05-03-2011, 06:43 PM
I'm re-reading Monika Dannemann's book Inner World Of Jimi Hendrix. What is fascinating about this book is it is a cryptic code manual to Hendrix's murder that people don't realize. I'm tickled by the fact that I'm one of the first to stumble into this ornate undiscovered Egyptian tomb and its abundant treasures. I particularly relish the idea that I'm falling into these heaps of ancient treasure, as far as the murder evidence for Jimi Hendrix, and people still don't seem to get it.
I haven't figured Monika out yet. She's a strange bug. She shows profound respect and understanding of Jimi's most sacred mythos, yet she's the person who withheld and denied the evidence for Jimi's murder. As far as I can tell she was a poor soul who ended up in an impossible situation because of her inescapable witnessing of Jimi's murder.
On page 35 of Inner World Monika discusses how the media did not accurately cover the real Jimi, preferring the wild man stage persona promoted by Michael Jeffery over the real gentle and mannered Jimi. While discussing this however, and emphasizing how you couldn't trust what the newspapers said about Jimi, Monika cuts to an almost non-sequitur discussing of Jimi's death and how they claimed he died of an overdose. What the reader is left to, as far as interpreting what Monika is doing here, is assuming she is trying to say the newspapers followed their usual inaccurate coverage with his death as well. Monika is obviously writing with a guilty conscience. This book was written around 1994, nineteen years after Monika admitted on a Dutch radio show that Jimi had "been murdered by the mafia...for sure". There's no doubt that Monika is trying to say Jimi didn't die by the means told of in the newspapers. Typical of Monika, she tries to cover her butt by adding Jimi did not die of an overdose but died of mechanical choking on vomit from a non-fatal dose of sleeping tablets, however those who have researched Hendrix's death see a repeating pattern and what Monika is really trying to say indirectly. And that's why Inner World is such a gold mine for those seeking the evidence behind Jimi's death.
Page 48:
"Unfortunately, before the Inquest on Jimi's death, I was forbidden by the authorities to make a statement in public for ten days, which gave the press the opportunity to publish whatever they wanted. This led to all the wrong or half-correct coverage after his death.
A press conference at which I could explain the true circumstances of Jimi's death was scheduled for the day of the Inquest, but cancelled by Jeffery, again, in retrospect, for obvious reasons. He was simply not interested in clearing up the public misconception that Jimi had died of a drug overdose."
Monika goes on to say that Jeffery had a self interest in keeping Jimi wild and outlaw and dying of a drug overdose to keep up posthumous sales, however, if you research this case you'll understand what Monika is really hinting at. What Monika isn't being honest about here is she took-off out of London in order to escape being questioned. Monika then lied at the Inquest she speaks of, telling a completely false story about the way Jimi died.
Page 57:
..."when I asked Jimi if he had his own bank account he told me that Jeffery was putting all his money into a special account in Jimi's name, for his future use.
A few months later Jimi discovered that the money he had earned had mysteriously disappeared and that in fact there was no "special account" in his name at all. This jolted him into taking an interest in his money, and trying to find out where it had gone and what his manager had done with it."
The context here is Jimi broke-up the "Jimi Hendrix Experience" right at this time. It was the group Michael Jeffery had depended on for keeping Hendrix tied to an exhaustive schedule where he wouldn't have time to think or ask where his money was going. Hendrix then proceeded to back away from performing for Jeffery and stayed at his Woodstock house with his new black band. Jimi was soon after kidnapped by Jeffery in a staged kidnapping where Jeffery put a still-strapped-in-a-chair Jimi on the phone and told him "there are some very powerful people depending on me being your manager and if you fire me you will be killed".
Let's cut to the chase here. Jeffery was part of a rogue intel program to supply mafia money to a secret CIA bank nexus in the Bahamas that was used to fund dirty Cold War black ops. Being MI-5 he was probably drafted into this program involuntarily. The people Jeffery told Jimi were dependent on him were these CIA people. Jimi died by a classic CIA covert murder method of alcoholic waterboarding combined with a barbiturate overdose just hours after he fired Jeffery. Investigators said up to 5 million dollars of Jimi's 1969 money disappeared in to those Bahamian banks.
How much of this Monika knew I don't know. She could be anything from a direct participant hired by CIA as a female infiltrator, to MK-ULTRA victim, to hapless patsy used by Jeffery to get close to Jimi. In any case we know she knew "the mafia killed Hendrix and it was...for sure".
I haven't figured Monika out yet. She's a strange bug. She shows profound respect and understanding of Jimi's most sacred mythos, yet she's the person who withheld and denied the evidence for Jimi's murder. As far as I can tell she was a poor soul who ended up in an impossible situation because of her inescapable witnessing of Jimi's murder.
On page 35 of Inner World Monika discusses how the media did not accurately cover the real Jimi, preferring the wild man stage persona promoted by Michael Jeffery over the real gentle and mannered Jimi. While discussing this however, and emphasizing how you couldn't trust what the newspapers said about Jimi, Monika cuts to an almost non-sequitur discussing of Jimi's death and how they claimed he died of an overdose. What the reader is left to, as far as interpreting what Monika is doing here, is assuming she is trying to say the newspapers followed their usual inaccurate coverage with his death as well. Monika is obviously writing with a guilty conscience. This book was written around 1994, nineteen years after Monika admitted on a Dutch radio show that Jimi had "been murdered by the mafia...for sure". There's no doubt that Monika is trying to say Jimi didn't die by the means told of in the newspapers. Typical of Monika, she tries to cover her butt by adding Jimi did not die of an overdose but died of mechanical choking on vomit from a non-fatal dose of sleeping tablets, however those who have researched Hendrix's death see a repeating pattern and what Monika is really trying to say indirectly. And that's why Inner World is such a gold mine for those seeking the evidence behind Jimi's death.
Page 48:
"Unfortunately, before the Inquest on Jimi's death, I was forbidden by the authorities to make a statement in public for ten days, which gave the press the opportunity to publish whatever they wanted. This led to all the wrong or half-correct coverage after his death.
A press conference at which I could explain the true circumstances of Jimi's death was scheduled for the day of the Inquest, but cancelled by Jeffery, again, in retrospect, for obvious reasons. He was simply not interested in clearing up the public misconception that Jimi had died of a drug overdose."
Monika goes on to say that Jeffery had a self interest in keeping Jimi wild and outlaw and dying of a drug overdose to keep up posthumous sales, however, if you research this case you'll understand what Monika is really hinting at. What Monika isn't being honest about here is she took-off out of London in order to escape being questioned. Monika then lied at the Inquest she speaks of, telling a completely false story about the way Jimi died.
Page 57:
..."when I asked Jimi if he had his own bank account he told me that Jeffery was putting all his money into a special account in Jimi's name, for his future use.
A few months later Jimi discovered that the money he had earned had mysteriously disappeared and that in fact there was no "special account" in his name at all. This jolted him into taking an interest in his money, and trying to find out where it had gone and what his manager had done with it."
The context here is Jimi broke-up the "Jimi Hendrix Experience" right at this time. It was the group Michael Jeffery had depended on for keeping Hendrix tied to an exhaustive schedule where he wouldn't have time to think or ask where his money was going. Hendrix then proceeded to back away from performing for Jeffery and stayed at his Woodstock house with his new black band. Jimi was soon after kidnapped by Jeffery in a staged kidnapping where Jeffery put a still-strapped-in-a-chair Jimi on the phone and told him "there are some very powerful people depending on me being your manager and if you fire me you will be killed".
Let's cut to the chase here. Jeffery was part of a rogue intel program to supply mafia money to a secret CIA bank nexus in the Bahamas that was used to fund dirty Cold War black ops. Being MI-5 he was probably drafted into this program involuntarily. The people Jeffery told Jimi were dependent on him were these CIA people. Jimi died by a classic CIA covert murder method of alcoholic waterboarding combined with a barbiturate overdose just hours after he fired Jeffery. Investigators said up to 5 million dollars of Jimi's 1969 money disappeared in to those Bahamian banks.
How much of this Monika knew I don't know. She could be anything from a direct participant hired by CIA as a female infiltrator, to MK-ULTRA victim, to hapless patsy used by Jeffery to get close to Jimi. In any case we know she knew "the mafia killed Hendrix and it was...for sure".

