Former CIA agent: I tell you why I killed Marilyn Monroe and her connections to Fidel Castro

Apparently, when someone is on his deathbed, there is nothing to lose and nothing to gain. One of the most shocking stories of this type is considered that of the CIA's 78-year-old agent Norman Hodges, who made some of the most innovative stories ever observed. By “WDT”, he committed 37 murders [...]
Apparently, when someone is on his deathbed, there is nothing to lose and nothing to gain.
One of the most shocking stories of this type is considered that of the CIA's 78-year-old agent Norman Hodges, who made some of the most innovative stories ever observed.
By “WDT”, he committed 37 murders for the American government between 1959 and 1972, including among many of his confessions, Marilyn Monroe.
In a shocking interview, Hodges confessed that Marilyn Monroe was killed not only because of her ties to President John F. Kennedy, but also because she had intimate relations with Fidel Castro, thus making it a massive national security hazard.
He admits that Marilyn Monroe was the only woman who had ever killed, a unique target at that time. He claims it had become a key <x0 threat to the country's security” and had to be eliminated.
We had evidence that Marilyn Monroe slept not only with Kennedy but also with Fidel Castro”, reported Hoxhas. My “Comandant, Jimmy Hayworth, told me she had to die and that she should look like a suicide or overdose. I had never killed a woman before, but I obeyed orders... made for America!
According to the former agent, Monroe could have transmitted strategic information to the communists.
She had to die! I just did what I had to do!
Marilyn Monroe died on August 5, 1962. Hodges claims to have entered her room while the star was sleeping, injecting a fatal dose of chlorine hydrogen (a very powerful soothing) mixed with another dangerous substance.
Hodges was a CIA officer for 41 years and had worked in operations between high-level security levels, the eye.net writes. He claims that his task was to kill individuals who posed a threat to the security of the United States.
He was trained as a sniper and a martial arts expert, but was also trained in other methods.
Despite his old age, Hodges has managed to recall any murder he's committed for the CIA.
His victims were from all walks of life starting with journalists, union leaders, political activists, artists and scientists, and, according to all likelihood, were killed because their radical ideas posed a threat to the interests of the United States.











