Mind Control
By Harry V. Martin and David Caul
Copyright, Napa Sentinel, 1991
Part One in a Series
There was just a small
news announcement on the radio in early July after a short heat wave,
three inmates of Vacaville Medical Facility had died in non-air
conditioned cells. Two of those prisoners, the announcement said, may
have died as a result of medical treatment. No media inquiries were
made, no major news stories developed because of these deaths.
But what was the medical treatment that may have caused their deaths?
The Medical Facility indicates they were mind control or behavior
modification treatments. A deeper probe into the death of these two
inmates unravels a mind-boggling tale of horror that has been part of
California penal history for a long time, and one that caused national
outcries two decades ago.
Mind control experiments have been part of California for decades and
permeate mental institutions and prisons. But, it is not just in the
penal society that mind control measures have been used. Minority
children were subjected to experimentation at abandoned Nike Missile
Sites, veterans who fought for American freedom were also subjected to
the programs. Funding and experimentations of mind control have been
part of the U.S. Health, Education and Welfare Department, the
Department of Veterans Affairs, the Central Intelligence Agency through
the Phoenix Program, the Stanford Research Institute, the Agency for
International Development, the Department of Defense, the Department of
Labor, the National Institute of Mental Health, the Law Enforcement
Assistance Administration, and the National Science Foundation.
California has been in the forefront of mind control experimentation.
Government experiments also were conducted in the Haight-Ashbury
District in San Francisco at the height of the Hippy reign. In 1974,
Senator Sam Erwin, of Watergate fame, headed a U.S. Senate Subcommittee
on Constitutional Rights studying the subject of "Individual rights
and the Federal role in behavior modification." Though little
publicity was given to this committee's investigation, Senator Erwin
issued a strong condemnation of the federal role in mind control. That
condemnation, however, did not halt mind control experiments, they just
received more circuitous funding.
Many of the case histories concerning individuals of whom the mind
control experiments were used, show a strange concept in the minds of
those seeking guinea pigs. Those subject to the mind control experiments
would be given indefinite sentences, his freedom was dependent upon how
well the experiment went. One individual, for example, was arrested for
joyriding, given a two-year sentence and held for mind control
experiments. He was held for 18 years.
Here are just a few experiments used in the mind control program:
A naked inmate is strapped down on a board. His wrists and ankles are
cuffed to the board and his head is rigidly held in place by a strap
around his neck and a helmet on his head. He is left in a darkened cell,
unable to remove his body wastes. When a meal is delivered, one wrist is
unlocked so he could feel around in the dark for his food and attempt to
pour liquid down his throat without being able to lift his head.
Another experiment creates a muscle relaxant. Within 30 to 40 seconds
paralysis begins to invade the small muscles of the fingers, toes, and
eyes and then the inter costal muscles and diaphragm. The heart slows
down to about 60 beats per minute. This condition, together with
respiratory arrests, sets in for as long as two to five minutes before
the drug begins to wear off. The individual remains fully conscious and
is gasping for breath. It is "likened to dying, it is almost like
drowning" the experiment states.
Another drug induces vomiting and was administered to prisoners who
didn't get up on time or caught swearing or lying, or even not greeting
their guards formally. The treatment brings about uncontrolled vomiting
that lasts from 15 minutes to an hour, accompanied by a temporary cardio
vascular effect involving changes in the blood pressure.
Another deals with creating body rigidness, aching restlessness, blurred
vision, severe muscular pain, trembling and fogged cognition.
The Department of Health, Education and Welfare and the U.S. Army have
admitted mind control experiments. Many deaths have occurred.
In tracing the steps of government mind control experiments, the trail
leads to legal and illegal usages, usage for covert intelligence
operations, and experiments on innocent people who were unaware that
they were being used.
Mind Control
By Harry V. Martin and David Caul
Copyright, Napa Sentinel, 1991
Part Two in a Series
EDITOR'S NOTE: The
Sentinel commenced a series on mind control in early August and
suspended it until September because of the extensive research required
after additional information was received.
In July, two inmates died at the Vacaville Medical Facility. According
to prison officials at the time, the two may have died as a result of
medical treatment, that treatment was the use of mind control or
behavior modification drugs. A deeper study into the deaths of the two
inmates has unraveled a mind-boggling tale of horror that has been part
of California penal history for a long time, and one that caused
national outcries years ago.
In the August article, the Sentinel presented a graphic portrait of some
of the mind control experiments that have been allowed to continue in
the United States. On November 1974 a U.S. Senate Sub committee on
Constitutional Rights investigated federally-funded behavior
modification programs, with emphasis on federal involvement in, and the
possible threat to individual constitutional rights of behavior
modification, especially involving inmates in prisons and mental
institutions.
The Senate committee was appalled after reviewing documents from the
following sources:
Neuro-Research Foundation's study entitled The Medical Epidemiology of
Criminals.
The Center for the Study and Reduction of Violence from UCLA.
The closed adolescent treatment center.
A national uproar was created by various articles in 1974, which
prompted the Senate investigation. But after all these years, the news
that two inmates at Vacaville may have died from these same experiments
indicates that though a nation was shocked in 1974, little was done to
correct the experimentations. In 1977, a Senate subcommittee on Health
and Scientific Research, chaired by Senator Ted Kennedy, focussed on the
CIA's testing of LSD on unwitting citizens. Only a mere handful of
people within the CIA knew about the scope and details of the program.
To understand the full scope of the problem, it is important to study
its origins. The Kennedy subcommittee learned about the CIA Operation
M.K.-Ultra through the testimony of Dr. Sidney Gottlieb. The purpose of
the program, accord ing to his testimony, was to "investigate
whether and how it was possible to modify an individual's behavior by
covert means". Claiming the protection of the National Security
Act, Dr. Gottlieb was unwilling to tell the Senate subcommittee what had
been learned or gained by these experiments.
He did state, however, that the program was initially engendered by a
concern that the Soviets and other enemies of the United States would
get ahead of the U.S. in this field. Through the Freedom of Information
Act, researchers are now able to obtain documents detailing the
M.K.-Ultra program and other CIA behavior modification projects in a
special reading room located on the bottom floor of the Hyatt Regency in
Rosslyn, VA.
The most daring phase of the M.K.-Ultra program involved slipping
unwitting American citizens LSD in real life situations. The idea for
the series of experiments originated in November 1941, when William
Donovan, founder and director of the Office of Strategic Services (OSS),
the forerunner of the CIA during World War Two. At that time the
intelligence agency invested $5000 for the "truth drug"
program. Experiments with scopolamine and morphine proved both
unfruitful and very dangerous. The program tested scores of other drugs,
including mescaline, barbituates, benzedrine, cannabis indica, to name a
few.
The U.S. was highly concerned over the heavy losses of freighters and
other ships in the North Atlantic, all victims of German U-boats.
Information about German U-boat strategy was desperately needed and it
was believed that the information could be obtained through
drug-influenced interrogations of German naval P.O.W.s, in violation of
the Geneva Accords.
Tetrahydrocannabinol acetate, a colorless, odorless marijuana extract,
was used to lace a cigarette or food substance without detection.
Initially, the experiments were done on volunteer U.S. Army and OSS
personnel, and testing was also disguised as a remedy for shell shock.
The volunteers became known as "Donovan's Dreamers". The
experiments were so hush-hush, that only a few top officials knew about
them. President Franklin Roosevelt was aware of the experiments. The
"truth drug" achieved mixed success.
The experiments were halted when a memo was written: "The drug
defies all but the most expert and search analysis, and for all
practical purposes can be considered beyond analysis." The OSS did
not, however, halt the program. In 1943 field tests of the extract were
being con ducted, despite the order to halt them. The most celebrated
test was conducted by Captain George Hunter White, an OSS agent and
ex-law enforcement official, on August Del Grazio, aka Augie Dallas, aka
Dell, aka Little Augie, a New York gangster. Cigarettes laced with the
acetate were offered to Augie without his knowledge of the content.
Augie, who had served time in prison for assault and murder, had been
one of the world's most notorious drug dealers and smugglers. He
operated an opium alkaloid factory in Turkey and he was a leader in the
Italian underworld on the Lower East Side of New York. Under the
influence of the drug, Augie revealed volumes of information about the
under world operations, including the names of high ranking officials
who took bribes from the mob. These experiments led to the encouragement
of Donovan. A new memo was issued: "Cigarette experiments indicated
that we had a mechanism which offered promise in relaxing prisoners to
be interrogated."
When the OSS was disbanded after the war, Captain White continued to
administer behavior modifying drugs. In 1947, the CIA replaced the OSS.
White's service record indicates that he worked with the OSS, and by
1954 he was a high ranking Federal Narcotics Bureau officer who had been
loaned to the CIA on a part-time basis.
White rented an apartment in Greenwich Village equipped with one-way
mirrors, surveillance gadgets and disguised himself as a seaman. White
drugged his acquaintances with LSD and brought them back to his
apartment. In 1955, the operation shifted to San Francisco. In San
Francisco, "safehouses" were established under the code name
Operation Midnight Climax. Midnight Climax hired prostitute addicts who
lured men from bars back to the safehouses after their drinks had been
spiked with LSD. White filmed the events in the safehouses. The purpose
of these "national security brothels" was to enable the CIA to
experiment with the act of lovemaking for extracting information from
men. The safehouse experiments continued until 1963 until CIA Inspector
General John Earman criticized Richard Helms, the director of the CIA
and father of the M.K.-Ultra project. Earman charged the new director
John McCone had not been fully briefed on the M.K.-Ultra Project when he
took office and that "the concepts involved in manipulating human
behavior are found by many people within and outside the Agency to be
distasteful and unethical." He stated that "the rights and
interest of U.S. citizens are placed in jeopardy". The Inspector
General stated that LSD had been tested on individuals at all social
levels, high and low, native American and foreign."
Earman's criticisms were rebuffed by Helms, who warned, "Positive
operation capacity to use drugs is diminishing owing to a lack of
realistic testing. Tests were necessary to keep up with the
Soviets." But in 1964, Helms had testified before the Warren
Commission investigating the assassination of President John Kennedy,
that "Soviet research has consistently lagged five years behind
Western research".
Upon leaving government service in 1966, Captain White wrote a startling
letter to his superior. In the letter to Dr. Gottlieb, Captain White
reminisced about his work in the safehouses with LSD. His comments were
frightening. "I was a very minor missionary, actually a heretic,
but I toiled wholeheartedly in the vineyards because it was fun, fun,
fun," White wrote. "Where else could a red-blooded American
boy lie, kill, cheat, steal, rape and pillage with the sanction and
blessing of the all-highest?"
(NEXT: How the drug experiments helped bring about the rebirth of the
mafia and the French Connection.)
Mind Control
By Harry V. Martin and David Caul
Copyright, Napa Sentinel, 1991
Part Three in a Series
Though the CIA continued
to maintain drug experiments in the streets of America after the program
was official cancelled, the United States reaped tremendous value from
it. With George Hunter Whites connection to underworld figure Little
Augie, connections were made with Mafia king-pin Lucky Luciano, who was
in Dannemore Prison.
Luciano wanted freedom, the Mafia wanted drugs, and the United States
wanted Sicily. The date was 1943. Augie was the go-between between
Luciano and the United States War Department.
Luciano was transferred to a less harsh prison and began to be visited
by representatives of the Office of Naval Intelligence and from
underworld figures, such as Meyer Lansky. A strange alliance was formed
between the U.S. Intelligence agencies and the Mafia, who controlled the
West Side docks in New York. Luciano regained active leadership in
organized crime in America.
The U.S. Intelligence community utilized Luciano's underworld
connections in Italy. In July of 1943, Allied forces launched their
invasion of Sicily, the beginning push into occupied Europe. General
George Patton's Seventh Army advanced through hundreds of miles of
territory that was fraught with difficulty, booby trapped roads,
snipers, confusing mountain topography, all within close range of 60,000
hostile Italian troops. All this was accomplished in four days, a
military "miracle" even for Patton.
Senate Estes Kefauver's Senate Sub committee on Organized Crime asked,
in 1951, how all this was possible. The answer was that the Mafia had
helped to protect roads from Italian snipers, served as guides through
treacherous mountain terrain, and provided needed intelligence to
Patton's army. The part of Sicily which Patton's forces traversed had at
one time been completely controlled by the Sicilian Mafia, until Benito
Mussolini smashed it through the use of police repression.
Just prior to the invasion, it was hardly even able to continue shaking
down farmers and shepherds for protection money. But the invasion
changed all this, and the Mafia went on to play a very prominent and
well-documented role in the American military occupation of Italy.
The expedience of war opened the doors to American drug traffic and
Mafia domination. This was the beginning of the Mafia-U.S. Intelligence
alliance, an alliance that lasts to this day and helped to support the
covert operations of the CIA, such as the Iran-Contra operations. In
these covert operations, the CIA would obtain drugs from South America
and Southeast Asia, sell them to the Mafia and use the money for the
covert purchase of military equipment. These operations accelerated when
Congress cut off military funding for the Contras.
One of the Allies top occupation priorities was to liberate as many of
their own soldiers from garrison duties so that they could participate
in the military offensive. In order to accomplish this, Don Calogero's
Mafia were pressed into service, and in July of 1943, the Civil Affairs
Control Office of the U.S. Army appointed him mayor of Villalba and
other Mafia officials as mayors of other towns in Sicily.
As the northern Italian offensive continued, Allied intelligence became
very concerned over the extent to which the Italian Communists
resistance to Mussolini had driven Italian politics to the left.
Community Party membership had doubled between 1943 and 1944, huge
leftist strikes had shut down factories and the Italian underground
fighting Mussolini had risen to almost 150,000 men. By mid-1944, the
situation came to a head and the U.S. Army terminated arms drops to the
Italian Resistance, and started appointing Mafia officials to occupation
administration posts. Mafia groups broke up leftists rallies and
reactivated black market operations throughout southern Italy.
Lucky Luciano was released from prison in 1946 and deported to Italy,
where he rebuilt the heroin trade. The court's decision to release him
was made possible by the testimony of intelligence agents at his
hearing, and a letter written by a naval officer reciting what Luciano
had done for the Navy. Luciano was supposed to have served from 30 to 50
years in prison. Over 100 Mafia members were similarly deported within a
couple of years.
Luciano set up a syndicate which transported morphine base from the
Middle East to Europe, refined it into heroin, and then shipped it into
the United States via Cuba. During the 1950's, Marseilles, in Southern
France, became a major city for the heroin labs and the Corsican
syndicate began to actively cooperate with the Mafia in the heroin
trade. Those became popularly known as the French Connection.
In 1948, Captain White visited Luciano and his narcotics associate Nick
Gentile in Europe. Gentile was a former American gangster who had worked
for the Allied Military Government in Sicily. By this time, the CIA was
already subsidizing Corsican and Italian gangsters to oust Communist
unions from the Port of Marseilles. American strategic planners saw
Italy and southern France as extremely important for their Naval bases
as a counterbalance to the growing naval forces of the Soviet Union.
CIO/AFL organizer Irving Brown testified that by the time the CIA
subsidies were terminated in 1953, U.S. support was no longer needed
because the profits from the heroin traffic was sufficient to sustain
operations.
When Luciano was originally jailed, the U.S. felt it had eliminated the
world's most effective underworld leader and the activities of the Mafia
were seriously damaged. Mussolini had been waging a war since 1924 to
rid the world of the Sicilian Mafia. Thousands of Mafia members were
convicted of crimes and forced to leave the cities and hide out in the
mountains.
Mussolini's reign of terror had virtually eradicated the international
drug syndicates. Combined with the shipping surveillance during the war
years, heroin trafficking had become almost nil. Drug use in the United
States, before Luciano's release from prison, was on the verge of being
entirely wiped out.
Mind Control
By Harry V. Martin and David Caul
Copyright, Napa Sentinel, 1991
Part Four in a Series
The U.S. government has
conducted three types of mind-control experiments:
Real life experiences, such as those used on Little Augie and the LSD
experiments in the safehouses of San Francisco and Greenwich Village.
Experiments on prisoners, such as in the California Medical Facility at
Vacaville.
Experiments conducted in both mental hospitals and the Veterans
Administration hospitals.
Such experimentation requires money, and the United States government
has funnelled funds for drug experiments through different agencies,
both overtly and covertly.
One of the funding agencies to contribute to the experimentation is the
Law Enforcement Assistance Administration (LEAA), a unit of the U.S.
Justice Department and one of President Richard Nixon's favorite pet
agencies. The Nixon Administration was, at one time, putting together a
program for detaining youngsters who showed a tendency toward violence
in "concentration" camps. According to the Washington Post,
the plan was authored by Dr. Arnold Hutschnecker. Health, Education and
Welfare Secretary Robert Finch was told by John Erlichman, Chief of
Staff for the Nixon White House, to implement the program. He proposed
the screening of children of six years of age for tendencies toward
criminality. Those who failed these tests were to be destined to be sent
to the camps. The program was never implemented.
LEAA came into existence in 1968 with a huge budget to assist various
U.S. law enforcement agencies. Its effectiveness, however, was not
considered too great. After spending $6 billion, the F.B.I. reports
general crime rose 31 percent and violent crime rose 50 percent. But
little accountability was required of LEAA on how it spent its funds.
LEAA's role in the behavior modification research began at a meeting
held in 1970 in Colorado Springs. Attending that meeting were Richard
Nixon, Attorney General John Mitchell, John Erlichman, H.R. Haldemann
and other White House staffers. They met with Dr. Bertram Brown,
director fo the National Institute of Mental Health, and forged a close
collaboration between LEAA and the Institute. LEAA was a product of the
Justice Department and the Institute was a product of HEW.
LEAA funded 350 projects involving medical procedures, behavior
modification and drugs for delinquency control. Money from the Criminal
Justice System was being used to fund mental health projects and vice
versa. Eventually, the leadership responsibility and control of the
Institute began to deteriorate and their scientists began to answer to
LEAA alone.
The National Institute of Mental Health went on to become one of the
greatest supporters of behavior modification research. Throughout the
1960's, court calenders became blighted with lawsuits on the part of
"human guinea pigs" who had been experimented upon in prisons
and mental institutions. It was these lawsuits which triggered the
Senate Subcommittee on Constitutional Rights investigation, headed by
Senator Sam Erwin. The subcommittee's harrowing report was virtually
ignored by the news media.
Thirteen behavior modification programs were conducted by the Department
of Defense. The Department of Labor had also conducted several
experiments, as well as the National Science Foundation. The Veterans'
Administration was also deeply involved in behavior modification and
mind control. Each of these agencies, including LEAA, and the Institute,
were named in secret CIA documents as those who provided research cover
for the MK-ULTRA program.
Eventually, LEAA was using much of its budget to fund experiments,
including aversive techniques and psychosurgery, which involved, in some
cases, irreversible brain surgery on normal brain tissue for the purpose
of changing or controlling behavior and/or emotions.
Senator Erwin questioned the head of LEAA concerning ethical standards
of the behavior modification projects which LEAA had been funding. Erwin
was extremely dubious about the idea of the government spending money on
this kind of project without strict guidelines and reasonable research
supervision in order to protect the human subjects. After Senator
Erwin's denunciation of the funding polices, LEAA announced that it
would no longer fund medical research into behavior modification and
psychosurgery. Despite the pledge by LEAA's director, Donald E.
Santarelli, LEAA ended up funding 537 research projects dealing with
behavior modification. There is strong evidence to indicate
psychosurgery was still being used in prisons in the 1980's. Immediately
after the funding announcement by LEAA, there were 50 psychosurgical
operations at Atmore State Prison in Alabama. The inmates became virtual
zombies. The operations, according to Dr. Swan of Fisk University, were
done on black prisoners who were considered politically active.
The Veterans' Administration openly admitted that psychosurgery was a
standard procedure for treatment and not used just in experiments. The
VA Hospitals in Durham, Long Beach, New York, Syracuse and Minneapolis
were known to employ these products on a regular basis. VA clients could
typically be subject to these behavior alteration procedures against
their will. The Erwin subcommittee concluded that the rights of VA
clients had been violated.
LEAA also subsidized the research and development of gadgets and
techniques useful to behavior modification. Much of the technology,
whose perfection LEAA funded, had originally been developed and made
operational for use in the Vietnam War. Companies like Bangor Punta
Corporation and Walter Kidde and Co., through its subsidiary Globe
Security System, adapted these devices to domestic use in the U.S. ITT
was another company that domesticated the warfare technology for
potential use on U.S. citizens. Rand Corporation executive Paul Baran
warned that the influx back to the United State of the Vietnam War
surveillance gadgets alone, not to mention the behavior modification
hardware, could bring about "the most effective, oppressive police
state ever created".
Mind Control
By Harry V. Martin and David Caul
Copyright, Napa Sentinel, 1991
Part Five in a Series
One of the fascinating
aspects of the scandals that plague the U.S. Government is the fact that
so often the same names appear from scandal to scandal. From the origins
of Ronald Reagan's political career, as Governor of California, Dr. Earl
Brian and Edward Meese played key advisory roles.
Dr. Brian's name has been linked to the October Surprise and is a
central figure in the government's theft of PROMIS soft ware from
INSLAW. Brian's role touches from the Cabazon Indian scandals to United
Press International. He is one of those low-profile key figures.
And, alas, his name appears again in the nation's behavior modification
and mind control experiments. Dr. Brian was Reagan's Secretary of Health
when Reagan was Governor. Dr. Brian was an advocate of state subsidies
for a research center for the study of violent behavior. The center was
to begin operations by mid-1975, and its research was intended to shed
light on why people murder or rape, or hijack aircraft. The center was
to be operated by the University of California at Los Angeles, and its
primary purpose, ac cording to Dr. Brian, was to unify scattered studies
on anti-social violence and possibly even touch on socially tolerated
violence, such as football or war. Dr. Brian sought $1.3 million for the
center.
It certainly was possible that prison inmates might be used as volunteer
subjects at the center to discover the unknowns which triggered their
violent behavior. Dr. Brian's quest for the center came at the same time
Governor Reagan concluded his plans to phase the state of California out
of the mental hospital business by 1982. Reagan's plan is echoed by
Governor Pete Wilson today, to place the responsibility of
rehabilitating young offenders squarely on the shoulders of local
communities.
But as the proposal became known more publicly, a swell of controversy
surrounded it. It ended in a fiasco. The inspiration for the violence
center came from three doctors in 1967, five years before Dr. Brian and
Governor Reagan unveiled their plans. Amidst urban rioting and civil
protest, Doctors Sweet, Mark and Ervin of Harvard put forward the thesis
that individuals who engage in civil disobedience possess defective or
damaged brain cells. If this conclusion were applied to the American
Revolution or the Women's Rights Movement, a good portion of American
society would be labeled as having brain damage.
In a letter to the Journal of the American Medical Association, they
stated: "That poverty, unemployment, slum housing, and inadequate
education underlie the nation's urban riots is well known, but the
obviousness of these causes may have blinded us to the more subtle role
of other possible factors, including brain dysfunction in the rioters
who engaged in arson, sniping and physical assault.
"There is evidence from several sources that brain dysfunction
related to a focal lesion plays a significant role in the violent and
assaultive behavior of thoroughly studied patients. Individuals with
electroencephalographic abnormalities in the temporal region have been
found to have a much greater frequency of behavioral abnormalities (such
as poor impulse control, assaultiveness, and psychosis) than is present
in people with a normal brain wave pattern."
Soon after the publication in the Journal, Dr. Ervin and Dr. Mark
published their book Violence and the Brain, which included the claim
that there were as many as 10 million individuals in the United States
"who suffer from obvious brain disease". They argued that the
data of their book provided a strong reason for starting a program of
mass screening of Americans.
"Our greatest danger no longer comes from famine or communicable
disease. Our greatest danger lies in ourselves and in our fellow
humans...we need to develop an 'early warning test' of limbic brain
function to detect those humans who have a low threshold for impulsive
violence...Violence is a public health problem, and the major thrust of
any program dealing with violence must be toward its prevention,"
they wrote.
The Law Enforcement Assistance Administration funded the doctors
$108,000 and the National Institute of Mental Health kicked in another
$500,000, under pressure from Congress. They believed that psychosurgery
would inevitably be performed in connection with the program, and that,
since it irreversibly impaired people's emotional and intellectual
capacities, it could be used as an instrument of repression and social
control.
The doctors wanted screening centers established throughout the nation.
In California, the publicity associated with the doctors' report, aided
in the development of The Center for the study and Reduction of
Violence. Both the state and LEAA provided the funding. The center was
to serve as a model for future facilities to be set up throughout the
United States.
The Director of the Neurophyschiatric Institute and chairman of the
Department of Psychiatry at UCLA, Dr. Louis Jolyon West was selected to
run the center. Dr. West is alleged to have been a contract agent for
the CIA, who, as part of a network of doctors and scientists, gathered
intelligence on hallucinogenic drugs, including LSD, for the
super-secret MK-ULTRA program. Like Captain White (see part three of the
series), West conducted LSD experiments for the CIA on unwitting
citizens in the safehouses of San Francisco. He achieved notoriety for
his injection of a massive dose of LSD into an elephant at the Oklahoma
Zoo, the elephant died when West tried to revive it by administering a
combination of drugs.
Dr. West was further known as the psychiatrist who was called upon to
examine Jack Ruby, Lee Harvey Oswald's assassin. It was on the basis of
West's diagnosis that Ruby was compelled to be treated for mental
disorders and put on happy pills. The West examination was ordered after
Ruby began to say that he was part of a right-wing conspiracy to kill
President John Kennedy. Two years after the commencement of treatment
for mental disorder, Ruby died of cancer in prison.
After January 11, 1973, when Governor Reagan announced plans for the
Violence Center, West wrote a letter to the then Director of Health for
California, J. M. Stubblebine.
"Dear Stub:
"I am in possession of confidential in formation that the Army is
prepared to turn over Nike missile bases to state and local agencies for
non-military purposes. They may look with special favor on
health-related applications.
"Such a Nike missile base is located in the Santa Monica Mountains,
within a half-hour's drive of the Neuropsychiatric Institute. It is
accessible, but relatively remote. The site is securely fenced, and
includes various buildings and improvements, making it suitable for
prompt occupancy.
"If this site were made available to the Neurophyschiatric
Institute as a research facility, perhaps initially as an adjunct to the
new Center for the Prevention of Violence, we could put it to very good
use. Comparative studies could be carried out there, in an isolated but
convenient location, of experimental or model programs for the
alteration of undesirable behavior.
"Such programs might include control of drug or alcohol abuse,
modification of chronic anti-social or impulsive aggressiveness, etc.
The site could also accommodate conferences or retreats for instruction
of selected groups of mental-health related professionals and of others
(e.g., law enforcement personnel, parole officers, special educators)
for whom both demonstration and participation would be effective modes
of instruction.
"My understanding is that a direct request by the Governor, or
other appropriate officers of the State, to the Secretary of Defense
(or, of course, the President), could be most likely to produce prompt
results."
Some of the planned areas of study for the Center included:
Studies of violent individuals.
Experiments on prisoners from Vacaville and Atascadero, and hyperkinetic
children.
Experiments with violence-producing and violent inhibiting drugs.
Hormonal aspects of passivity and aggressiveness in boys.
Studies to discover and compare norms of violence among various ethnic
groups.
Studies of pre-delinquent children.
It would also encourage law enforcement to keep computer files on
pre-delinquent children, which would make possible the treatment of
children before they became delinquents.
The purpose of the Violence Center was not just research. The staff was
to include sociologists, lawyers, police officers, clergymen and
probation officers. With the backing of Governor Reagan and Dr. Brian,
West had secured guarantees of prisoner volunteers from several
California correctional institutions, including Vacaville. Vacaville and
Atascadero were chosen as the primary sources for the human guinea pigs.
These institutions had established a reputation, by that time, of
committing some of the worst atrocities in West Coast history. Some of
the experimentations differed little from what the Nazis did in the
death camps.
(NEXT: What happened to the Center?)
Mind Control
By Harry V. Martin and David Caul
Copyright, Napa Sentinel, 1991
Part Six in a Series
Dr. Earl Brian, Governor
Ronald Reagan's Secretary of Health, was adamant about his support for
mind control centers in California. He felt the behavior modification
plan of the Violence Control Centers was important in the prevention of
crime.
The Violence Control Center was actually the brain child of William
Herrmann as part of a pacification plan for California. A counter
insurgency expert for Systems Development Corporation and an advisor to
Governor Reagan, Herrmann worked with the Stand Research Institute, the
RAND Corporation, and the Hoover Center on Violence. Herrman was also a
CIA agent who is now serving an eight year prison sentence for his role
in a CIA counterfeiting operation. He was also directly linked with the
Iran-Contra affair according to government records and Herrmann's own
testimony.
In 1970, Herrmann worked with Colston Westbrook as his CIA control
officer when Westbrook formed and implemented the Black Cultural
Association at the Vacaville Medical Facility, a facility which in July
experienced the death of three inmates who were forcibly subjected to
behavior modification drugs. The Black Cultural Association was
ostensibly an education program designed to instill black pride identity
in prisons, the Association was really a cover for an experimental
behavior modification pilot project designed to test the feasibility of
programming unstable prisoners to become more manageable.
Westbrook worked for the CIA in Vietnam as a psychological warfare
expert, and as an advisor to the Korean equivalent of the CIA and for
the Lon Nol regime in Cambodia. Between 1966 and 1969, he was an advisor
to the Vietnamese Police Special Branch under the cover of working as an
employee of Pacific Architects and Engineers.
His "firm" contracted the building of the
interrogation/torture centers in every province of South Vietnam as part
of the CIA's Phoenix Program. The program was centered around behavior
modification experiments to learn how to extract information from
prisoners of war, a direct violation of the Geneva Accords.
Westbrook's most prominent client at Vacaville was Donald DeFreeze, who
be tween 1967 and 1969, had worked for the Los Angeles Police
Department's Public Disorder Intelligence unit and later became the
leader of the Symbionese Liberation Army. Many authorities now believe
that the Black Cultural Association at Vacaville was the seedling of the
SLA. Westbrook even designed the SLA logo, the cobra with seven heads,
and gave De Freeze his African name of Cinque. The SLA was responsible
for the assassination of Marcus Foster, superintendent of School in
Oakland and the kidnapping of Patty Hearst.
As a counterinsurgency consultant for Systems Development Corporation, a
security firm, Herrmann told the Los Angeles Times that a good computer
intelligence system "would separate out the activist bent on
destroying the system" and then develop a master plan "to win
the hearts and minds of the people". The San Francisco-based Bay
Guardian, recently identified Herrmann as an international arms dealer
working with Iran in 1980, and possibly involved in the October
Surprise. Herrmann is in an English prison for counterfeiting. He
allegedly met with Iranian officials to ascertain whether the Iranians
would trade arms for hostages held in Lebanon.
The London Sunday Telegraph confirmed Herrmann's CIA connections,
tracing them from 1976 to 1986. He also worked for the FBI. This
information was revealed in his London trial.
In the 1970's, Dr. Brian and Herrmann worked together under Governor
Reagan on the Center for the Study and Reduction of Violence, and then,
a decade later, again worked under Reagan. Both men have been identified
as working for Reagan with the Iranians.
The Violence Center, however, died an agonizing death. Despite the Ervin
Senate Committee investigation and chastation of mind control, the
experiments continued. But when the Watergate scandal broke in the early
1970's, Washington felt it was too politically risky to continue to push
for mind control centers.
Top doctors began to withdraw from the proposal because they felt that
there were not enough safeguards. Even the Law Enforcement Assistance
Agency, which funded the program, backed out, stating, the proposal
showed "little evidence of established research ability of the kind
of level necessary for a study of this cope".
Eventually it became known that control of the Violence Center was not
going to rest with the University of California, but instead with the
Department of Corrections and other law enforcement officials. This
information was released publicly by the Committee Opposed to
Psychiatric Abuse of Prisoners. The disclosure of the letter resulted in
the main backers of the program bowing out and the eventual demise of
the center.
Dr. Brian's final public statement on the matter was that the decision
to cut off funding represented "a callous disregard for public
safety". Though the Center was not built, the mind control
experiments continue to this day.
(NEXT: What these torturous drugs do.)
Mind Control
By Harry V. Martin and David Caul
Copyright, Napa Sentinel, 1991
Part Seven in a Series
The Central Intelligence
Agency held two major interests in use of L.S.D. to alter normal
behavior patterns. The first interest centered around obtaining
information from prisoners of war and enemy agents, in contravention of
the Geneva Accords. The second was to deter the effectiveness of drugs
used against the enemy on the battlefield.
The MK-ULTRA program was originally run by a small number of people
within the CIA known as the Technical Services Staff (TSS). Another CIA
department, the Office of Security, also began its own testing program.
Friction arose and then infighting broke out when the Office of Security
commenced to spy on TSS people after it was learned that LSD was being
tested on unwitting Americans.
Not only did the two branches disagree over the issue of testing the
drug on the unwitting, they also disagreed over the issue of how the
drug was actually to be used by the CIA. The office of Security
envisioned the drug as an interrogation weapon. But the TSS group
thought the drug could be used to help destabilize another country, it
could be slipped into the food or beverage of a public official in order
to make him behave foolishly or oddly in public. One CIA document
reveals that L.S.D. could be administered right before an official was
to make a public speech.
Realizing that gaining information about the drug in real life
situations was crucial to exploiting the drug to its fullest, TSS
started conducting experiments on its own people. There was an extensive
amount of self-experimentation. The Office of Security felt the TSS
group was playing with fire, especially when it was learned that TSS was
prepared to spike an annual office Christmas party punch with LSD, the
Christmas party of the CIA. L.S.D. could produce serious insanity for
periods of eight to 18 hours and possibly longer.
One of the "victims" of the punch was agent Frank Olson.
Having never had drugs before, L.S.D. took its toll on Olson. He
reported that, every automobile that came by was a terrible monster with
fantastic eyes, out to get him personally. Each time a car passed he
would huddle down against a parapet, terribly frightened. Olson began to
behave erratically. The CIA made preparation to treat Olson at Chestnut
Lodge, but before they could, Olson checked into a New York hotel and
threw himself out from his tenth story room. The CIA was ordered to
cease all drug testing.
Mind control drugs and experiments were torturous to the victims. One of
three inmates who died in Vacaville Prison in July was scheduled to
appear in court in an attempt to stop forced administration of a drug,
the very drug that may have played a role in his death.
Joseph Cannata believed he was making progress and did not need forced
dosages of the drug Haldol. The Solano County Coroner's Office said that
Cannata and two other inmates died of hyperthermia, extremely elevated
body temperature. Their bodies all had at least 108 degrees temperature
when they died. The psychotropic drugs they were being forced to take
will elevate body temperature.
Dr. Ewen Cameron, working at McGill University in Montreal, used a
variety of experimental techniques, including keeping subjects
unconscious for months at a time, administering huge electroshocks and
continual doses of L.S.D.
Massive lawsuits developed as a result of this testing, and many of the
subjects who suffered trauma had never agreed to participate in the
experiments. Such CIA experiments infringed upon the much-honored
Nuremberg Code concerning medical ethics. Dr. Camron was one of the
members of the Nuremberg Tribunal.
L.S.D. research was also conducted at the Addiction Research Center of
the U.S. Public Health Service in Lexington, Kentucky. This institution
was one of several used by the CIA. The National Institute of Mental
Health and the U.S. Navy funded this operation. Vast supplies of L.S.D.
and other hallucinogenic drugs were required to keep the experiments
going. Dr. Harris Isbell ran the program. He was a member of the Food
and Drug Administration's Advisory Committee on the Abuse of Depressant
and Stimulants Drugs. Almost all of the inmates were black. In many
cases, L.S.D. dosage was increased daily for 75 days.
Some 1500 U.S. soldiers were also victims of drug experimentation. Some
claimed they had agreed to become guinea pigs only through pressure from
their superior officers. Many claimed they suffered from severe
depression and other psychological stress.
One such soldier was Master Sergeant Jim Stanley. L.S.D. was put in
Stanley's drinking water and he freaked out. Stanley's hallucinations
continued even after he returned to his regular duties. His service
record suffered, his marriage went on the rocks and he ended up beating
his wife and children. It wasn't until 17 years later that Stanley was
informed by the military that he had been an L.S.D. experiment. He sued
the government, but the Supreme Court ruled no soldier could sue the
Army for the L.S.D. experiments. Justice William Brennen disagreed with
the Court decision. He wrote, "Experimentation with unknowing human
subjects is morally and legally unacceptable."
Private James Thornwell was given L.S.D. in a military test in 1961. For
the next 23 years he lived in a mental fog, eventually drowning in a
Vallejo swimming pool in 1984. Congress had set up a $625,000 trust fund
for him. Large scale L.S.D. tests on American soldiers were conducted at
Aberdeen Proving Ground in Maryland, Fort Benning, Georgia, Fort
Leavenworth, Kansas, Dugway Proving Ground, Utah, and in Europe and the
Pacific. The Army conducted a series of L.S.D. tests at Fort Bragg in
North Carolina. The purpose of the tests were to ascertain how well
soldiers could perform their tasks on the battlefield while under the
influence of L.S.D. At Fort McClellan, Alabama, 200 officers in the
Chemical Corps were given L.S.D. in order to familiarize them with the
drug's effects. At Edgewood Arsenal, soldiers were given L.S.D. and then
confined to sensory deprivation chambers and later exposed to a harsh
interrogation sessions by intelligence people. In these sessions, it was
discovered that soldiers would cooperate if promised they would be
allowed to get off the L.S.D.
In Operation Derby Hat, foreign nationals accused of drug trafficking
were given L.S.D. by the Special Purpose Team, with one subject begging
to be killed in order to end his ordeal. Such experiments were also
conducted in Saigon on Viet Cong POWs. One of the most potent drugs in
the U.S. arsenal is called BZ or quinuclidinyl benzilate. It is a
long-lasting drug and brings on a litany of psychotic experiences and
almost completely isolates any person from his environment. The main
effects of BZ last up to 80 hours compared to eight hours for L.S.D.
Negative after-effects may persist for up to six weeks.
The BZ experiments were conducted on soldiers at Edgewood Arsenal for 16
years. Many of the "victims" claim that the drug permanently
affected their lives in a negative way. It so disorientated one
paratrooper that he was found taking a shower in his uniform and smoking
a cigar. BZ was eventually put in hand grenades and a 750 pound cluster
bomb. Other configurations were made for mortars, artillery and
missiles. The bomb was tested in Vietnam and CIA documents indicate it
was prepared for use by the U.S. in the event of large-scale civilian
uprisings.
In Vacaville, psychosurgery has long been a policy. In one set of cases,
experimental psychosurgery was conducted on three inmates, a black, a
Chicano and a white person. This involved the procedure of pushing
electrodes deep into the brain in order to determine the position of
defective brain cells, and then shooting enough voltage into the
suspected area to kill the defective cells. One prisoner, who appeared
to be improving after surgery, was released on parole, but ended up back
in prison. The second inmate became violent and there is no information
on the third inmate.
Vacaville also administered a "terror drug" Anectine as a way
of "suppressing hazardous behavior". In small doses, Anectine
serves as a muscle relaxant; in huge does, it produces prolonged seizure
of the respiratory system and a sensation "worse than dying".
The drug goes to work within 30 to 40 seconds by paralyzing the small
muscles of the fingers, toes, and eyes, and then moves into the the
intercostal muscles and the diaphragm. The heart rate subsides to 60
beats per minute, respiratory arrest sets in and the patient remains
completely conscious throughout the ordeal, which lasts two to five
minutes. The experiments were also used at Atascadero.
Several mind altering drugs were originally developed for
non-psychoactive purposes. Some of these drugs are Phenothiazine and
Thorzine. The side effects of these drugs can be a living hell. The
impact includes the feeling of drowsiness, disorientation, shakiness,
dry mouth, blurred vision and an inability to concentrate. Drugs like
Prolixin are described by users as "sheer torture" and
"becoming a zombie".
The Veterans Administration Hospital has been shown by the General
Accounting Office to apply heavy dosages of psychotherapeutic drugs. One
patient was taking eight different drugs, three antipsychotic, two
antianxiety, one antidepressant, one sedative and one anti-Parkinson.
Three of these drugs were being given in dosages equal to the maximum
recommended. Another patient was taking seven different drugs. One
report tells of a patient who refused to take the drug. "I told
them I don't want the drug to start with, they grabbed me and strapped
me down and gave me a forced intramuscular shot of Prolixin. They gave
me Artane to counteract the Prolixin and they gave me Sinequan, which is
a kind of tranquilizer to make me calm down, which over calmed me, so
rather than letting up on the medication, they then gave me Ritalin to
pep me up."
Prolixin lasts for two weeks. One patient describes how the drug does
not calm or sedate nerves, but instead attacks from so deep inside you,
you cannot locate the source of the pain. "The drugs turn your
nerves in upon yourself. Against your will, your resistance, your
resolve, are directed at your own tissues, your own muscles, reflexes,
etc.." The patient continues, "The pain grinds into your
fiber, your vision is so blurred you cannot read. You ache with
restlessness, so that you feel you have to walk, to pace. And then as
soon as you start pacing, the opposite occurs to you, you must sit and
rest. Back and forth, up and down, you go in pain you cannot locate. In
such wretched anxiety you are overwhelmed because you cannot get relief
even in breathing."
Mind Control
By Harry V. Martin and David Caul
Copyright, Napa Sentinel, 1991
Part Eight in a Series
October 15, 1991
"We need a program of psychosurgery for political control of our
society. The purpose is physical control of the mind. Everyone who
deviates from the given norm can be surgically mutilated.
"The individual may think that the most important reality is his
own existence, but this is only his personal point of view. This lacks
historical perspective.
"Man does not have the right to develop his own mind. This kind of
liberal orientation has great appeal. We must electrically control the
brain. Some day armies and generals will be controlled by electric
stimulation of the brain." These were the remarks of Dr. Jose
Delgado as they appeared in the February 24, 1974 edition of the
Congressional Record, No. 26., Vol. 118.
Despite Dr. Delgado's outlandish statements before Congress, his work
was financed by grants from the Office of Naval Research, the Air Force
Aero-Medical Research Laboratory, and the Public Health Foundation of
Boston.
Dr. Delgado was a pioneer of the technology of Electrical Stimulation of
the Brain (ESB). The New York Times ran an article on May 17, 1965
entitled Matador With a Radio Stops Wild Bull. The story details Dr.
Delgado's experiments at Yale University School of Medicine and work in
the field at Cordova, Spain. The New York Times stated:
"Afternoon sunlight poured over the high wooden barriers into the
ring, as the brave bull bore down on the unarmed matador, a scientist
who had never faced fighting bull. But the charging animal's horn never
reached the man behind the heavy red cape. Moments before that could
happen, Dr. Delgado pressed a button on a small radio transmitter in his
hand and the bull braked to a halt. Then he pressed another button on
the transmitter, and the bull obediently turned to the right and trotted
away. The bull was obeying commands in his brain that were being called
forth by electrical stimulation by the radio signals to certain regions
in which fine wires had been painlessly planted the day before."
According to Dr. Delgado, experiments of this type have also been
performed on humans. While giving a lecture on the Brain in 1965, Dr.
Delgado said, "Science has developed a new methodology for the
study and control of cerebral function in animals and humans."
The late L.L. Vasiliev, professor of physiology at the University of
Leningrad wrote in a paper about hypnotism: "As a control of the
subject's condition, when she was outside the laboratory in another set
of experiments, a radio set was used. The results obtained indicate that
the method of using radio signals substantially enhances the
experimental possibilities." The professor continued to write,
"I.F. Tomaschevsky (a Russian physiologist) carried out the first
experiments with this subject at a distance of one or two rooms, and
under conditions that the participant would not know or suspect that she
would be experimented with. In other cases, the sender was not in the
same house, and someone else observed the subject's behavior. Subsequent
experiments at considerable distances were successful. One such
experiment was carried out in a park at a distance. Mental suggestions
to go to sleep were complied with within a minute."
The Russian experiments in the control of a person's mind through
hypnosis and radio waves were conducted in the 1930s, some 30 years
before Dr. Delgado's bull experiment. Dr. Vasiliev definitely
demonstrated that radio transmission can produce stimulation of the
brain. It is not a complex process. In fact, it need not be implanted
within the skull or be productive of stimulation of the brain, itself.
All that is needed to accomplish the radio control of the brain is a
twitching muscle. The subject becomes hypnotized and a muscle stimulant
is implanted. The subject, while still under hypnosis, is commanded to
respond when the muscle stimulant is activated, in this case by radio
transmission.
Lincoln Lawrence wrote a book entitled Were We Controlled? Lawrance
wrote, "If the subject is placed under hypnosis and mentally
programmed to maintain a determination eventually to perform one
specific act, perhaps to shoot someone, it is suggested thereafter, each
time a particular muscle twitches in a certain manner, which is then
demonstrated by using the transmitter, he will increase this
determination even more strongly. As the hypnotic spell is renewed again
and again, he makes it his life's purpose to carry out this act until it
is finally achieved. Thus are the two complementary aspects of
Radio-Hypnotic Intracerebral Control (RHIC) joined to reinforce each
other, and perpetuate the control, until such time as the controlled
behavior is called for. This is done by a second session with the
hypnotist giving final instructions. These might be reinforced with
radio stimulation in more frequent cycles. They could even carry over
the moments after the act to reassure calm behavior during the escape
period, or to assure that one conspirator would not indicate that he was
aware of the co-conspirator's role, or that he was even acquainted with
him."
RHIC constitutes the joining of two well known tools, the radio part and
the hypnotism part. People have found it difficult to accept that an
individual can be hypnotized to perform an act which is against his
moral principles. Some experiments have been conducted by the U.S. Army
which show that this popular perception is untrue. The chairman of the
Department of Psychology at Colgate University, Dr. Estabrooks, has
stated, "I can hypnotize a man without his knowledge or consent
into committing treason against the United States." Estabrooks was
one of the nation's most authoritative sources in the hypnotic field.
The psychologist told officials in Washington that a mere 200 well
trained hypnotists could develop an army of mind-controlled sixth
columnists in wartime United States. He laid out a scenario of an enemy
doctor placing thousands of patients under hypnotic mind control, and
eventually programming key military officers to follow his assignment.
Through such maneuvers, he said, the entire U.S. Army could be taken
over. Large numbers of saboteurs could also be created using hypnotism
through the work of a doctor practicing in a neighborhood or foreign
born nationals with close cultural ties with an enemy power.
Dr. Estabrooks actually conducted experiments on U.S. soldiers to prove
his point. Soldiers of low rank and little formal education were placed
under hypnotism and their memories tested. Surprisingly, hypnotists were
able to control the subjects' ability to retain complicated verbal
information. J. G. Watkins followed in Estabrooks steps and induced
soldiers of lower rank to commit acts which conflicted not only with
their moral code, but also the military code which they had come to
accept through their basic training. One of the experiments involved
placing a normal, stable army private in a deep trance. Watkins was
trying to see if he could get the private to attack a superior officer,
a cardinal sin in the military. While the private was in a deep trance,
Watkins told him that the officer sitting across from him was an enemy
soldier who was going to attempt to kill him. In the private's mind, it
was a kill or be killed situation. The private immediately jumped up and
grabbed the officer by the throat. The experiment was repeated several
times, and in one case the man who was hypnotized and the man who was
attacked were very close friends. The results were always the same. In
one experiment, the hypnotized subject pulled out a knife and nearly
stabbed another person.
Watkins concluded that people could be induced to commit acts contrary
to their morality if their reality was distorted by the hypnotism.
Similar experiments were conducted by Watkins using WACs exploring the
possibility of making military personnel divulge military secrets. A
related experiment had to be discontinued because a researcher, who had
been one of the subjects, was exposing numerous top-secret projects to
his hypnotist, who did not have the proper security clearance for such
information. The information was divulged before an audience of 200
military personnel.
(NEXT: School for Assassins)
Mind Control
By Harry V. Martin and David Caul
Copyright, Napa Sentinel, 1991
Part Nine in a Series
Tuesday, October 22, 1991
In mans quest to control the behavior of humans, there was a great
breakthrough established by Pavlov, who devised a way to make dogs
salivate on cue. He perfected his conditioning response technique by
cutting holes in the cheeks of dogs and measured the amount they
salivated in response to different stimuli. Pavlov verified that
"quality, rate and frequency of the salivation changed depending
upon the quality, rate and frequency of the stimuli."
Though Pavlov's work falls far short of human mind control, it did lay
the groundwork for future studies in mind and behavior control of
humans. John B. Watson conducted experiments in the United States on an
11-month-old infant. After allowing the infant to establish a rapport
with a white rat, Watson began to beat on the floor with an iron bar
every time the infant came in contact with the rat. After a time, the
infant made the association between the appearance of the rat and the
frightening sound, and began to cry every time the rat came into view.
Eventually, the infant developed a fear of any type of small animal.
Watson was the founder of the behaviorist school of psychology.
"Give me the baby, and I'll make it climb and use its hands in
constructing buildings or stone or wood. I'll make it a thief, a gunman
or a dope fiend. The possibilities of shaping in any direction are
almost endless. Even gross differences in anatomical structure limits
are far less than you may think. Make him a deaf mute, and I will build
you a Helen Keller. Men are built, not born," Watson proclaimed.
His psychology did not recognize inner feelings and thoughts as
legitimate objects of scientific study, he was only interested in overt
behavior.
Though Watson's work was the beginning of mans attempts to control human
actions, the real work was done by B.F. Skinner, the high priest of the
behaviorists movement. The key to Skinner's work was the concept of
operant conditioning, which relied on the notion of reinforcement, all
behavior which is learned is rooted in either a positive or negative
response to that action. There are two corollaries of operant
conditioning" Aversion therapy and desensitization.
Aversion therapy uses unpleasant reinforcement to a response which is
undesirable. This can take the form of electric shock, exposing the
subject to fear producing situations, and the infliction of pain in
general. It has been used as a way of "curing" homosexuality,
alcoholism and stuttering. Desensitization involves forcing the subject
to view disturbing images over and over again until they no longer
produce any anxiety, then moving on to more extreme images, and
repeating the process over again until no anxiety is produced.
Eventually, the subject becomes immune to even the most extreme images.
This technique is typically used to treat people's phobias. Thus, the
violence shown on T.V. could be said to have the unsystematic and
unintended effect of desensitization.
Skinnerian behaviorism has been accused of attempting to deprive man of
his free will, his dignity and his autonomy. It is said to be intolerant
of uncertainty in human behavior, and refuses to recognize the private,
the ineffable, and the unpredictable. It sees the individual merely as a
medical, chemical and mechanistic entity which has no comprehension of
its real interests.
Skinner believed that people are going to be manipulated. "I just
want them to be manipulated effectively," he said. He measured his
success by the absence of resistance and counter control on the part of
the person he was manipulating. He thought that his techniques could be
perfected to the point that the subject would not even suspect that he
was being manipulated.
Dr. James V. McConnel, head of the Department of Mental Health Research
at the University of Michigan, said, "The day has come when we can
combine sensory deprivation with the use of drugs, hypnosis, and the
astute manipulation of reward and punishment to gain almost absolute
control over an individual's behavior. We want to reshape our society
drastically."
A U.S. Navy psychologist, who claims that the Office of Naval
Intelligence had taken convicted murderers from military prisons, used
behavior modification techniques on them, and then relocated them in
American embassies throughout the world. Just prior to that time, the
U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee had censured the CIA for its global
political assassination plots, including plots against Fidel Castro. The
Navy psychologist was Lt. Commander Thomas Narut of the U.S. Regional
Medical Center in Naples, Italy. The information was divulged at an Oslo
NATO conference of 120 psychologists from the eleven nation alliance.
According to Dr. Narut, the U.S. Navy was an excellent place for a
researcher to find "captive personnel" whom they could could
use as guinea pigs in experiments. The Navy provided all the funding
necessary, according to Narut.
Dr. Narut, in a question and answer session with reporters from many
nations, revealed how the Navy was secretly programming large numbers of
assassins. He said that the men he had worked with for the Navy were
being prepared for commando-type operations, as well as covert
operations in U.S. embassies worldwide. He described the men who went
through his program as "hit men and assassins" who could kill
on command.
Careful screening of the subjects was accomplished by Navy psychologists
through the military records, and those who actually received
assignments where their training could be utilized, were drawn mainly
from submarine crews, the paratroops, and many were convicted murderers
serving military prison sentences. Several men who had been awarded
medals for bravery were drafted into the program.
The assassins were conditioned through "audio-visual
desensitization". The process involved the showing of films of
people being injured or killed in a variety of ways, starting with very
mild depictions, leading up to the more extreme forms of mayhem.
Eventually, the subjects would be able to detach their feelings even
when viewing the most horrible of films. The conditioning was most
successful when applied to "passive-aggressive" types, and
most of these ended up being able to kill without any regrets. The prime
indicator of violent tendencies was the Minnesota Multiphasic
Personality Inventory. Dr. Narut knew of two Navy programming centers,
the neuropsychiatric laboratory in San Diego and the U.S. Regional
Medical Center in Italy, where he worked.
During the audio-visual desensitization programming, restraints were
used to force the subject to view the films. A device was used on the
subjects eyelids to prevent him from blinking. Typically, the
preliminary film was on an African youth being ritualistically
circumcised with a dull knife and without any anesthetic. The second
film showed a sawmill scene in which a man accidentally cut off his
fingers.
In addition to the desensitization films, the potential assassins
underwent programming to create prejudicial attitude in the men, to
think of their future enemies, especially the leaders of these
countries, as sub-human. Films and lectures were presented demeaning the
culture and habits of the people of the countries where it had been
decided they would be sent.
After his NATO lecture, Dr. Narut disappeared. He could not be located.
Within a week of so after the lecture, the Pentagon issued an emphatic
denial that the U.S. Navy had "engaged in psychological training or
other types of training of personnel as assassins." They disavowed
the programming centers in San Diego and Naples and stated they were
unable to locate Narut, but did provide confirmation that he was a staff
member of the U.S. Regional Medical Center in Naples.
Dr. Alfred Zitani, an American delegate to the Oslo conference, did
verify Narut's remarks and they were published in the Sunday Times.
Sometime later, Dr. Narut surfaced again in London and recanted his
remarks, stating that he was "talking in theoretical and not
practical terms." Shortly thereafter, the U.S. Naval headquarters
in London issued a statement indicating that Dr. Narut's remarks at the
NATO conference should be discounted because he had "personal
problems". Dr. Narut never made any further public statements about
the program.
During the NATO conference in Oslo, Dr. Narut had remarked that the
reason he was divulging the information was because he believed that the
information was coming out anyway. The doctor was referring to the
disclosure by a Congressional subcommittee which were then appearing in
the press concerning various CIA assassination plots. However, what Dr.
Narut had failed to realize at the time, was that the Navy's
assassination plots were not destined to be revealed to the public at
that time.
Mind Control
By Harry V. Martin and David Caul
Copyright, Napa Sentinel, 1991
Part Ten in a Series
November 5, 1991
There were three scientists who pioneered the work of using an
electromagnetic field to control human behavior. Their work began 25
years ago. These three were Dr. Jose Delgado, psychology professor at
Yale University; Dr. W. Ross Adey, a physiologist at the Brain Research
Institute at UCLA; and Dr. Wilder Penfield, a Canadian.
Dr. Penfield's experiments consisted of the implantation of electrodes
deep into the cortexes of epilepsy patients who were to undergo surgery;
he was able to drastically improve the memories of these patients
through electrical stimulation. Dr. Adey implanted transmitters in the
brains of cats and chimpanzees that could send signals to a receiver
regarding the electrical activity of the brain; additional radio signals
were sent back into the brains of the animals which modified their
behavior at the direction of the doctor. Dr. Delgado was able to stop
and turn a charging bull through the use of an implanted radio receiver.
Other experiments using platinum, gold and stainless steel electrode
implants enabled researchers to induce total madness in cats, put
monkeys into a stupor, or to set human beings jerking their arms up and
down. Much of Delgado's work was financed by the CIA through phony
funding conduits masking themselves as charitable organizations.
Following the successes of Delgado's work, the CIA set up their own
research program in the field of electromagnetic behavior modification
under the code name Sleeping Beauty. With the guidance of Dr. Ivor
Browning, a laboratory was set up in New Mexico, specializing in working
with the hypothalamus or "sweet spot" of the brain. Here it
was found that stimulating this area could produce intense euphoria.
Dr. Browning was able to wire a radio receiver-amplifier into the
"sweet spot" of a donkey which picked up a five-micro-amp
signal, such that he could create intense happiness in the animal. Using
the jolts of happiness as an "electronic carrot", Browning was
able to send the donkey up a 2000 foot New Mexico mountain and back to
its point of origin. When the donkey was proceeding up the path toward
its destination, it was rewarded; when it deviated, the signal stopped.
"You've never seen a donkey so eager to keep on course in your
whole life," Dr. Browning exclaimed.
The CIA utilized the electronic carrot technique in getting trained
pigeons to fly miniature microphone-transmitters to the ledge of a KGB
safe house where the devices monitored conversations for months. There
was a move within the CIA to conduct further experiments on humans,
foreigners and prisoners, but officially the White House vetoed the idea
as being unethical.
In May 1989, it was learned by the CIA that the KGB was subjecting
people undergoing interrogation to electromagnetic fields, which
produced a panic reaction, thereby bringing them closer to breaking down
under questioning. The subjects were not told that they were being
placed under the influence of these beams. A few years earlier, Dr. Ross
Adey released photographs and a fact sheet concerning what he called the
Russian Lida machine. This consisted of a small transmitter emitting
10-hertz waves which makes the subject susceptibile to hypnotic
suggestion. The device utilized the outmoded vacuum-tube design.
American POWs in Korea have indicated that similar devices had been used
for interrogation purposes in POW camps.
The general, long term goal of the CIA was to find out whether or not
mind control could be achieved through the use of a precise, external,
electromagnetic beam. The electrical activity of the brain operates
within the range of 100 hertz frequency. This spectrum is called ELF or
Extremely Low Frequency range. ELF waves carry very little ionizing
radiation and very low heat, and therefore do not manifest gross,
observable physical effects on living organisms. Published Soviet
experiments with ELFs reveal that there was a marked increase in
psychiatric and central nervous system disorders and symptoms of stress
for sailors working close to ELF generators.
In the mid-1970s, American interest in combining EMR techniques with
hypnosis was very prominent. Plans were on file to develop these
techniques through experiments on human volunteers. The spoken word of
the hypnotist could be conveyed by modulated electromagnetic energy
directly into the subconscious parts of the human brain without
employing any technical devices for receiving or transacting the
messages and without the person exposed to such influence having a
chance to control the information input consciously.
In California, it was discovered by Dr. Adey that animal brain waves
could be altered directly by ELF fields. It was found that monkey brains
would fall in phase with ELF waves. These waves could easily pass
through the skull, which normally protected the central nervous system
from outside influence.
In San Leandro, Dr. Elizabeth Rauscher, director of Technic Research
Laboratory, has been doing ELF/br>
Transfer interrupted!
some time. One of the frequencies produces nausea for more than an hour.
Another frequency, she calls it the marijuana frequency, gets people
laughing. "Give me the money and three months,"she says,
"and I'll be able to affect the behavior of eighty percent of the
people in this town without their knowing it."
In the past, the Soviet Union has invested large sums of time and money
investigating microwaves. In 1952, while the Cold War was showing no
signs of thawing, there was a secret meeting at the Sandia Corporation
in New Mexico between U.S. and Soviet scientists involving the exchange
of information regarding the biological hazards and safety levels of
EMR. The Soviets possessed the greater preponderance of information, and
the American scientists were unwilling to take it seriously. In
subsequent meetings, the Soviet scientists continued to stress the
seriousness of the risks, while American scientists downplayed their
importance. Shortly after the last Sandia meeting, the Soviets began
directing a microwave beam at the U.S. embassy in Moscow, using embassy
workers as guinea pigs for low-level EMR experiments. Washington, D.C.
was oddly quiescent, regarding the Moscow embassy bombardment.
Discovered in 1962, the Moscow signal was investigated by the CIA, which
hired a consultant, Milton Zaret, and code named the research Project
Pandora. According to Zaret, the Moscow signal was composed of several
frequencies, and was focussed precisely upon the Ambassador's office.
The intensity of the bombardment was not made public, but when the State
Department finally admitted the existence of the signal, it announced
that it was fairly low.
There was consensus among Soviet EMR researchers that a beam such as the
Moscow signal was destined to produced blurred vision and loss of mental
concentration. The Boston Globe reported that the American ambassador
had not only developed a leukemia-like blood disease, but also suffered
from bleeding eyes and chronic headaches. Under the CIA's Project
Pandora, monkeys were brought into the embassy and exposed to the Moscow
signal; they were found to have developed blood composition anomalies
and unusual chromosome counts. Embassy personnel were found to have a 40
percent higher than average white blood cell count. While Operation
Pandora's data gathering proceeded, embassy personnel continued working
in the facility and were not informed of the bombardment until 10 years
later. Embassy employees were eventually granted a 20 percent hardship
allowance for their service in an unhealthful post. Throughout the
period of bombardment, the CIA used the opportunity to gather data on
psychological and biological effects of the beam on American personnel.
The U.S. government began to examine the affects of the Moscow signal.
The job was turned over to the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
(DARPA). DARPA is now developing electromagnetic weaponry. The man in
charge of the DARPA program, Dr. Jack Verona, is so important and so
secretive that he doesn't even return President George Bush's telephone
calls.
Mind Control
By Harry V. Martin and David Caul
Copyright, Napa Sentinel, 1991
Part Eleven in a Series
Friday, November 8, 1991
The American public was never informed that the military had planned to
develop electromagnetic weapons until 1982, when the revelation appeared
in a technical Air Force magazine.
The magazine article stated, "....specifically generated
radio-frequency radiation (RFR) fields may pose powerful and
revolutionary anti-personnel military trends." The article
indicated that that it would be very easy to use electromagnetic fields
to disrupt the human brain because the brain, itself, was an
electrically mediated organ. Iftfurther indicated that a rapidly
scanning RFR system would have a stunning or killing capability over a
large area. The system was developable.
Navy Captain Dr. Paul E. Taylor read a paper at the Air University
Center for Aerospace Doctrine, Research and Education, at Maxwell Air
Force Base, Alabama. Dr. Taylor was responsible for the Navy's Radiation
Laboratory and had been studying radiation effects on humans. In his
paper, Dr. Taylor stated, "The ability of individuals to function
(as soldiers) could be degraded to such a point that would be combat
ineffective." The system was so sophisticated that it employed
microwaves and millimeter waves and was transportable by a large truck.
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in the South Bay, are working on
the development of a "brain bomb". A bomb could be dropped in
the middle of a battlefield which would produce microwaves,
incapacitating the minds of soldiers within a circumscribed area.
Applications of microwave technology in espionage were available for
over 25 years. In a meeting in Berkeley of the American Association for
the Advancement of Science as early as 1965, Professor J. Anthony
Deutsch of New York University, provided an important segment of
research in the field of memory control. In layman terms, Professor
Deutsch indicated that the mind is a transmitter and if too much
information is received, like too many vehicles on a crowded freeway,
the brain ceases to transmit. The Professor indicated that an excess of
acetyl choline in the brain can interfere with the memory process and
control. He indicated excess amounts of acetyl choline can be
artificially produced, through both the administration of drugs or
through the use of radio waves. The process is called Electronic
Dissolution of Memory (EDOM). The memory transmission can be stopped for
as long as the radio signal continues.
As a result, the awareness of the person skips over those minutes during
which he is subjected to the radio signal. Memory is distorted, and
time-orientation is destroyed.
According to Lincoln Lawrence, author of Were We Controlled, EDOM is now
operational. "There is already in use a small EDOM
generator/transmitter which can be concealed on the body of the person.
Contact with this person, a casual handshake or even just a touch,
transmits a tiny electronic charge plus an ultra-sonic signal tone which
for a short period will disturb the time-orientation of the person
affected....it can be a potent weapon for hopelessly confusing evidence
in the investigation of a crime."
Thirty years ago, Allen Frey discovered that microwaves of 300 to 3000
megahertz could be "heard" by people, even if they were deaf,
if pulsed at a certain rate. Appearing to be originating just in back of
the head, the sound boomed, clicked, hissed or buzzed, depending upon
the frequency. Later research has shown that the perception of the waves
take place just in front of the ears. The microwaves causes pressure
waves in the brain tissue, and this phenomenon vibrates the sound
receptors in the inner ear through the bone structure. Some microwaves
are capable of directly stimulating the nerve cells of the auditory
pathways. This has been confirmed with experiments with rats, in which
the sound registers 120 decibels, which is equal to the volume of a
nearby jet during takeoff. Aside from having the capability of causing
pain and preventing auditory communication, a more subtle effect was
demonstrated at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research by Dr. Joseph
C. Sharp. Dr. Sharp, himself, was the subject of an experiment in which
pulsed microwave audiograms, or the microwave analog of the sound
vibrations of spoken words, were delivered to his brain in such a way
that he was able to understand the words that were spoken. Military and
undercover uses of such a device might include driving a subject crazy
with inner voices in order to discredit him, or conveying undetectable
instructions to a programmed assassin.
But the technology has been carried even a step further. It has been
demonstrated by Dr. Ross Adey that microwaves can be used to directly
bring about changes in the electrical patterns of different parts of the
brain. His experiments showed that he could achieve the same mind
control over animals as Dr. Delgado did in the bull incident. Dr.
Delgado used brain implants in his animals, Dr. Adey used microwave
devices without preconditioning. He made animals act and look like
electronic toys.
Mind Control
By Harry V. Martin and David Caul
Copyright, Napa Sentinel, 1991
Part Twelve in a Series
Tuesday, November 19,
1991
At the conclusion of World War Two, American investigators learned that
Nazi doctors at the Dachau concentration camp in Germany had been
conducting mind control experiments on inmates. They experimented with
hypnosis and with the drug mescaline.
Mescaline is a quasi-synthetic extract of the peyote cactus, and is very
similar to LSD in the hallucinations which it produces. Though they did
not achieve the degree of success they had desired, the SS interrogators
in conjunction with the Dachau doctors were able to extract the most
intimate secrets from the prisoners when the inmates were given very
high doses of mescaline.
There were fatal mind control experiments conducted at Auschwitz. The
experiments there were described by one informant as "brainwashing
with chemicals". The informant said the Gestapo wasn't satisfied
with extracting information by torture. "So the next question was,
why don't we do it like the Russians, who have been able to get
confessions of guilt at their show trials?" They tried various
barbiturates and morphine derivatives. After prisoners were fed a
coffee-like substance, two of them died in the night and others died
later.
The Dachau mescaline experiments were written up in a lengthy report
issued by the U.S. Naval Technical Mission, whose job it was at the
conclusion of the war to scour all of Europe for every shred of
industrial and scientific material that had been produced by the Third
Reich. It was as a result of this report that the U.S. Navy became
interested in mescaline as an interrogation tool. The Navy initiated
Project Chatter in 1947, the same year the Central Intelligence Agency
was formed. The Chatter format included developing methods for acquiring
information from people against their will, but without inflicting harm
or pain.
At the conclusion of the war, the OSS was designated as the
investigative unit for the International Military Tribunal, which was to
become known as the Nuremberg Trials. The purpose of Nuremberg was to
try the principal Nazi leaders. Some Nazis were on trial for their
experiments, and the U.S. was using its own "truth drugs" on
these principal Nazi prisoners, namely Goring, Ribbentrop, Speer and
eight others. The Justice in charge of the tribunal had given the OSS
permission to use the drugs.
The Dachau doctors who performed the mescaline experiments also were
involved in aviation medicine. The aviation experiments at Dachau
fascinated Heinrich Himmler. Himmler followed the progress of the tests,
studied their findings and often suggested improvements. The Germans had
a keen interest in several medical problems in the field of flying, they
were interested in preventing pilots from slowly becoming unconscious as
a result of breathing the thin air of the high altitudes and there was
interest in enhancing night vision.
The main research in this area was at the Institute of Aviation in
Munich, which had excellent laboratories. The experiments in
relationship to the Institute were conducted at Dachau. Inmates had been
immersed in tubs of ice water with instruments placed in their orifices
in order to monitor their painful deaths. Dr. Hubertus Strughold, who
ran the German aviation medicine team, confirmed that he had heard
humans were used for the Dachau experiments. Hidden in a cave in Hallein
were files recording the Dachau experiments.
On May 15, 1941, Dr. Sigmund Rascher wrote a letter to Himmler
requesting permission to use the Dachau inmates for experiments on the
physiology of high altitudes. Rascher lamented the fact that no such
experiments have been done using human subjects. "The experiments
are very dangerous and we cannot attract volunteers," he told
Himmler. His request was approved.
Dachau was filled with Communists and Social Democrats, Jews, Jehovah's
Witnesses, Gypsies, clergymen, homosexuals, and people critical of the
Nazi government. Upon entering Dachau, prisoners lost all legal status,
their hair was shaved off, all their possessions confiscated, they were
poorly fed, and they were used as slaves for both the corporations and
the government. The SS guards were brutal and sadistic. The idea to test
subjects at Dachau was really the brain child of Erich Hippke, chief
surgeon of the Luftwaffe.
Between March and August of 1942 extensive experiments were conducted at
Dachau regarding the limits of human endurance at high altitudes. These
experiments were conducted for the benefit of the German Air Force. The
experiments took place in a low-pressure chamber in which altitudes of
up to 68,000 feet could be simulated. The subjects were placed in the
chamber and the altitude was raised, many inmates died as a result. The
survivors often suffered serious injury. One witness at the Nuremberg
trails, Anton Pacholegg, who was sent to Dachau in 1942, gave an
eyewitness account of the typical pressure test:
"The Luftwaffe delivered a cabinet constructed of wood and metal.
It was possible in the cabinet to either decrease or increase the air
pressure. You could observe through a little window the reaction of the
subject inside the chamber. The purpose of these experiments was to test
human energy and the subject's capacity...to take large amounts of pure
oxygen, and then to test his reaction to a gradual decrease in oxygen. I
have personally seen through the observation window of the chamber when
a prisoner inside would stand a vacuum until his lungs ruptured. Some
experiments gave men such pressure in their heads that they would go mad
and pull out their hair in an effort to relieve the pressure. They would
tear their heads and face with their fingers and nails in an attempt to
maim themselves in their madness. They would beat the walls with their
hands and head and scream in an effort to relieve pressure in their
eardrums. These cases of extreme vacuums generally ended in the death of
the subjects." The former prisoner also testified, "An extreme
experiment was so certain to result in death that in many instances the
chamber was used for routine execution purposes rather than an
experiment." A minimum 200 prisoners were known to have died in
these experiments.
The doctors directly involved with the research held very high
positions: Karl Brandt was Hitler's personal doctor; Oskar Schroeder was
the Chief of the Medical Services of the Luftwaffe; Karl Gebhardt was
Chief Surgeon on the Staff of the Reich Physician SS and Police and
German Red Cross President; Joachim Mrugowsky was Chief of the Hygienic
Institute of the Waffen SS; Helmut Poppendick was a senior colonel in
the SS and Chief of the Personal Staff of the Reich Physicians SS and
Police; Siegfried Ruff was Director of the Department of Aviation
Medicine.
The first human guinea pig was a 37 year old Jew in good health. Himmler
invited 40 top Luftwaffe officers to view a movie of an inmate dying in
the pressure chamber. After the pressure chamber tests, the cold
treatment experiments began. The experiments consisted of immersing
inmates in freezing water while their vital signs were monitored. The
goal was to discover the cause of death. Heart failure was the answer.
An inmate described the procedures:
"The basins were filled with water and ice was added until the
water measured 37.4 F and the experimental subjects were either dressed
in a flying suit or were placed in the water naked. The temperature was
measured rectally and through the stomach. The lowering of the body
temperature to 32 degrees was terrible for experimental subjects. At 32
degrees the subject lost consciousness. They were frozen to 25 degrees.
The worst experiment was performed on two Russian officer POWs. They
were placed in the basin naked. Hour after hour passed, and while
usually after a short time, 60 minutes, freezing had set in, these two
Russians were still conscious after two hours. After the third hour one
Russian told the other, 'Comrade, tell that officer to shoot us.' The
other replied, 'Don't expect any mercy from this Fascist dog.' Then they
shook hands and said goodbye. The experiment lasted at least five hours
until death occurred.
Dry freezing experiments were also carried out a Dachau. One subject was
put outdoors on a stretcher at night when it was extremely cold. While
covered with a linen sheet, a bucket of cold water was poured over him
every hour. He was kept outdoors undersub-freezing conditions. In
subsequent experiments, subjects were simply left outside naked in a
court under freezing conditions for hours. Himmler gave permission to
move the experiments to Auschwitz, because it was more private and
because the subjects of the experiment would howl all night as they
froze. The physical pain of freezing was terrible. The subjects died by
inches, heartbeat became totally irregular, breathing difficulties and
lung endema resulted, hands and feet became frozen white."
As the Germans began to lose the war, the aviation doctors began too
keep their names from appearing in Himmler's files for fear of future
recriminations.
Mind Control
By Harry V. Martin and David Caul
Copyright, Napa Sentinel, 1991
Part Thirteen {finale} in a Series
Friday, November 22, 1991
The Nazi doctors who experimented on the inmates of prison camps during
World War Two were tried for murder at the Nuremberg Tribunal. The
accused were educated, trained physicians, they did not kill in anger or
in malice, they were creating a science of death.
Ironically, in 1933, the Nazi's passed a law for the protection of
animals. The law cited the prevention of cruelty and indifference to
animals as one of the highest moral values of a people, animal
experimentation was unthinkable, but human experimentations were
acceptable. The victims of the crime of these doctors numbered into the
thousands.
In 1953, while the Central Intelligence Agency was still conducting mind
control and behavior modification on unwitting humans in this country,
the United States signed the Nuremberg Code, a code born out of the
ashes of war and human suffering. The document was a solemn promise
never to tolerate such human atrocities again. The Code maintains three
fundamental principles:
The subjects of any experimentation must be volunteers who thoroughly
understand the purpose and the dangers of the experiments. They must be
free to give consent and the consent must be without pressure and they
must be free to quit the experiments at any time.
The experiments must be likely to yield knowledge which is valuable to
everyone. The knowledge must be such that it could not be gained in any
other way.
The experiments must be conducted by only the most competent doctors,
and they must exercise extreme care.
The Nazi aviation experiments met none of these conditions. Most inmates
at Dachau knew that the experiments in the pressure chamber were fatal.
From the very beginning, control of the experiments was largely in the
hands of the SS, which was later judged to be a criminal organization by
the Nuremberg Tribunal.
Despite our lessons from Nuremberg and the death camps, the CIA, U.S.
Navy and the U.S. Army Chemical Corps targeted specific groups of people
for experimentation who were not able to resist, prisoners, mental
patients, foreigners, ethnic minorities, sex deviants, the terminally
ill, children and U.S. military personnel and prisoners of war. They
violated the Nuremberg Code for conducting and subsidizing experiments
on unwitting citizens. The CIA began its mind control projects in 1953,
the very year that the U.S. signed the Nuremberg Code and pledged with
the international community of nations to respect basic human rights and
to prohibit experimentation on captive populations without full and free
consent.
Dr. Cameron, a CIA operative, was one of the worst offenders against the
Code, yet he was a member of the Nuremberg Tribunal, with full knowledge
of its testimony. In 1973, a three judge court in Michigan ruled,
"...experimental psychosurgery, which is irreversible and
intrusive, often leads to the blunting of emotions, the deadening of
memory, the reduction of affect, and limits the ability to generate new
ideas. Its potential for injury to the creativity of the individual is
great and can infringe on the right of the individual to be free from
interference with his mental process.
"The state's interest in performing psychosurgery and the legal
ability of the involuntarily detained mental patient to give consent,
must bow to the First Amendment, which protects the generation and free
flow of ideas from unwarranted interference with one's mental
processes." Citing the Nuremberg Code, the court found that
"the very nature of the subject's incarceration diminishes the
capacity to consent to psychosurgery." In 1973, the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts enacted regulations which would require informed written
consent from voluntary patients before electroshock treatment could be
performed.
Senator Sam Ervin's Committee lashed out bitterly at the mind control
and behavior modification experiments and ordered them discontinued,
they were not. But the New England Journal of Medicine states, that the
consent provisions are "no more than an elaborate ritual."
They called it "a device that when the subject is uneducated and
uncomprehending, confers no more than a semblance of propriety on human
experimentation."
The Nuremberg Tribunal brought to light that some of the most respected
figures in the medical profession were involved in the vast crime
network of the SS. Only 23 persons were charged with criminal activity
in this area, despite the fact that hundreds of medical personnel were
involved. The defendants were charged with crimes against humanity. They
were found guilty of planning and executing experiments on humans
without their consent, in a cruel and brutal manner which involved
severe torture, deliberate murder and with the full knowledge of the
gravity of their deeds. Only seven of the defendants were sentenced to
death and hanged, others received life sentences. Five who were involved
in the experiments were not tried. Ernest Grawitz committed suicide,
Carl Clauberg was tried in the Soviet Union, Josef Mengele escaped to
South America and was later captured by Israeli agents, Horst Schumann
disappeared and Siegmund Rascher was executed by Himmler.
There were 200 German medical doctors conducting these medical
experiments. Most of these doctors were friends of the United States
before the war, and despite their inhuman experiments, the U.S.
attempted to rebuild a relationship with them after the war. The
knowledge the Germans had accumulated at the expense of human life and
suffering, was considered a "booty of war", by the Americans
and the Russians.The Americans tracked down Dr. Strughold, the aviation
doctor who was in charge of the Dachau experiments. With full knowledge
that the experiments were conducted on captive humans, the U.S.
recruited the doctors to work for them. General Dwight D. Eisenhower
gave his personal approval to exploit the work and research of the
Nazi's in the death camps.
Within weeks of Eisenhower's order, many of these notorious doctors were
working for the U.S. Army at Heidelberg. Army teams scoured Europe for
scientific experimental apparatus such as pressure chambers,
compressors, G-force machines, giant centrifuges, and electron
microscopes. These doctors were wined and dined by the U.S. Army while
most of Germany's post-war citizens virtually starved.
The German doctors were brought to the U.S. and went to work for Project
Paperclip. All these doctors had been insulated against war crime
charges. The Nuremberg prosecutors were shocked that U.S. authorities
were using the German doctors despite their criminal past.
Under the leadership of Strughold, 34 scientists accepted contracts from
Project Paperclip, and were moved to Randolph Air Force Base at San
Antonio, Texas. The authorization to hire these Nazi scientists came
directly for the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The top military brass stated
that they wished to exploit these rare minds. Project Paperclip,
ironically, would use Nazi doctors to develop methods of interrogating
German prisoners of war.
As hostilities began to build after the war between the Americans and
the Russians, the U.S. imported as many as 1000 former Nazi scientists.
In 1969, Americans landed on the moon, and two groups of scientist in
the control center shared the credit, the rocket team from Peenemunde,
Germany, under the leadership of Werner von Braun, these men had
perfected the V-2s which were built in the Nordhausen caves where 20,000
slave laborers from prison camp Dora had been worked to death. The
second group were the space doctors, lead by 71-year-old Dr. Hubertus
Strughold, whose work was pioneered in Experimental Block No. 5 of the
Dachau concentration camp and the torture and death of hundreds of
inmates. The torture chambers that was used to slowly kill the prisoners
of the Nazi's were the test beds for the apparatus that protected Neil
Armstrong from harm, from lack of oxygen, and pressure, when he walked
on the moon.
Bibliography
The Napa Sentinel would like to acknowledge the exceptional contribution
of radio commentator David Emory and his extensive archives. Other
source material included:
Acid Dreams by Martin Lee &
Bruce Shlain
From the Belly of the Beast, Jack Henry Abbott
Congressional Record, No. 26, Vol. 118, Feb. 24, 1974, testimony of
Jose Delgado
The Glass House Tapes, by Louis Tackwood
The Great Heroin Coup, by Henrik Kruger
Individual Rights and the Federal Role in Behavior Modification, 93rd
Congress, 2nd Session, 1974. Sam Ervin Senate Subcommittee on
Constitutional 'Rights
The Last Hero, Wild Bill Donovan, by Anthony Cave Brown
Mind Control, by Peter Schrag
The Mind Stealers, by Samuel Chavkin
Matador with a radio stops wild bull, New York Times, May 17, 1965
Operation Mind Control, Water Bowart
The Phoenix Program, Douglas Valentine
The Physical Control of the Mind, Jose M. R. Delgado, MD
The Politics of Heroin in Southeast Asia, Alfred McCoy
Role of Brain Disease in Riots and urban Violence, by Vernon H. Mark,
Frank R. Ervin, and William H. Sweet. Journal of the American Medical
Association, September 11, 1967.
San Francisco Bay Guardian, August 28, 1991
Convict Talks of 1984 Arms Talks With Iran, San Francisco Chronicle,
December 29, 1986
San Francisco Chronicle, January 13, 1973
Guy Wright Column, San Francisco Chronicle, July 5, 1987
Sunday Times, July 1975.
Violence and the Brain, by Vernon H. Mark and Frank R. Ervin
War on the Mind: The Military Uses and Abuses of Psychology, by Peter
Watson
Were We Controlled? - by Lincoln Lawrence
Why Was Patricia Hearst Kidnapped? - by Mae Brussell, The Realist.
and other select readings.
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