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Owners of Marilyn Monroe’s $8M death home sue LA, Karen Bass in brazen bid to tear it down

owners-of-marilyn-monroe’s-$8m-death-home-sue-la,-karen-bass-in-brazen-bid-to-tear-it-down
Owners of Marilyn Monroe’s $8M death home sue LA, Karen Bass in brazen bid to tear it down

The owners of the Los Angeles home where Marilyn Monroe died have launched a legal battle against Mayor Karen Bass and the City of Los Angeles.

Brinah Milstein and Roy Bank purchased the infamous Brentwood property for just over $8 million in 2023. Soon after, they applied for — and received — city approval to demolish the home and begin new construction, according to a lawsuit obtained by The California Post.

That’s when problems started for the homeowners, who say the the city swooped in to designate the home a “Historical-Cultural Monument” in 2024 — after the permits were already approved.

Marilyn Monroe posing outside her home during a photo call.

Getty Images

Marilyn Monroe reading sheet music on a bedroom floor with a tape player beside her.

Marilyn Monroe owned the home for about six months in 1962. Getty Images

“In doing so, the city has turned the property into a tourist attraction, attracting (as the city wanted and expected) traffic congestion on the short, narrow dead-end street adjacent to the property along with numerous trespassers leaping over and onto property walls to get into the “designated” house (which cannot be seen from the public realm due to the property wall and landscaping),” the docs state.

The new attention on the home has also allegedly forced the homeowners to hire their own private security to police the property, and they claim burglars broke in back in November looking for memorabilia.

The closed gray front gate and white stucco wall of Marilyn Monroe's former home, with a driveway in the foreground and lush greenery and part of a white van visible over the wall.

The owners of the famous home are suing the City of Los Angeles and Mayor Karen Bass. AP

Police officers and newsmen gather at the gate of Marilyn Monroe's home in Brentwood.

AP

Newsmen gathered outside Marilyn Monroe and Joe DiMaggio's Beverly Hills home after their divorce announcement.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

A policeman stands in front of Marilyn Monroe's house in Brentwood.

AFP via Getty Images

Medical attendants removing the body of Marilyn Monroe from her home.

Getty Images

Ambulancemen and police officers load a body into a mortuary van.

Monroe died at the home in August 1962. AFP via Getty Images

The Spanish style bungalow with a pool, situated on a tiny dead end street in the heart of  a multi-million-dollar neighborhood, has been a tourist attraction ever since Monroe’s naked body was wheeled out of the home on a gurney in August of 1962.

The property “was owned for about six months in 1962 by Marilyn Monroe — she occasionally occupied a small house that sits on the property — while traveling extensively during her brief ownership to her permanent home in New York City and elsewhere — before she died at the property in August 1962,” according to the lawsuit.

Aerial view of Marilyn Monroe's former Spanish Colonial-style hacienda with a green pool, brick patio, and surrounding greenery.

Getty Images

Aerial view of Marilyn Monroe's former Spanish Colonial-style hacienda in Brentwood, California, featuring red-tiled roofs, a green swimming pool, and solar panels.

The new owners argue that there was never interest in the home for sixty years after Monroe’s death there. Getty Images

Monroe’s body was found in the home’s master bedroom, her lifeless body surrounded by prescription pills, she died of a barbiturate overdose which was suspected to be a probable suicide.

Milstein and Bank argue in their lawsuit that the city never took interest in the home in the sixty years after Monroe died, and it went through multiple renovations and had multiple owners. They claim the historical designation has now “rendered the property useless” and has totally prohibited their ability to capitalize on the $8.3 million they put into purchasing the home.

Three people standing on a street next to a house with a person scaling a wall in the background.

US District Court, California

Two people scaling a white wall to trespass onto a property.

US District Court, California

Infrared surveillance footage shows a person climbing over a wall from the bed of a pickup truck at night.

After its historical designation, many have attempted to catch a glimpse of the secluded home. US District Court, California

The couple is asking the court to either allow them to go ahead with their plans to demolish the home or to force the city to pay the value of the home.

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