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Mind Control Documents & Links - proof mk-ultra exists
This page includes information on mk-ultra, the CIA, mind
control, Operation Paperclip and the Nazis, the 1995 congressional
hearings, the 2010 veterans vs CIA court case, Artichoke, the CIA
Supreme Court cases, Ewen Cameron and the Sleep Room and the MK/Naomi
project.
1995 U. S. congressional hearing:
MKULTRA Victim Full Testimony (U.S. Mind Control Child Abuse Victims
A-C Testimony, U.S. Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments
Public Meeting, Washington DC, March 1995. Valerie Wolf (A), Chris
DeNicola Tucson Arizona (B), Claudia Mullen (C): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GbhpRmsEq44
Mind Control Survivors’ Testimony at the Human Radiation Experiments Hearings:
Valerie Wolf – Therapist of mind control survivors who gave
testimony about mind control experiments in the 1995 US Presidential
hearings on radiation experiments. http://www.whale.to/b/wolf.html
1977 Congressional Hearings
2010 Court Case – Veterans vs CIA
CIA Tries Again to Duck Responsibility for Doing Drug Experiments on Veterans
By MARIA DINZEO December 14, 2010 SAN FRANCISCO (CN) – The Central
Intelligence Agency in January will argue for dismissal of Vietnam
veterans’ claims that the CIA must provide them with information about
the health effects of chemicals used on them during Cold War-era human
experiments. The CIA also claims it is not obligated to provide the
veterans with medical care for side effects of the drugs. It’s the CIA’s
third attempt to get the case dismissed.
In a 2009 federal lawsuit, Vietnam Veterans of America claimed that the
Army and CIA had used at least 7,800 soldiers as guinea pigs in “Project
Paperclip.” They were given at least 250 and as many as 400 types of
drugs, among them sarin, one of the most deadly drugs known to man,
amphetamines, barbiturates, mustard gas, phosgene gas and LSD.
Among the project’s goals were to control human behavior, develop drugs
that would cause confusion, promote weakness or temporarily cause loss
of hearing or vision, create a drug to induce hypnosis and identify
drugs that could enhance a person’s ability to withstand torture.
https://www.courthousenews.com/2010/12/14/32562.htm
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA –
OAKLAND DIVISION VIETNAM VETERANS OF AMERICA, et al., Plaintiffs, v.
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY, et al., Defendants. Case No. CV 09-0037-CW
Noticed Motion Date and Time: January 13, 2011 2:00 p.m. DEFENDANTS’
PARTIAL MOTION TO DISMISS PLAINTIFFS’ THIRD AMENDED COMPLAINT
http://www.courthousenews.com/2010/12/14/CIADismiss.pdf
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURTNORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA –
OAKLAND DIVISION VIETNAM VETERANS OF AMERICA, et al., Plaintiffs, v.
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY, et al., Defendants. Case No. CV 09-0037-CW
PLAINTIFFS’ OPPOSITION TO DEFENDANTS’ PARTIAL MOTION TO DISMISS THIRD
AMENDED COMPLAINT Date: January 13, 2011 http://www.courthousenews.com/2010/12/14/VetsvCIA.pdf
Veterans say CIA tested drugs, mind control on them
By Jay Price – Staff Writer 1/11/09 Instead of equipment testing,
though, the Onslow County native found himself in a bizarre, CIA-funded
drug testing and mind-control program, according to a lawsuit that he
and five other veterans and Vietnam Veterans of America filed last week.
The suit was filed in federal court in San Francisco against the
Department of Defense and the CIA. The plaintiffs seek to force the
government to contact all the subjects of the experiments and give them
proper health care. The experiments have been the subject of
congressional hearings, and in 2003 the U.S. Department of Veterans
Affairs released a pamphlet said nearly 7,000 soldiers had been involved
and more than 250 chemicals used on them, including hallucinogens such
as LSD and PCP as well as biological and chemical agents. Lasting from
1950 to 1975, the experiments took place at Edgewood Arsenal in
Maryland. According to the lawsuit, some of the volunteers were even
implanted with electrical devices in an effort to control their
behavior. Rochelle, 60, who has come back to live in Onslow
County, said in an interview Saturday that there were about two dozen
volunteers when he was taken to Edgewood. Once there, they were asked to
volunteer a second time, for drug testing. They were told that the
experiments were harmless and that their health would be carefully
monitored, not just during the tests but afterward, too. The doctors
running the experiments, though, couldn’t have known the drugs were
safe, because safety was one of the things they were trying to find out,
Rochelle said. “We volunteered, yes, but we were not fully aware of the
dangers,” he said. “None of us knew the kind of drugs they gave us, or
the aftereffects they’d have.” http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2009/01/12-8
Vets sue CIA, DoD over military experiments By PAUL
ELIAS, Associated Press Writer 1/7/09 SAN FRANCISCO – Six veterans who
say they were exposed to dangerous chemicals, germs and mind-altering
drugs during Cold War-era experiments filed a federal lawsuit against
the CIA, Department of Defense and other agencies Wednesday. The
veterans say they volunteered for military experiments as part of a
wide-ranging program started in the 1950s to test nerve agents,
biological weapons and mind-control techniques, but were not properly
informed of the nature of the experiments. They blame the experiments
for poor health and are demanding the government provide their health
care. They also want the court to rule that the program was illegal
because its administrators failed to get their consent….The suit, filed
in San Francisco, alleges that at least 7,800 U.S. military personnel
served as volunteers to test experimental drugs such as LSD at the
Edgewood Arsenal near Baltimore, Md., during a program that lasted into
the 1970s, and that many others volunteered for similar experiments at
other locations. “In virtually all cases, troops served in the
same capacity as laboratory rats or guinea pigs,” the lawsuit states.
The suit contends that veterans were wrongfully used as test subjects in
experiments such as MK-ULTRA, a CIA project from the 1950s and ’60s
that involved brainwashing and administering experimental drugs like LSD
to unsuspecting individuals. The project was the target of
several congressional inquiries in the 1970s and was tied to at least
one death. Harf said that MK-ULTRA “was thoroughly investigated and the
CIA fully cooperated with each of the investigations.” The plaintiffs
say many of the volunteers’ records have been destroyed or remain sealed
as top secret documents. They also say they were denied medals and
other citations they were promised for participating in the experiments.
They are not seeking monetary damages but have demanded access to
health care for veterans they say were turned away at Department of
Veterans Affairs facilities because they could not prove their ailments
were related to their military service. In 1988, the Justice
Department agreed to pay eight Canadians a total of $750,000 to settle
their lawsuit alleging they suffered psychological trauma from
CIA-financed mind-control experiments that included the use of LSD.
Operation Artichoke
CIA FILES – Operation ARTICHOKE – BACM RESEARCH –
WWW.PAPERLESSARCHIVES. About BACM Research – PaperlessArchives.com BACM
Research/PaperlessArchives.com publishes documentary historical research
collections….
CIA ARTICHOKE FILES “Manchurian Candidate” ARTICHOKE CIA Files
– ARTICHOKE was the CIA’S cryptonym for the study and/or use of special
interrogation methods that have been known to included hypnosis, drugs
and total isolation. It grew out of the Agency’s Operation BLACKBIRD and
was a forerunner to the Agency’s MKULTRA. Project ARTICHOKE also known
as Operation ARTICHOKE was run by the CIA’s Office of Scientific
Intelligence. The project went deeper into interrogation methods studied
in the CIA’s Project BLUEBIRD. ARTICHOKE offensive mind control
techniques experiments attempted to induce amnesia and highly suggestive
states in its subjects. ARTICHOKE focused on the use of hypnosis,
forced morphine addiction, forced morphine addiction withdrawal, along
with other drugs, chemicals, and techniques. The main focus of the
program was summarized in a January 1952 CIA memo, “Can we get control
of an individual to the point where he will do our bidding against his
will and even against fundamental laws of nature, such as
self-preservation?”
One program experiment attempted to see if it was possible to produce a
“Manchurian Candidate.” In Richard Condon’s 1959 novel “The Manchurian
Candidate” an American soldier, who has been placed into a hypnotic
state by Communist forces, returns home to assassinate on command. Five
years earlier the CIA considered the possibility. A January 1954 CIA
report asks the question, “Can an individual of [redacted] descent be
made to perform an act of attempted assassination involuntarily under
the influence of ARTICHOKE?”
http://www.paperlessarchives.com/FreeTitles/ARTICHOKECIAFiles.pdf
CIA Supreme Court Cases
U.S. Supreme Court CIA v. SIMS, 471 U.S. 159 (1985)
471 U.S. 159 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY ET AL. v. SIMS ET AL.
CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE DISTRICT OF
COLUMBIA CIRCUIT No. 83-1075. Argued December 4, 1984 Decided April
16, 1985 ….Between 1953 and 1966, the Central Intelligence Agency financed a wide-ranging project, code-named MKULTRA,
concerned with “the research and development of chemical, biological,
and radiological materials capable of employment in clandestine
operations to control human behavior.” The [471 U.S. 159, 162] program
consisted of some 149 subprojects which the Agency contracted out to
various universities, research foundations, and similar institutions. At
least 80 institutions and 185 private researchers participated. Because
the Agency funded MKULTRA indirectly, many of the participating
individuals were unaware that they were dealing with the Agency.
MKULTRA was established to counter perceived Soviet and Chinese
advances in brainwashing and interrogation techniques. Over the years
the program included various medical and psychological experiments, some
of which led to untoward results. These aspects of MKULTRA surfaced
publicly during the 1970’s and became the subject of executive and
congressional investigations. http://caselaw.findlaw.com/us-supreme-court/471/159.html
U.S. Supreme Court UNITED STATES v. STANLEY, 483 U.S. 669 (1987) 483 U.S. 669 UNITED STATES ET AL. v. STANLEY CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
No. 86-393. Argued April 21, 1987 Decided June 25, 1987 Respondent, a
serviceman, volunteered for what was ostensibly a chemical warfare
testing program, but in which he was secretly administered
lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) pursuant to an Army plan to test the
effects of the drug on human subjects, whereby he suffered severe
personality changes that led to his discharge and the dissolution of his
marriage. Upon being informed by the Army that he had been
given LSD, respondent filed a Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA) suit. The
District Court granted the Government summary judgment on the ground
that the suit was barred by the doctrine of Feres v. United States, 340
U.S. 135 , which precludes governmental FTCA liability for injuries to
servicemen resulting from activity “incident to service.” Although
agreeing with this holding, the Court of Appeals remanded the case upon
concluding that respondent had at least a colorable constitutional claim
under the doctrine of Bivens v. Six Unknown Fed. Narcotics Agents, 403
U.S. 388 , whereby a violation of constitutional rights can give rise to
a damages action against the offending federal officials even in the
absence of a statute authorizing such relief, unless there are “special
factors counselling hesitation” or an “explicit congressional
declaration” of another, exclusive remedy. Respondent then amended his
complaint to add Bivens claims and attempted to resurrect his FTCA
claim. Although dismissing the latter claim, the District Court refused
to dismiss the Bivens claims, rejecting, inter alia, the Government’s
argument that the same considerations giving rise to the Feres doctrine
should constitute “special factors” barring a Bivens action….In February
1958, James B. Stanley, a master sergeant in the Army stationed at Fort
Knox, Kentucky, volunteered to participate in a program ostensibly
designed to test the effectiveness of protective clothing and equipment
as defenses against chemical warfare. He was released from his
then-current duties and went to the Army’s Chemical Warfare Laboratories
at the Aberdeen Proving Grounds in Maryland. Four times that month,
Stanley was secretly administered doses of lysergic acid diethylamide
(LSD), pursuant to an Army plan to study the effects of the drug on
human subjects. According to his Second Amended Complaint (the
allegations of which we accept for purposes of this decision), as a
result of the LSD exposure, Stanley has suffered from hallucinations and
periods of incoherence and memory loss, was impaired in his military
performance, and would on occasion “awake from sleep at night and,
without reason, violently beat his wife and children, later being unable
to recall the entire incident.” App. 5. He was discharged from the Army
in 1969. One year later, his marriage dissolved because of the
personality changes wrought by the LSD. December 10, 1975, the Army sent
Stanley a letter soliciting his cooperation in a study of the long-term
effects of LSD on “volunteers who participated” in the 1958 tests. [483
U.S. 669, 672] This was the Government’s first notification to Stanley
that he had been given LSD during his time in Maryland. After an
administrative claim for compensation was denied by the Army, Stanley
filed suit under the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA), 28 U.S.C. 2671 et
seq., alleging negligence in the administration, supervision, and
subsequent monitoring of the drug testing program. http://caselaw.findlaw.com/us-supreme-court/483/669.html
The Sleep Room – Cameron
The Sleep Room’s Missing Memories by Ray Conlogue
Quebec Arts Correspondent, Montreal – Cameron he Sleep Room’s Missing
Memories by Ray Conlogue Quebec Arts Correspondent, Montreal “A new CBC
[Canadian Broadcasting Corporation] miniseries tells how mental patients
in Montreal were once subjected to CIA-sponsored brainwashing….recalls a
series of barbaric experiments conducted on mental patients over a
nine-year period beginning in 1955…the “psychic driving” technique
invented by psychiatrist Ewen Cameron took on a science-fiction quality
when it was revealed in 1977 that the CIA had helped finance the work. The
CIA thought it had potential as a brainwashing technique to be used on
“enemies” of the United States during the Cold War….a human catastrophe
that stripped more than 300 people of their identities….she sued Ottawa
instead, and forced the government to pay $100,000 to each surviving
Allan patient.” http://web.archive.org/web/20030402163532/www.serendipity.li/cia/slprm.html (The Globe and Mail (Toronto), 1998-01-10, page C2)
This week on the fifth estate – “The Sleep Room” 1/6/98
– When Canadians first learned that CIA brainwashing experiments had
been carried out on Canadians… in Canada… with the knowledge of our
government… at the Allan Memorial Institute in Montreal …the story of
Cameron’s experiments and the victims’ struggle for justice have been
made into a riveting movie, to be broadcast on CBC Television… For the
victims of The Sleep Room, the horror has never really ended. VELMA
ORLIKOW (patient of Dr. Ewen Cameron): The man who I had thought cared
about what happened to me didn’t give a damn. I was a fly, just a fly.
VOICE-OVER ANNOUNCER: Revisiting Canada’s infamous Sleep Room. LINDA
MACDONALD (patient of Dr. Ewen Cameron): I was…had to be toilet-trained.
I was a vegetable. VOICE-OVER ANNOUNCER: In the 1960s, Dr. Ewen
Cameron conducted CIA-funded experiments on troubled Canadian patients
he was meant to help… MacIntyre: …the CIA caved in the day before the
trial was to begin. They settled out of court for $750,000 – at the time
it was the largest settlement the CIA had ever awarded. http://web.archive.org/web/20021225185605/http://www.radix.net/~jcturner/980106-Fifth-Estate.htm
Ottawa finally aids brainwashing victims Broadcast Date: Jan.
28, 1984 (digital clip) It sounds like a science fiction plot or a
horror movie: A front organization for the American CIA sets up shop in
Canada to engage in mind control experiments. But it’s no fiction, it’s
the discussion on the floor of the House of Commons and among lawyers
for the Department of External Affairs. Canadians caught up in the
research, including a member of Parliament’s wife, may finally get some
action from the government in their pursuit of answers and
compensation. http://archives.cbc.ca/society/crime_justice/clips/15125/
Project Paperclip
Declassified Papers Show U.S. Recruited Ex-Nazis By
SAM ROBERTS December 11, 2010 After World War II, American
counterintelligence recruited former Gestapo officers, SS veterans and
Nazi collaborators to an even greater extent than had been previously
disclosed and helped many of them avoid prosecution or looked the other
way when they escaped, according to thousands of newly declassified
documents.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/12/us/12holocaust.html
The report, “Hitler’s Shadow: Nazi War Criminals, U.S. Intelligence and the Cold War,”
( HITLER’S SHADOW Nazi War Criminals, U.S. Intelligence, and the Cold
War Richard Breitman and Norman J.W. Goda Published by the National
Archives http://www.archives.gov/iwg/reports/hitlers-shadow.pdf
Operation Paperclip – CIA’s Denial of Protecting Nazis is Blatant Lie (Part
1) by Hank P. Albarelli Jr. Leaks or revelations are often more
compelling because of what they don’t reveal. Through Operation
Paperclip, the U.S. organized a monumental transfer of black technology
by actively recruiting Nazi scientists guilty of war crimes for
employment by U.S. intelligence. In his three-part investigation, author
H. P. Albarelli dredges up the part that was omitted from the
recently-outed official report: the U.S. pointedly chose ’fervent’ Nazi
scientists with experience in chemical, biological and radioactive
warfare to become the architects of the CIA’s darkest military
experiments involving human guinea pigs, as was the case in Nazi
Germany.
On 11 November 1954, thirty-nine of the German-born scientists who
entered the United States through Project Paperclip were sworn in as
U.S. citizens. Military Intelligence “cleansed” the files of Nazi
references. By 1955, more than 760 German scientists had been granted
citizenship in the U.S. and given prominent positions in the American
scientific community. Many had been longtime members of the Nazi party
and the Gestapo, had conducted experiments on humans at concentration
camps, had used slave labor, and had committed other war crimes.
The article focused on a 600-page “secret report” that had been
produced by the U.S. Justice Department. The report, which Justice
Department officials had suppressed from public release for years,
details the American government’s importation into the U.S., following
the end of World War II, of countless numbers of Nazis.
Written in a dry, bureaucratic style, the report recounts a number of
examples of well-known Nazis to whom both the CIA and Department of
State had provided both shelter and employment to, including Adolph
Eichman, Otto Von Bolschwing, Dr. Josef Mengele, and Arthur Rudolph. To
the purposes of this article, it is important to underscore here that
the long-concealed report makes no mention whatsoever of the many Nazi
scientists who specialized in chemical, biological and radioactive
warfare and who were secretly relocated in the United States between the
years 1946 and 1958….
“Operation Paperclip” transferred to the U.S. over 1,600 Nazi
scientists, largely escaping the Nuremberg trials. Men who were
classified as ’ardent Nazis’ were chosen – just weeks after Hitler’s
defeat – to become ’respectable’ U.S. citizens, some of whom are
allegedly still working in places like Brookhaven labs, Cold Spring
Harbor and Plum Island. Photo: Gen. Reinhard Gehlen (middle) and his SS
united were hired, and swiftly became agents of the CIA when they
revealed their massive records on the Soviet Union to the US.
Officials: CIA gave waterboarders $5M legal shield
(AP) 12/17/10 WASHINGTON (AP) — When the CIA decided to waterboard
suspected terror detainees in overseas prisons, the agency turned to a
pair of contractors. The men designed the CIA’s interrogation program
and also personally took part in the waterboarding sessions. But to do
the job, the CIA had to promise to cover at least $5 million in legal
fees for them in case there was trouble down the road, former U.S.
officials said. http://www.spokesman.com/stories/2010/dec/17/officials-cia-gave-waterboarders-5m-legal-shield/
Morgellons and the CIA’s MK/NAOMI Project (Part 2) by
Hank P. Albarelli Jr., Zoe Martell Why is it that the U.S. state
apparatus is standing in the way of any serious medical investigation
into Mogellons disease? For the simple reason that it would inexorably
lead to the covert biological war programmes of the 1950’s. Hank
Albarelli lifts the veil on a period – which may not necessarily be over
– when the military-industrial complex proclaimed to safeguard the
“free world” while testing new experiments on the civilian population
that it purported to protect; a period when members of the medical
profession – including the CDC – developed diseases that they should
have been preventing but which they used instead to contaminate the very
people they were supposed to protect.
….MK/NAOMI was the cryptonym for an ultra-secret project instituted
by the CIA for its partnership with the Special Operations Division
(SOD) of the U.S. Army’s biological warfare center at Fort Detrick,
Maryland. The general objectives of MK/NAOMI, as stated in
contemporaneous CIA documents, were:
– To provide for a covert support base to meet clandestine operational requirements.
– To research, develop, and stockpile severely incapacitating and lethal
materials for the specific use of CIA’s Technical Services Division.
– To maintain in operational readiness special and unique items for the dissemination of biological and chemical materials.
– To provide for the required surveillance, testing, upgrading, and
evaluation of materials and items in order to assure absence of defects
and complete predictability of results to be expected under operational
conditions.
Recently obtained CIA documents reveal that in the mid-1950s, scientists
at Fort Detrick’s SOD undertook intensive research and experimentation
with a large number of “paralysis agents.” This phase of MK/NAOMI was
referred to in-house at Fort Detrick as the “K Project” and the “K
Problem.” According to CIA documents, K indicates both “knockout” and
“kill”, depending upon the circumstances under which researched
biological products were employed by CIA operatives in the field
operations conducted under “Project Artichoke” and later programs.
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