"The beauty of the world has two edges,
one of laughter,
one of anguish, cutting the heart asunder."
-- Virginia Woolf
Momo figured two could play the Kennedys game of cat and mouse. He continued
to work with the CIA, this time to shadow Jacks and Bobbys every move. For
their allegiance, the CIA would share in Momos gambling profits.
Official wiretaps evidenced that the Kennedy brothers had resolved to severe the
embryonic cord with the mobsters whom patriarch Joe -- and they -- had relied on to get
them where they were. Their first step had been to cut all social ties with anyone
associated with the Outfit; even Frank Sinatra, Jacks long-time friend, was no
longer welcome at the White House.
Momo also heard Bobby on tape distinctly insisting to the FBI that "that dago Sam
Giancana" be put away for life.
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Marilyn Monroe (Magnum Photos) |
Eager to strike back, Momo could not, unfortunately, use the powerhouse
footage he had of Jacks "indiscretions." The CIA vetoed this idea since
the material had been obtained illegally and could backfire against their user. So,
according to Chuck Giancana's oft-startling revelations in Double Cross, Momo
found another way.His object was still to destroy the Kennedys good-boy Roman
Catholic image. (Bobby had just been named "Family Man of the Year" by a
national magazine.) The trysts Momo had been having with movie star Marilyn Monroe had
been cooling since he began seeing more and more of Phyllis McGuire. But, they had
remained friends and he knew she was sharing her time with other men, including both the
married Kennedy brothers. She had recently confessed to him that she had fallen in love
with Bobby. The book, Double Cross, theorizes that this confession sealed her doom.
Marilyn had grown up as Norma Jean Baker, passed like a rented automobile through a
series of uncaring foster families. In looking for the love she had never experienced, she
tried to find it the only way she knew, with her physical body. She kept telling herself
man after man that he was the one who really loved her. Perhaps because Bobby was
gentler, more sophisticated, better spoken than the other men she had known, men like
Mooney terse with the rawness of the streets, Bobby may have come across to her as the
golden cavalier whose affections were sincere.
Columnist Vernon Scott had written of Marilyn: "She is every mans dream of
the kind of woman hed like to spend the rest of his life with on a deserted
island." But, to Bobby -- like all the rest -- an occasional jaunt to that island was
sufficient.
Through his CIA informants who had bugged Marilyns phone, Momo learned that Bobby
was to be in California on August 4, 1962, and had arranged a rendezvous at Marilyns
house for that evening. The plan that ensued was diabolical. Momo sent his two
most-trusted hit men, "Needles" Gianola and "Mugsy"
Tortorella, to
case Marilyns house and, after Bobby departed, to make their move. According
to the theory put forth in the book, the executioners would kill the star and make her
death look like suicide. Naturally, Momo figured, the Attorney General would be dragged
into the case when police discovered the love letters from Bobby that Momo knew she kept;
besides this, Marilyns housekeeper always answered the door when anyone visited and
would be sure under police scrutiny to admit that Kennedy had been there moments before
she died. Momos press friends were put on alert; they were ordered to make the most
of the "tragic, unrequited love affair that sent poor Marilyn racing for the bottle
of barbiturates".
August 4...waiting paid off. Bobby arrived at Marilyns
Brentwood,
mansion early evening, let in by the housekeeper. He left Marilyn around midnight. Waiting
for her maid to retire, which was soon thereafter, the two killers stole into
Marilyns bedroom. There, Chuck Giancana insists, they overcame her and inserted a
Nembutal suppository into her anus. It was not the first time the device was used; it had
eliminated other celebrities who had, when found dead, been written off as suicides. It
was untraceable and the drug worked quickly, seeping its poison into the blood stream,
appearing as if she had overdosed. Before they left the house, Gianola opened a bottle of
pills, poured most of them into his pocket, and sprinkled a few beside her on the bed
along with the empty bottle. The housekeeper discovered Marilyns corpse the
following morning.
Momo envisioned the headlines: MARILYN MONROE FOUND DEAD; THE KENNEDYS IMPLICATED. But,
he would be disappointed. When the news service splashed the news of the untimely death
the following morning, the Kennedys pulled out all stops to censure investigation and keep
newspaper reporters at bay. FBI agents, on Presidential instruction, removed anything
accusatory from the Monroe home. When the coroner pronounced his hearing later in the day
he expediently ruled, "Probable suicide". Oh...and the housekeeper said nothing.
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