20,000 documents of illegal human experiments
Project MK-Ultra, which was the name given to an illegal program implemented by the CIA, ran human experiments focusing on mind control.
Since the 1975 Church Committee hearings exposed the operation, a freedom of information act request has now uncovered as a cache of 20,000 documents relating the disturbing mind control experiments.
MK-ULTRA’s origins lie in operation Paperclip which was the top secret transfer of NAZI scientist to the US.
The scientists possessed documentation on unethical Nazi human experimentation which also includes research into mind control and mental manipulation.
The Central Intelligence Agency wanted to create an optimal truth drug they could use in interrogations and research uses for mind controlled subjects as well as control of foreign leaders including assassinations.
A 1955 document describing the substances used in the experiments gives some indication of the sheer scope of the project.
MK-ULTRA’s origins lie in operation Paperclip which was the top secret transfer of NAZI scientist to the US.
LSD was also administered to CIA employees, military personnel, doctors and other government agents.
In one case, the hallucinogenic drug was administered to a mental patient in Kentucky for 174 straight days.
Handout shows the brains of subjects lying awake with their eyes closed, under a placebo and the drug LSD, when being examined using functional MRI.
In another, the CIA set up several brothels in San Francisco, California, dosed customers, and watched and filmed proceedings via one-way mirrors. Brothels were chosen as a surefire means of ensuring victims would not discuss their experience with others.
While officially ruled a suicide, a 1994 autopsy concluded the circumstances of his death and state prior to the plunge were “rankly and starkly” suggestive of homicide.
Despite such travesties, Dr. Gottlieb continued on with LSD experiments, convinced its volatile nature in fact made it ideal for use in covert operations. As its effects were temporary, he theorized it could be given to high-ranking officials to affect the course of important meetings, speeches and the like.
LSD was eventually jettisoned by MKUltra’s research team for being too unpredictable — an alleged turning point was the secret dosing of an agent that sent the individual running across Washington, seeing monsters in every car he passed.
In any event, by 1962 the CIA and the army had developed a series of superhallucinogens, such as BZ — said to be 100 times more powerful than LSD.
The operation continued on until 1973, when CIA Director Richard Helms abruptly ordered all experiments halted, and all relevant files destroyed.
He was motivated by the Watergate scandal — fearing subsequent scrutiny of the US secret state’s activities, he wished to ensure any subsequent investigation of such clandestine CIA operations would be impossible.
Helms subsequently admitted to the existence of the program during the 1975 Church Committee investigation — although due to the bonfire of relevant documentation, the Committee could only base their investigation on the sworn testimony of participants.
Nonetheless, a 1977 a Freedom of Information Act request unearthed a cache of 20,000 documents relating to the project, which had been mistakenly filed in a financial records building. These documents were fully investigated in Senate Hearings later that year.
While the remaining documents largely recorded the program’s catastrophic failure, Miles Copeland — former CIA agent and father of Police drummer Stewart Copeland — subsequently suggested the tranche was but a “smokescreen” that offered “the barest glimpse” of the scope of the project.
Moreover, he suspected the project wasn’t genuinely terminated in 1973. It may well persist, in even more covert forms, to this very day
https://realitieswatch.com/cia-release-disturbing-mk-ultra-mind-control-docs-first-time-ever/ http://archive.is/02BAN
Reblogged this on World4Justice : NOW! Lobby Forum..
LikeLiked by 1 person
Reblogged this on HOLLIE GREIG JUSTICE E mail .
LikeLiked by 1 person