe on a sofa, later returning to find her unresponsive. RFK allegedly shook her, but she only mumbled before passing out and ceasing to breathe.
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One of Monroeâs final entries read âPeter said Robert will come tomorrow,â referring to RFK before her death.
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Rothmiller claims the situation took an even more shocking turn. Two plainclothes LAPD officers allegedly arrived at the door. Without exchanging words, Lawford and RFK left for the airport.
Hours passed before Monroeâs doctor called 911 the following morning.
By the time Monroeâs death was reported, RFK had an alibi: he was seen attending church with his family near San Francisco.
Rothmiller theorizes that during the missing hours, the scene was altered to look like a suicide, and all evidence of Monroeâs ties to the Kennedys, including the diary, vanished.
He considers the diary to be the key evidence.
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Rothmiller alleged Peter Lawford told him RFK visited Monroe on the day she died.
âWhat shocked me the most was her writing that Bobby was coming to see her that day,â Rothmiller said. âIt corroborated all the other stuffâ he saw in secret OCID dossiers involving Monroe and the Kennedys.
Since publishing his findings in his book Bombshell: The Night Bobby Kennedy Killed Marilyn Monroe, Rothmiller says additional former OCID officers have quietly backed him up, telling him about other secret files and surveillance photos allegedly showing Lawford and RFK in Los Angeles on the day Monroe died.
âThey wouldnât speak on the record or go public,â he said, âbut they told me: âYou absolutely nailed it.'â


