-Caveat Lector-   <A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">
</A> -Cui Bono?-

Forwarded article....

Forum: alt.conspiracy
Sender: Tory Miller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: 4/6/2000

In article <eku1zp2n$GA.206@cpmsnbbsa03>,

  "dudalb" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Too coolsnoop: You can of course offer solid evidience to back up you
> statement....I am not holding my breath for a reply...

Intelligence agencies use mind control technologies to simulate mental illness in 
their subjects, causing them to wind up in mental institutions. It's logical enough, 
no? Ordinary police catch overt criminals who are thrown into prison. But the secret 
police target "subversives" and spies, "imprisoning" them in mental asylums. The 
principle behind these technologies is well described in US Patent no's 4,877,027 and 
3,951,134 which you can look up yourself at www.uspto.gov.

Consider the following high profile case (from The Washington Post), where an 
artificial psychosis was induced on a formerly healthy young man who has been accused 
of spying. All very convenient for the FBI, which probably doesn't want its secrets 
splashed all over the newspapers thru a very public court trial...


ESPIONAGE SUSPECT FOUND INCOMPETENT; AUSTRALIAN ACCUSED OF SELLING U.S. DOCUMENTS, 
PHOTOS FACES FURTHER TREATMENT

BROOKE A. MASTERS
WASHINGTON POST STAFF WRITER

Saturday, November 20, 1999; Page B02

A former Australian intelligence analyst charged with selling U.S. secrets to a 
foreign country is not mentally competent to stand trial at this point, federal mental 
health officials have found.

Jean-Philippe Wispelaere was supposed to go on trial earlier this month in federal 
court in Alexandria on espionage and attempted espionage charges, but in September his 
behavior became increasingly erratic and bizarre, his lawyer said.

Wispelaere, 28, was sent to a federal corrections facility in Butner, N.C., for 
observation, and officials there concluded that he was incompetent to assist in his 
defense, in part because he would not or could not participate in psychological 
testing.

The doctors at Butner have asked for 120 more days to evaluate and treat Wispelaere, 
who allegedly stole hundreds of highly sensitive documents and photographs that U.S. 
intelligence officials had shared with Australia. Before his arrest May 15, the 
Australian allegedly offered his wares to another foreign country and accepted more 
than $120,000 from FBI officials during a sting. Authorities have not said which 
country was involved.

Wispelaere's attorney, Nina Gisberg, said that in September her client began bursting 
into inappropriate laughter and banging his hands against his head. He was unable to 
follow what his attorneys were saying, even though he had been able to discuss the 
case beforehand, she said, and he also stopped eating.

"To see a human being just come to pieces like this was very frightening," Ginsberg 
said.

Finding a defendant in a criminal case incompetent to stand trial is unusual. Few 
defense attorneys even try to raise the issue; and when suspects are sent for 
evaluation, more than 90 percent of them are found to be competent, said University of 
Virginia forensic clinical psychological Dewey G. Cornell.

Wispelaere's mental health records are sealed to protect his privacy. Cornell said 
incompetent defendants are usually delusional, extremely depressed or severely 
mentally handicapped.

Unlike a finding of not guilty by reason of insanity, incompetency usually does not 
provide permanent protection from prosecution.
Incompetent defendants are usually treated until their conditions improve enough for 
them to work with their attorneys.

"Incompetence is simply a timeout," Cornell said.

Wispelaere, who has a master's degree in strategic defense studies, worked for the 
Australian Defence Intelligence Organization for six months ending in January. At that 
time, according to court documents, he walked into the Bangkok embassy of the unnamed 
country and offered to sell the classified documents. The FBI found out about the 
alleged offer and launched its sting.

The defendant was arrested at Dulles International Airport in May. If convicted, he 
would face a maximum of life in prison.

U.S. District Judge Leonie M. Brinkema has given Ginsberg and the U.S. attorney's 
office until Monday to respond to the doctors' recommendation.


Articles appear as they were originally printed in The Washington Post and may not 
include subsequent corrections.
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