
Marilyn Monroe's final mystery: Crucial item missing from the scene of her death that changes everything - and a police sergeant noticed it straight away
Sergeant Jack Clemmons is a homicide investigator with the Los Angeles Police Department. He immediately presumes the call is a hoax. Drunks call the police department, making ridiculous claims, at every hour of the day.

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Daily Mail
39 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Fears for missing pregnant teen after troubling final message before disappearance
A pregnant Massachusetts teenager sent a chilling final text to a friend, voicing a sense that something felt 'off' shortly before she disappeared without a trace. Kylee Monteiro, 18, who her family says was 11 weeks pregnant, vanished on August 7 after she was last seen near Country Street in Rehoboth. Her last known location was her boyfriend's house to grab some things, family members told Boston 25 News. Fears are only intensifying in the desperate search, as Kylee's family revealed she had recently argued with her boyfriend - and her haunting final message expressed fear for her safety. 'I don't feel safe right now something's not right,' she texted her friend before she stopped responding completely, according to WCVB News. 'It's been very difficult, we're very scared,' Kylee's sister, Faith Monteiro told ABC 6 News. 'We hope she's ok, this is not like her at all, she would never just disappear, the circumstances don't seem good,' she added. 'I have so many theories just like everybody else, like I said it's a lot of speculation. We really don't know what happened.' On Monday, the Rehoboth Police Department issued a press release about Kylee's sudden and out-of-character disappearance. The statement described the teen as last seen wearing a red T-shirt bearing the phrase 'Get Over It' and likely carrying a white bag she was frequently seen with. Kylee, who graduated from Attleboro High School in June, had been living in a homeless shelter for several weeks amid an 'on and off' relationship with her boyfriend, her sister, Faith, told ABC News. According to Faith, her sister's relationship involved 'domestic issues,' including an incident that allegedly took place the night before she disappeared. On the evening of August 6, Kylee reportedly called Faith and several others after an argument with her boyfriend, expressing fear not only for her safety but for her very life. Although Kylee reportedly told her sister that the argument had settled, she was still described as frantic - her tone conveying an urgent, unspoken plea for help. 'She was desperate for help,' Faith told ABC. 'She was calling out to friends, family, anyone she could, telling them that she was in danger. The whole situation is very scary.' Faith immediately offered to pick her up, but Kylee declined. Still, Faith said her sister wasn't the type to ask a stranger for a ride and 'doesn't know how to survive on her own.' 'The last known time when we heard her voice was Wednesday night,' Faith added to WCVB News. Kitty Monteiro, another sister of Kylee's, wrote to Facebook: 'It's highly unlike her to cut all contact from social media and family. We need to get word out to find any information as soon as possible.' Kylee's last known contact came the day after the phone calls, when she sent a friend the eerie, context-free text message that would be her final communication. 'I tried talking with her after that, and she just stopped responding to me after that,' the unidentified friend told WCVB. 'I just want her to know that like, we miss you, and we're not going to stop trying to find you.' On Tuesday, several officers - including a K-9 unit and dive team - were seen searching along County Street, according to WPRI News. So far, searches have included wooded areas, a nearby pond, and homes around the area where Kylee was last seen - but have turned up nothing. On Wednesday, a full police presence was back on the ground, spending hours combing through previously unsearched areas, as reported by ABC 6. 'There's a little bit of relief knowing that there's people out there looking for her and they're not going to stop until they find her,' Faith told the outlet. 'But if they don't find her, I don't know what the next steps are, and that is worrying to me.' Kylee is described as 6 feet tall, with light brown hair and brown eyes. In addition to her red 'Get Over It' T-shirt, she was last seen wearing ripped blue jeans and tan boots. 'She's amazing. She's so friendly and lovable, she's outgoing, but also timid at the same time,' Faith added. 'She doesn't have survival instinct to survive out here on her own. That's for sure.' 'We just have to keep hope that she's out there.'


The Guardian
39 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Trump news at a glance: president insists he won't let Putin ‘mess around with me' at summit on Ukraine
Donald Trump has insisted he won't let Vladimir Putin 'mess around' with him at their high-stakes summit over Ukraine and is giving the talks a 75% chance of success. Amid concerns from European leaders that the Russian president will cajole Trump into imposing a settlement on Ukraine, the US president told reporters on the eve of Friday's talks in Alaska: 'I am president, and he's not going to mess around with me. 'I'll know within the first two minutes, three minutes, four minutes or five minutes... whether or not we're going to have a good meeting or a bad meeting. And if it's a bad meeting, it'll end very quickly, and if it's a good meeting, we're going to end up getting peace in the pretty near future.' Meanwhile in Washington DC, the White House said there would be a round-the-clock presence of local and federal law enforcement officers after Trump's federal takeover of its police department and dispatch of national guard troops. Here are the key US politics stories at a glance: Donald Trump has said he believes Vladimir Putin is ready to make a deal on the war in Ukraine as the two leaders prepare for their Alaska summit, but his suggestion the Russian leader and Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy could 'divvy things up' may alarm some in Kyiv. The US president implied there was a 75% chance of Friday's Alaska meeting succeeding, and that the threat of economic sanctions may have made Putin more willing to seek an end to the war. He also said a second meeting – at present not confirmed – between himself, Putin and Zelenskyy would be the more decisive. Read the full story The president falsely claimed crime in Washington DC was the 'worst it's ever been', amid an ongoing federal takeover of the city's police department and deployment of the national guard and federal agents in the city. 'Washington DC is at its worst point,' Trump said from the Oval Office on Thursday. 'It will soon be at its best point.' He also baselessly accused DC law enforcement officials of giving 'phony crime stats' and said 'they're under investigation'. Read the full story Pam Bondi, the attorney general, said she had sent 'sanctuary city' letters to the mayors of 32 cities and a handful of county executives warning that she intends to prosecute political leaders who are not in her view sufficiently supportive of immigration enforcement. 'You better be abiding by our federal policies and with our federal law enforcement, because if you're not we're going to come after you,' she told a Fox News reporter on Thursday. 'Our leaders have to support our law enforcement.' Read the full story Democratic lawmakers in Texas said they were ready to return to the state under certain conditions, ending a nearly two-week-long effort to block Republicans from passing a new congressional map that would add five GOP seats. The lawmakers said on Thursday they would return as long as the legislature ended its first special session on Friday, which Republicans have said they plan to do. The Texas governor, Greg Abbott, has said he will immediately call another special session. Read the full story The first lady has demanded that Hunter Biden retract comments linking her to the sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and has threatened to sue if he does not. Biden, the son of the former president Joe Biden, alleged in an interview this month that Epstein had introduced Melania Trump to Donald Trump. The statements were false, defamatory and 'extremely salacious', Melania Trump's lawyer, Alejandro Brito, said in a letter to Biden. Read the full story An influential US medical journal is rejecting a call from the secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services, Robert F Kennedy Jr, to retract a large Danish study that found that aluminum ingredients in vaccines do not increase health risks for children, the journal's editor told Reuters. Read the full story Donald Trump cold-called Norway's finance minister last month to ask about a nomination for the Nobel peace prize, Norwegian press reported on Thursday. A lawsuit filed on behalf of two mothers and their four minor children claims the two families were unlawfully denied due process and deported by Ice to Honduras. Ron DeSantis said Florida would open a second immigration jail as a federal judge weighs whether to close the facility in the Everglades known as 'Alligator Alcatraz'. Catching up? Here's what happened on 13 August 2025.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Mom-of-two shot dead by 'pathetic' killer while walking children to school
A young mother-of-two was shot dead while walking her daughter to a Louisville bus stop, sparking community devastation as police search for the 'pathetic' killer. Redaja Williams, 23, died on Wednesday around 8am in the Russell neighborhood of the Kentucky city. There are several bus stops, a YMCA and two schools in the area Williams was killed. Dozens of children watched on in horror as she fell to the ground. First responders rushed to the scene and took Williams to the hospital, where she was pronounced dead. Her daughter was thankfully unharmed. 'It is unacceptable that people simply trying to go to school must fear for their safety,' Louisville Metro Police (LMPD) Chief Paul Humphrey said, WDRB reported. 'Kids should be able to go to school - go to the bus stop in the morning - without any fear of gun violence, without any fear of having to run for their life in the morning.' The suspect, who police say is a black man who was wearing a red sweatshirt and black sweatpants, is still at large. 'She was innocent, she was a bystander,' Williams' good friend Angel Mitchell told WDRB. Williams' two kids are just two and seven years old. Her family has spoken out about her horrifying death to demand justice for their loved one who died too soon. Her sister Lavett, who was with Williams when she was shot, described her as a 'kind-hearted' mother who was not afraid to speak her mind. 'But most of all, she was caring and very loving to her family,' the heartbroken sister said moments before she started to sob. 'And I'm so devastated because I had to watch my sister lay on that ground and take her last breath. 'And there was nothing I can do about it.' 'She was a really outgoing young lady, she loved people and kids, she had her ways about doing things, but she was loved by her family,' her grandfather Bruce Simmons, told WLKY. 'I'm her granddad dad, and I loved her dearly. I am going to miss her.' Williams' family and friends called her 'Juicy,' but her aunt Donna Cole wants her real name to never be forgotten. 'But her name is Redaja Williams. Say it. Remember it,' she passionately asserted during a Thursday press conference attended by community leaders. 'My heart goes out to every parent, every child, that was on that bus stop,' Louisville Metro Councilwoman Tammy Hawkins said during the conference, touching upon a broader issue of violence within the Louisville community. She said there needs to be a strengthened relationship between community members and the LMPD in order for future tragedies to be prevented. Williams' gut-wrenching death is the second bus stop shooting within just a week to shake the Russell neighborhood. On August 7, the first day of school for Jefferson County Public Schools, two tens fired shots at each other at a bus stop. Just as Wednesday's incident, dozens of children looked on in terror as they waited for their buses to arrive. 'I'm scared to walk around because of all the shooting,' a 10-year-old boy from the neighborhood told WDRB. Two 15-year-olds were arrested in relation to the shooting, each facing 34 charges. 'This is a traumatic event for so many people that changes neighborhoods for the worse,' chief Humphrey told WDRB. 'The is the second time in a week that we're talking about this, and it's absolutely pathetic.' One of the teens was actually arrested after Williams' shooting, but homicide detectives determined he was allegedly involved in the one a week prior, but did not pull the trigger on Williams. 'I'm outraged. Not just today for Redaja, but for every child whose family I've comforted,' Cole said at the Thursday press conference. 'Let me tell you something. They can't be more outraged for us than we are. Boots on the ground. We're talking about what needs to be done, get in your communities.'