http://www.webcom.com/ctka/pr300-mkultra.html

 From the March-April 2000 issue (Vol. 7 No. 3)

Mind-Control Part 1:
Canadian and U.S. Survivors Seek Justice
"Curiously, often a classic manifestation of people who are afflicted with
certain psychotic disorders is the irrational fear that the CIA and FBI is
conspiring to harm them. In this case, the CIA involvement is real and the
covert nature of the involvement is not contested."

Orlikow v. United States (1988)1

By Arlene Tyner
Gripping survivor-centered accounts of medical atrocities committed by
CIA-funded mind-control (MC) researchers during the Cold War are rarely
found in traditional U.S. media.2  Neither are they the subject of
emotionally powerful TV docu-dramas commonly produced for broadcast and
cable television. In January 1998, the Canadian Broadcasting System (CBC)
courageously filled this void, although the blackout on government MC
history is near-total in the U.S.

The Sleep Room, a gut-wrenching four-hour miniseries, depicts the true story
of Dr. Ewen Cameron�s secret MKULTRA brainwashing experiments carried out in
the late 50s and early 60s at Allan Memorial Institute in Montreal.
Widespread publicity accompanying this major TV event has empowered many
other Canadian survivors of nonconsensual brainwashing experiments in
hospitals and prisons to come forward and seek justice in the courts.3

In Part I of the miniseries, gifted actors dramatize how vulnerable,
trusting hospital patients were transformed into virtual vegetables through
doses of "electroconvulsive therapy" 30-40 times more powerful than usual,
sensory deprivation, hallucinogenic and paralytic drugs, and other
psychological and physical tortures. Part II grippingly depicts the
successful eight-year U.S. lawsuit of nine survivors, who overcame fear to
confront the humiliations and frustrating delay tactics of the CIA lawyers.
Joseph L. Rauh, Jr., a legendary Washington civil rights attorney, and his
partner James C. Turner eventually prevailed for their clients. In 1988, the
U.S. "national security" establishment agreed to an out-of-court settlement
of $750,000.4

This extraordinary CBC drama was based on Anne Collins� prize-winning 1989
book In the Sleep Room: The Story of CIA Brainwashing Experiments in Canada.
Collins exposed Cameron�s 1930s-1940s history of ethically unsupportable
experiments on psychiatric patients. Many of the people methodically abused
by Cameron had entered the Institute suffering only from mild disorders such
as anxiety and post-partum depression. By the time they were released from
the Sleep Room torture chamber, many had decades of memory completely wiped
out. Some did not remember their children and even had to relearn bladder
and bowel control.

A U.S. citizen since 1941, the Scottish-born Cameron resided in Albany, New
York, from which he commuted to Montreal each week. Before taking on the
directorship at Allan Memorial, which is associated with McGill University,
Cameron was chair of psychiatry and neurology at a medical school in Albany.
He worked closely with Alan Gregg, medical-sciences director of the
Rockefeller Foundation, which provided grants to found the Institute in
1943.5  As director from 1943 to 1964, Cameron achieved a worldwide
reputation, serving as the first chair of the World Psychiatric Association,
as well as president of the American and Canadian psychiatric associations.

In one barely watchable scene of institutional cruelty, Cameron is filmed
delivering a speech to psychiatrists about his successes in "curing" mental
illness. As he drones on, the camera switches to scenes of terrified
resisting patients being captured and restrained by doctors and nurses,
forcibly being dosed with drugs and high-voltage electroshock, then put to
sleep for weeks at a time in a room full of beds equipped with tape
recorders and football helmets.

Winner in 1998 of the Academy of Canadian Cinema and Television�s Gemini
Awards in best picture and other categories, The Sleep Room touched the raw
nerves of Canadian citizens. Not only did they learn their government had
been the CIA�s junior consort during the Cold War against Communism, they
also discovered it had secretly granted $500,000 to fund the Allan Memorial
experiments. The CIA had only given Cameron $69,000 from 1957 to 1964. As
the lawsuit dragged on through the Reagan presidency, Rauh was forced to
expose the Canadian government�s role in helping the CIA derail the lawsuit,
in complete disregard for pain and lifelong suffering of its own citizens.6
In 1992 the Canadian government coughed up $100,000 for 76 Cameron victims.
To date 127 of his patients have come forward with their horror stories to
seek compensation.

CIA psychologist John Gittinger initiated contact with Cameron after reading
his article on "Psychic Driving" in the January 1956 American Journal of
Psychiatry. Gittinger persuaded Cameron to apply to the Society for the
Investigation of Human Ecology, a CIA front set up in 1955 to disburse
funding for what became a huge MKULTRA network in the U.S., Canada and
overseas (in collaboration with branches of the U.S. Armed Forces). The
Human Ecology Fund (its name was changed in 1961) operated secretly out of
Cornell University in New York City.

Cameron�s brainwashing grant application proposed to "depattern" patient
behavior through the use of mega-doses of electroshock, to reprogram
patients� minds with repetitious verbal messages 16 hours a day for six or
seven days, during which time the patient would be kept in partial sensory
deprivation. Cameron called this technique "psychic driving." Brainwashing
would be completed by subjecting patients to drug-enforced continuous sleep,
sometimes as long as weeks or even months.7

The Sleep Room portrays two generations of CIA personnel as equally deadly,
i.e., the 1950s Human Ecology bureaucrats who approved the funding for what
were considered "terminal" experiments on non-U.S. nationals, and the 1980s
CIA legal lords who maneuvered on grounds of "national security" to withhold
evidence of the agency�s negligence and failure to adhere to the Nuremberg
Code. The callousness of the CIA scientists is aptly captured in this
fictitious dialog, where the scientists are discussing whether to fund
Cameron�s proposal:

#1: He�s going to fry his patients. I can tell you that.

#2: Well, we won�t worry about the patients. That�s his problem. I just want
to know if he can brainwash them.

#1: He just might, you know. He�s right about the memory loss with a shock
like that. You couldn�t do that to volunteers.

#2: Well, should we give him the money?

#1: What have we got to lose? It�s not like he�s doing it to Americans.

While the tone is apt, the misleading impression that neither the CIA nor
Cameron were experimenting on U.S. citizens (witting or unwitting) during
this era is the miniseries� biggest flaw. According to the March 15, 1995
testimony of Claudia Mullen before the President�s Advisory Commission on
Human Radiation Experiments (ACHRE), Ewen Cameron was the high-voltage
expert in a secret team of CIA doctor-brainwashers. Mullen and Chris
DiNicola Ebner told a visibly shaken group of scientists that memory-erasing
electroshock, among other horrors, was regularly used on physically healthy
American children in the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s.8  Unlucky enough to be
delivered into CIA/military custody by abusive or uncaring parents, children
as young as eight years old were subjected to trauma-based mind control (MC)
programming to mold them into "Manchurian Candidate" spies, assassins and
sexual blackmailers.9   ACHRE�s final report documented more than 4000
experiments, and anywhere from 16,000 to 23,000 unwitting victims!10   The
numbers run past 200,000 when if one includes the GIs deliberately exposed
to radiation from atomic bomb testing.11

During this same era, U.S. psychiatric patients were also victimized. Harold
Blauer, a patient in the New York Psychiatric Institute, died in 1953
shortly after being injected with a highly toxic dose of
methyl-diamphetamine (MDA), a derivative of mescaline. Blauer had entered
the hospital suffering from depression after a divorce. He had made progress
solely with the talking cure. Blauer did not know that his psychiatrist,
Paul Hoch, was a CIA consultant secretly under contract with the Army�s
Edgewood Arsenal chemical/biological warfare lab. This contract was
negotiated through the New York State Department of Mental Hygiene, which
allowed trusting hospital patients to be used as part of the Army�s search
for "potential chemical warfare agents."

The MDA was not administered for any therapeutic reason. Blauer was
scheduled to be released from the hospital in a few weeks. His objections to
the series of injections, which were causing him great pain and discomfort,
were overridden by manipulative hospital personnel. Blauer was threatened
before the fourth nonfatal dose that if he didn�t give his consent, he would
be moved out of the Institute to hospital settings that displeased him. The
fourth dose caused a violent reaction. The fifth killed him. The Army began
its cover-up immediately, the sordid details of which are recounted in the
1987 court decision awarding the Blauer estate $707,044. The court affixed
blame for Blauer�s needless death totally on the U.S. government.12

The Blauer case reveals a direct lineage between Nazi research projects and
the MKULTRA program. Mescaline was tested on concentration camp inmates
during the Third Reich�s search for a "truth serum."13   These and other
Nazi experiments were intensively studied by U.S. military scientists in
occupied Germany. Under the CIA�s Operation Paperclip, 1600 German and
Austrian scientists were secretly brought to the U.S. Some had worked for
I.G. Farben perfecting Zyclon-B gas for the extermination of Jews and other
doomed prisoners. Many were being investigated for war crimes when they were
rescued by a government intent on using their knowledge and expertise in the
Cold War against the Communist Eastern Bloc. Hundreds of chemists and other
scientists were given jobs at Edgewood Arsenal, which supplied the drugs,
chemicals and poisons for the CIA�s counterespionage and assassination
programs during the Korean and Vietnam wars, as well as covert interventions
in the affairs of many Third World nations.14

Though the Cold War is over, the U.S. military/CIA bureaucracies still
invoke "national security" and "plausible deniability" to hide a vast
arsenal of sophisticated mind-control and psychological warfare
technology.15  All of these weapons had to be perfected by means of human
experimentation. Psychiatrist Colin Ross found that many areas of brain
research heading in the direction of MC suddenly went "black" in the
1960s.16  His long-awaited book, Building the Manchurian Candidate:
Deliberate Creation of Multiple Personality by Psychiatrists, will soon be
published.

A hint about mind-control research first surfaced in the aftermath of the
1963 assassination of President John F. Kennedy. When J. Edgar Hoover
testified before the Warren Commission in 1964, he raised the possibility
President Kennedy had been killed by a programmed assassin dispatched by the
Soviet Union. Alarmed, the Commission requested the CIA to produce
information on Soviet brainwashing. The resultant CIA memo (so controversial
it wasn�t declassified until 1974) cryptically asserted the Soviets did not
have any MC techniques or drugs "not available in the West."17  However,
neither Hoover nor the CIA told the Commission that the U.S. had an
operational program of Manchurian Candidates up and running since World War
II!18

The term "brainwashing" was first coined in 1950 by Edward Hunter, a CIA
employee operating undercover as a journalist, purportedly to explain how
American POWs in Korea were being coerced into confessing they used
biological weapons.19 Newspapers played up fears that the Soviets, the
Chinese and North Koreans were using a secret psychological weapon against
allied soldiers. This "brainwashing" scare was a successful CIA
disinformation strategy used to build support for an unpopular war.20  It
also helped insulate military and university researchers from accountability
for violating medical ethics and criminal laws.

The prevailing anticommunist hysteria that grew to justify the MKULTRA
program and its unambiguous violations of the Hippocratic Oath, the
Nuremberg Code and many international human-rights covenants was aptly
summarized in 1954 by former President Herbert Hoover:

It is now clear we are facing an implacable enemy whose avowed objective is
world domination.... There are no rules in such a game. Hitherto accepted
norms of human conduct do not apply.... If the United States is to survive,
long-standing American concepts of fair play must be reconsidered... We must
learn to subvert, sabotage and destroy our enemies by more clever, more
sophisticated, more effective methods than those used against us.21

The MKULTRA program began with a proposal by Richard Helms, then the CIA�s
Assistant Deputy Director for Plans, to fund "highly sensitive" research and
development using chemical/ biological substances to alter human behavior.
It was approved by CIA Director Allen Dulles on April 13, 1953 and was
overseen by chemist Sidney Gottlieb, chief of the CIA�s Technical Services
Division (TSD). The first MC programs, called Bluebird and Artichoke, were
subsumed under the MKULTRA umbrella. This program came to embrace an
octopus-like network with names like MK-Search (1963-1973), MK-Delta and
MK-Naomi (assassination programs carried out by the Army 1953-1970).22
Between 1953 and 1963 the TSD operated 149 subprojects in 80 U.S. and
Canadian universities and medical centers, and three prisons, involving 185
private researchers, 15 foundations and numerous pharmaceutical companies.23

In 1973, with the Watergate scandal looming, outgoing CIA Director Helms
ordered all MKULTRA records destroyed. He testified before the Senate�s
Church Committee two years later that Gottlieb:

"...came to me and said that he was retiring and I was retiring and he
thought it would be a good idea if these files were destroyed. And I also
believe part of the reason for our thinking this was advisable was there had
been relationships with outsiders in government agencies and other
organizations and these would be sensitive in this kind of thing but that
since the program was over and finished and done with, we thought we would
just get rid of the files as well, so that anybody who assisted us in the
past would not be subject to follow-up questions, embarrassment, if you
will."24

Fortunately, 8,000 pages of mainly financial data escaped the CIA shredder,
and were declassified pursuant to a Freedom of Information lawsuit in the
1970s filed by the Center for National Security Studies. Though woefully
incomplete, these documents nevertheless became the bedrock of John Marks�
groundbreaking 1978 book, The Search for the "Manchurian Candidate": The CIA
and Mind Control.25

All branches of the military sponsored MC research in collaboration with the
CIA.26  Most civilian subjects were unwitting; even CIA employees and Army
recruits who consented to drug and hypnosis experiments were not properly
informed as to their dangers. MKULTRA clearly violated the Nuremberg Code
requirement that subjects give "informed consent" to participate in
scientific research: "This means that the person involved should have the
legal capacity to give consent; should be so situated as to be able to
exercise free power of choice, without the intervention of any element of
force, fraud, deceit, duress, overreaching, or other form of constraint or
coercion." This Code was established in 1948 by the same U.S. Military
Tribunal that tried 24 Nazi doctors for deadly experiments on concentration
camp inmates. It was binding on the U.S. as of February 26, 1953.27

How do we explain the hundreds of thousands of human guinea pigs callously
sacrificed during the Cold War?28  As Paperclip researcher Linda Hunt
concluded, "...we used Nazi science to kill our own people."29 Perhaps
survivor stories can help us understand what went wrong and why our secular
democracy allows huge bureaucracies of unsupervised, supersecret warriors
guided only by the cult-like religion of "national security" and the
obsessive search for "enemies of the state." The death of communism as a
military threat has not dented the religious zeal that still inspires the
military/intelligence establishment.

James Stanley, a career soldier, suffered soul murder as an Army lab rat. He
was given LSD in 1958 without being warned of its dangers, as were 1000
other "volunteer" soldiers. Stanley suffered hallucinations, memory loss,
incoherence, and a negative personality change. Fits of uncontrollable
violence destroyed his family, and restricted his ability to earn a living.
And he never knew why until 1975, when the Army invited him to participate
in a follow-up study on "volunteers who participated" in LSD testing. In
United States vs. Stanley,30   the Supreme Court majority decided against
Stanley�s claim for damages. However, Justices Brennan, Marshall and O�
Connor dissented, asserting their belief that the Nuremberg Code�s standard
of informed consent applies to soldiers as well as civilians. In 1996 James
Stanley finally wrangled a $400,000 settlement from the government, but no
apology for having ruined his life.31

Unacknowledged civilian wreckage from unimaginably cruel brainwashing
experiments continues to bob to the surface from a vast sea of
still-classified, cold-war experiments. Survivors of ghoulish medical
tortures or the families of deceased victims are turning up in Canadian and
U.S. courtrooms today demanding compensation for a lifetime of suffering.
Some Canadian plaintiffs appear to have a slight advantage over their U.S.
cousins, who are severely hampered by the 1973 Helms/Gottlieb destruction of
MKULTRA records. Fortunately for these survivors, paper trails are being
unearthed in government, hospital and prison archives. The eminently freer
Canadian press also helps build public support for MC survivors� lawsuits.32

Gail Kastner, now in her 60s, did not discover Ewen Cameron�s experiments
were the cause of her "wasted life" until reading a newspaper story in the
Montreal Gazette in 1992. She sued the Canadian government and Montreal�s
Royal Victoria Hospital in 1999 after the government rejected her claim for
damages. A "brilliant student whose domineering father checked her into the
institute for depression," Kastner says that Cameron�s electroconvulsive
"depatterning" treatments and insulin-induced comas for five weeks at a time
are responsible for a life of screaming nightmares, recurring seizures, loss
of memory, and long-term regression to an infantile state. Her husband, son
and twin sister could not tolerate her bizarre behavior, i.e. "wetting the
living-room carpet, thumb-sucking, babytalk and wanting to be bottlefed."
Abandoned by her own family, she was rescued from homelessness by the Jewish
Family Service.33

During the era of Cameron�s brainwashing regimens, psychiatrists and
psychologists in other Canadian institutions were using similar methods to
"treat" people haphazardly diagnosed with depression, schizophrenia or, in
prisons, what was perceived as "antisocial" conduct. Dorothy Proctor was a
rebellious 17-year-old when she entered the Prison for Women in Kingston,
Ontario on a three-year term for robbery. Primed first with sensory
deprivation and electroshock, she was administered LSD in 1961 by a prison
psychologist, then locked into "The Hole" to endure what for her was "Dante�
s Inferno."

Proctor, a Native and Black Canadian from Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia,
calls this "mind rape." She says she was singled out for such "Nazi-style
science" because she had twice escaped from the prison, bringing unfavorable
publicity to the authorities there. Proctor asserts that the steady prison
diet of LSD and other experimental drugs led her down the path to drug
addiction for 24 years. After publishing Chameleon: The Life of Dorothy
Proctor in 1994, this articulate and determined woman launched a complaint
with the Corrections Service of Canada (CSC), saying she suffered permanent
brain damage and hallucinations haunting her to the present day.

"I was reduced to a lab rat, a monkey in a cage," she told the Ottawa
Citizen (7/21/98), which has been covering the Proctor and other Canadian
human experimentation cases for a number of years. A government inquiry
turned up documentation (including clinical notes) that Proctor was not the
only victim of involuntary prison experimentation 1960-1963. At least 23
other women prisoners were also used as human guinea pigs. Only four of
these women have been found to date. And instead of complying with the CSC�s
recommendation of an apology and financial compensation to Proctor, the
Canadian government commissioned an "ethics study" at McGill University.
Meanwhile Proctor hired lawyer James Newland and filed suit for $5 million
in damages from the Canadian government, George Scott, MD, the prison
psychiatrist, and Mark Eveson, a psychologist affiliated with Queen�s
University.34

While the emotional shock of The Sleep Room still electrified Canadian
airways, the Ottawa Citizen published an expose drawn from interviews,
archives, scientific journals and correspondence between doctors and prison
officials. It found that hundreds of federal prisoners throughout Canada
were used for pharmaceutical trials of untested drugs, sensory deprivation,
and pain and electroshock studies. It uncovered a 1968 trial during which
defendant Christine Bauman claimed that she suffered terrifying personality
changes after being given LSD in 1961 at the Institute for Psychotherapy,
not far from Kingston Prison where she had been incarcerated.35
Furthermore, archival materials released through the Proctor lawsuit
indicate that some abuses may have begun as early as March 24, 1949, when a
new electroshock machine arrived at Kingston Penitentiary. Electroshock has
a history of being used as punishment in Nazi Germany and against Blacks in
apartheid South Africa.36

By late 1999, additional Canadian women and men came forward to claim they
were used in prison and hospital experiments in the 1960s and 1970s. A
class-action suit against the prison system was filed anonymously by "Jane
Doe," a 75-year-old grandmother who realized after reading newspaper stories
that she was one of the 23 women who were given LSD and other terrifying
"treatments" without their consent while in prison . Her lawsuit charges
Scott and Eveson with assault, intentional affliction of mental suffering,
and negligence. Her access to the Eveson�s clinical notes, released as a
result of the Proctor suit, helped her recognize what had been done to her
38 years ago.37

Less documented, however, are the connections of these prison experiments to
U.S. mind-control funding sources. Canadian newspaper stories usually
include the caveat that although prison use of LSD and "shock therapy"
coincided with CIA "brainwashing" experiments at Allan Memorial Institute,
no evidence has been found to link the programs. However, Allen Hornblum,
author of Acres of Skin: The Human Experiments at Holmesburg Prison, said on
a 1998 CBC radio show that some of the experiments conducted in U.S. prisons
during this era were sponsored by the U.S. Army and the CIA. And he pointed
out that shortly after seven Nazi doctors were hung at Nuremberg for
horrific experiments on inmates at Bergen Belsen, Auschwitz and Ravensbruk,
U.S. doctors were injecting plutonium and uranium into unwitting hospital
patients.38

Activist Lynne Moss-Sharman does not rule out a hidden connection between
the Canadian prison experiments and CIA/military brainwashing research.
Moss-Sharman is the Canadian contact for ACHES-MC (Advocacy Committee for
Human Experimentation Survivors � Mind Control), and is herself a survivor
of brainwashing experimentation during her childhood.39  The Canadian
military had a close relationship with Edgewood Arsenal during the years it
funded MC experiments in hospitals and prisons.40

Moss-Sharman has been organizing support for federal prisoner Richard
Carlson, who filed a civil claim in October 1998. Carlson says his use in
covert brainwashing experiments from 1968 to 1974 in several Kingston-area
prisons caused a lifelong psychiatric disability. According to Moss-Sharman,
the authorities retaliated against Carlson going public about the prison
brainwashing experiments. They unsuccessfully tried to change his status to
"dangerous offender," which would have carried a mandatory life sentence for
the bank robbery charge, which he is also appealing.

Three people connected to Carlson have died under mysterious circumstances
since he launched his brainwashing claim. They include Tony Vaitelis, the
second male inmate to make claims similar to Carlson�s, an unnamed former
hospital orderly and potential witness to prison brainwashing, and Carlson�s
30-year-old son. Moss-Sharman says Carlson is dangerous to Correctional
Services Canada because he can name the inmates who died during the prison
experiments and can describe what happened in the experimental units.41

"Insulin shock therapy" was frequently used on Ewen Cameron�s patients at
Allan Memorial. In 1999 the widow of Yuan Woo (Jean-Paul Martineau), a
former Royal Canadian Air Force radar technician, went public with the story
of how her deceased husband had been the unwitting subject of "insulin shock
therapy" experiments in Queen Mary�s Veterans Hospital in 1953. Martineau
curiously changed his name to "Juan Woo" after being discharged. As a result
of medical mistreatment, Ms. Woo says, her husband developed such a morbid
fear of physicians, he postponed going to the doctor until he was near death
from cancer in 1996.42

In the U.S., MC survivors and their families are hard-pressed to secure
files documenting their claims, if indeed such records escaped the shredder
years ago. Since 1985 all litigants have been hampered by C.I.A. vs. Sims,43
a landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision that undergirds the CIA�s refusal to
name its contract institutions and individual researchers on grounds of
"national security."44  Only 59 CIA/military contract institutions and a
handful of researchers consented to be publicly named in the 1970s when the
MKULTRA program was exposed.

The most well-publicized U.S. victim of the MKULTRA experiments is Frank
Olson, a biochemist who worked at the Army Chemical Corps� Special
Operations Division at Ft. Detrick, in Frederick, Maryland. On November 18,
1953, Olson was given a drink of Cointreau secretly laced with LSD. He
immediately became agitated and severely paranoid, a condition that lasted
for days. Olson was said to have committed suicide nine days later by
jumping 13-stories to his death through the closed window of a New York
hotel. Members of his family did not learn he had been drugged until 1975
when the MKULTRA behavior-control program was exposed. They later received
an apology from President Gerald Ford and a $750,000 settlement.

However, after studying documents declassified in later years, Eric Olson
believed his father may have been pushed out the window. He had the body
exhumed in 1994. A group of private forensic researchers announced on the
41th anniversary of Olson�s death that both forensic and other evidence were
"starkly suggestive of homicide."45  A second skull fracture (missed in the
initial autopsy) means Olson may have been hit on the head before his body
went through the window. Also the lack of cuts on Olson�s body would appear
to rule out the official CIA story of his "suicide."46   Armond Pastore, the
hotel night manager who kneeled beside the dying Olson back in 1953, said,
"I never heard of anybody jumping through a closed window with the blind
down."47  Last year a New York grand jury was looking at this new
evidence.48

The first CIA brainwashing case to go before a jury took place in 1999. I
learned about this civil trial through two articles in the Philadelphia
Inquirer.49  This civil trial centered on the tragic life of up-and-coming
artist Stanley Glickman, who says that in 1952 in a Paris cafe, MKULTRA czar
Sidney Gottlieb had brought him a drink laced with LSD. Gottlieb denied
doing this, despite admitting he had spiked the drinks of other unsuspecting
people in the 1950s. Glickman suffered a psychological breakdown from which
he never recovered. After collapsing he was rushed to American Hospital
where he claimed doctors there administered electroshock therapy "via a
catheter up his penis" as well as more hallucinogenic drugs.50

After learning about the CIA�s LSD experiments on unwitting subjects in the
1970s, Glickman sued in 1983. His identification of Gottlieb was based on
remembering that the strange man in the bar had a club foot. Using the same
delay-and-attrition tactics heaped on the nine elderly Canadians in Orlikow,
the CIA was able to delay the trial for 16 years. Glickman died in 1992 but
his sister Gloria Kronisch continued the lawsuit. Dominick L. DiCarlo, a
conservative chief judge "on loan" from the U.S. Court of International
Trade in New York City, presided.

What happened next will some day be the stuff of high drama in a Sleep
Room-type teleplay exposing the CIA�s 50-year history of crimes against
humanity. Finally being called to account in a courtroom for overseeing a
quarter-century of U.S.-style Nazi science, Gottlieb becomes ill, causing
postponement of the February trial. On the eve of the March date, he
unexpectedly dies. Both the New York Times and the Los Angeles Times
obituaries report that the Gottlieb family refuses to disclose the cause of
his death. The online WorldNet Daily, however, reports that Gottlieb, 80,
died after a "month-long bout with pneumonia." According to this story, he
was admitted to the University of Virginia Medical Center in Charlottesburg
on February 14, and "lapsed into a coma" on March 5 "from which he never
recovered."51

Are we overly paranoid to suspect the CIA of foul play here? Did life
boomerang on the aged Dr. Strangelove? Was this enthusiastic harvester of
exotic poisons and inventor of bizarre assassination delivery systems
somehow silenced by same to prevent his spilling the CIA�s dirty secrets in
a court of law?52

Anyway, the trial goes forward in late March, with the Glickman estate suing
the Gottlieb estate (the claims against Helms and the CIA had been thrown
out). As the lawyers near their final summations, Judge DiCarlo, 71,
suddenly drops dead of a heart attack while exercising in a federal gym
located next to the court. His New York Times obituary makes no mention of
the controversial CIA trial (nor does the Times even cover the trial).53
However, the New York Daily News, with more guts and pizzazz, reports that
DiCarlo�s death "created a surreal scene as paramedics and a priest called
to give last rites mingled with jurors preparing to decide one of the
strangest cases being heard in the city."54  Goosebumps and paranoia strike
again. Was this Reagan-appointed judge a victim of the CIA�s long-rumored,
untraceable method of inducing heart attacks? Or was it the stress of a CIA
trial that killed him?

Almost on cue, Federal Judge Kimba Wood was assigned to take DiCarlo�s
place, a move prejudicial to the plaintiff since she had thrown out this
case in 1997. The Second Circuit Court of Appeals reinstated the lawsuit in
1998.55  After closing arguments, the jury deliberated for seven hours
before ruling against the Glickman estate.

But the evidence of foul play goes way beyond the spiking of Glickman�s
drink. His Paris hospital records show that two of his doctors had been
engaged in LSD research at the time. Also, CIA files from 1952 reveal a
special interest in the heightened effect of LSD on people with hepatitis.
One of Glickman�s American Hospital doctors had previously treated him for
hepatitis, making this once-promising young artist "the ideal guinea pig."56

I would like to thank Lynne Moss-Sharman, Kathy Kasten, Eleanor White and
Blanche Chavoustie for providing news articles and other research materials
for this series.

Endnotes
 1. 682 F. Supp. 77, 94 (D.C. 1988) (Civ. No. 80-3153). For a summary of the
federal court cases cited in this article , see "The Law and Mind Control: A
Look at the Law and Government Mind Control Through Five Cases"" by Attorney
Helen McGonigle (http://members.aol.com/smartnews/fivecases.htm)

 2. Survivor testimonies, however, can be found on the Internet:
(http://morethanconquerors.simplenet.com/MCF/)

 3. MacLean�s, 4/21/97 (p. A3) and 1/12/98 (P. 66); The Gazette (Montreal),
3/13/97 (p. A3) and 1/11/98 (p. C9); Toronto Star, 1/10/98 (p. SW10) and
1/11/98 (p. B7); Toronto Sun, 1/11/98 (TV 3); Ottawa Citizen, 1/10/98 (p.
H4); CBC broadcast, "Fifth Estate," 1/6/98

 4. For a history of Orlikow, see "Anatomy of a Public Interest Case Against
the CIA," by Joseph L. Rauh, Jr. and James C. Turner, Hamline Journal of
Public Law and Policy, Vol. II (2), Fall 1990.
(http://www.radix.net/~jcturner/anat-tofc.html)

 5. Collins, In the Sleep Room (Key Porter Books, 1998), pp. 94, 101-104.

 6. Joe Rauh�s lifelong history of defending victims of government abuse was
postumously rewarded in 1994 when President Bill Clinton awarded him the
Presidential Medal of Freedom. Rauh had died in 1992, the Canadian case
against the CIA having been his last hurrah.

 7. Rauh and Turner, op. cit.

 8. A videotape of the ACHRE hearing is available from Missoulians for a
Clean Environment, P.O. Box 2885, Missoula, MT 59806 (Phone: 406-543-7210).
A transcript is posted at
http://morethanconquerers.simplenet.com/MCF/ckln07.htm. Tape 14: "Giving
testimony regarding survival as a government mind-control victim: My
testimony and the backlash," Mullen�s presentation to the 1997 Believe the
Children (BTC) Conference can be ordered from BTC Repeat Performance, 2911
Crabapple Lane, Hobart, IN 46342. This tape also includes the BTC
presentation by therapist Valerie Wolf, BCSW, ACSW, BCD, "Assessment and
treatment of survivors of sadistic abuse."

 9. Rappaport, Jon, Mind Control Experiments on Children, self-published
book containing the supporting documentation produced by legal and medical
professionals for the 1995 ACHRE hearings.
(http://home.earthlink.net/~alto/index.html)

 10. Final Report of President�s Commission on Human Radiation Experiments
(ACHRE), 1996 (http://tis.eh.doe.gov/ohre/roadmap/achre/index.html)

 11. ACHRE Report, ibid., Chapter 10.

 12. Barrett v. U.S., 660 F.Supp. 1291 (S.D.N.Y. 1987). See Hunt, op. cit.,
pp. 170, 235 for details on the Blauer case.

 13 Lifton, R.J., The Nazi Doctors: Medical Killing and the Psychology of
Genocide (Basic Books, 1986), pp. 289-290.

 14 See generally, Hunt, L., Secret Agenda: The United States Government,
Nazi Scientists, and Project Paperclip, 1945 to 1990 (St. Martin�s Press,
1991).

 15 "Wonder Weapons: the Pentagon�s quest for nonlethal arms is amazing. But
is it smart?" U.S. News and World Report, July 7, 1997.

 16 Ross, Colin, "The CIA and Military Mind Control Research: Building the
Manchurian Candidate." A lecture given at the 9th Annual Western Clinical
Conference on Trauma and Dissociation, April 18, 1996, Orange County,
California. Transcript and/or audiotape can be ordered from CKLN-FM, 380
Victoria Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5B 1W7 (phone 416-595-1477; fax
416-595-0226). Transcript is posted at
http://morethanconquerers.simplenet.com/MCF/ckln01.htm.

 17. Russell, D. The Man Who Knew Too Much (Carroll & Graf, 1992), pp.
673-674.

 18. Ross, op. cit. See also George H. Estabrooks, PhD, "Hypnosis comes of
age," Science Digest, April 1971, pp. 44-50.

 19. Russell, Dick, op. cit., pp. 193-194. According to historians Stephen
Endicott and Edward Hagerman, The United States and Biological Warfare
(Indiana University Press, 1999), the U.S. did use germ weapons in Korea.

 20. Scheflin, A. & Opton, Jr., E.M., The Mind Manipulators. (Paddington
Press, 1978), p. 107.

 21. Secret report to the Eisenhower White House, quoted in Hunt, Linda, op.
cit., p. 263.

 22. "C.I.A. Documents Tell of 1954 Project to Create Involuntary
Assassins," New York Times, February 9, 1978, p. 17.

 23. New York Times, August 2, 1977, pp. 1, 16.

 24. Foreign and Military Intelligence, Book I, Final Report of the Select
Committee to Study Government Operations With Respect to Intelligence
Activities [the "Church Committee" report], U.S. Senate (April 26, 1976),
pp. 403-404. Quoted in Russell, op. cit. p. 775 (Note 12).

 25 Online version of Marks� book:
http://druglibrary.org/schaffer/lsd/marks.htm

 25. Ross, op. cit.

 27. Orlikow, op. cit., at 82.

 28 Sea, G., "The Radiation Story No One Would Touch," Columbia Journalism
Review, March/April 1994 (http://www.cjr.org/year/94/2/radiation.asp)

29. Hunt, op. cit., p. 268.

 30. 483 U.S. 669 (1987)

 31. March 6, 1996 article provided by Lynne Moss-Sharman (newspaper not
identified)

 32. Some examples from the Ottawa Citizen: "Debate over prison
experimentation emerges from shadows," 9/28/98; "Minister demands answers on
prison experiments: Solicitor general upset by Citizen account of inmates
used as guinea pigs," 10/1/98; "LSD trials on inmates �unethical�: Ignore
proposal for compensation, McGill study says," 10/31/98; "Military tested
LSD on civilians: Canada funded Cold War probe into mind control," 12/7/98.
>From CBC Radio, "Secret experiments on Canada�s convicts," 11/9/98. From the
Toronto Star: "Prisoners used for �frightening� tests, new papers show,"
12/18/99.

 33. CBC Montreal (Ivan Slobod), 1/5/00; "Woman suing over CIA experiments,"
Globe and Mail, 1/6/00; �Hell for my family,� Montreal Gazette, 1/11/00;
"Shock treatment victim supports suit," The Daily Miner (Kenora), 1/21/00.

 34. CKLN Radio (Toronto) "Shrinkrap" interviews Dorothy Proctor and lawyer
James Newland, August 1998; "Inmates subdued with drugs, shock therapy,
report says," Globe and Mail, 10/31/98; Ottawa Citizen: "Burden of proof on
LSD inmates: Government won�t compensate women without more proof that tests
caused harm," 2/3/98; "LSD tested on female prisoners," 2/28/98; "The case
for prison�s LSD tests," 3/1/98; "Pay LSD victims: Reform (Party): Law and
Order Party calls experiments on inmates �sickening�," 3/2/98; "Privacy an
issue in LSD probe," 3/20/98; "LSD experiments �good research back then�,"
7/10/98; "MPs demand inquiry into prison tests," 9/29/98; "Minister demands
answers on Citizen account of inmates used as guinea pigs," 10/1/98; "Scott
stalling LSD report, critics charge," 10/15/98; "LSD trials on inmates
�unethical�," 10/31/98); "Government accused of withholding files on prison
LSD testing," 12/8/99;

 35. " �I was in a very bad state�- LSD guinea pig says form inmate
underwent dramatic personality changes," Ottawa Citizen, 9/26/98.

 36. Eastgate, J., "The Case Against Electroshock Treatment," USA Today
(Magazine), November 1998, p. 28.

 37. "75-year-old guinea pig wants to sue," Ottawa Citizen, 12/9/99.

 38. "This Morning," CBC Radio, Nov. 9, 1998. Interviewers: Avril Benoit and
Rosie Rowbotham.

 39. In a 1997 interview on CKLN radio, Moss-Sharman recounts her own
nightmare as a child victim of CIA/military brainwashing experiments.
(http://morethanconquerers.simplenet.com/MCF/ckln16.htm). Also see "Mind
Games: Another woman comes forward to claim the CIA used her as a guinea pig
in hideous experiments," Ottawa Citizen, 9/13/97 (posted at
http://www.cs.virginia.edu/~alb/misc/ ottawaMindControl.html)

 40. "Military tested LSD on civilians: Canada funded Cold War probe into
mind control," Ottawa Citizen, 12/7/98.

 41. Chronical Journal (Thunder Bay, Ontario): "Carlson gets access to
prison file," 5/1/99; "Carlson case adjourns," 10/27/99; "Convicted bank
robber Carlson launches appeal bid," 2/2/00. Two letters to the Canadian
Human Rights Commission re: Carlson (11/9/99 from Moss-Sharman and 12/30/99
from Patty Rehn, U.S. contact for ACHES-MC) are available from the author
upon request.

 42. " �The nightmares are real�: Widow blames military for man�s
suffering," Ottawa Citizen, 10/11/99; "Was Canuck in CIA experiments? Widow
wants to know why hubby suffered," Sun Media, 10/12/99.

 43. C.I.A. vs. Sims., 471 U.S. 159, 85 L.Ed.2d, 105 S.Ct. 1881 (1985).

 44. A revealing account of the difficulties U.S. citizens encounter in
making claims against the government can be found in Budiansky, Goode, Gast,
"The Cold War Experiments," U.S. News and World Report, January 24, 1994.

 45. Philadelphia Inquirer, November 29, 1994, B6.

 46. Los Angeles Times, July 13, 1994, A4

 47. The Independent (London), June 4, 1994, p. 8.

 48. Baker, R., "Conspiracy: In 1952, Stanley Glickman was a promising young
painter studying in Paris. Then one night he shared a drink with some fellow
Americans, and his life fell apart. Did the CIA spike his drink with LSD?
The Observer (Guardian Newspapers Ltd.), February 14, 1999.

 49. "Case against CIA that began with �52 encounter winds down," 4/30/99,
and "Jury rejects suit alleging �52 drugging," 5/1/99.

 50. Baker, op. cit.

 51. New York Times, 3/10/99 and Los Angeles Times, 4/4/99. See
http://www.sightings.com/ufo2/ gottlieb.htm for the 3/11/99 WorldNet Daily
obituary.

 52. Regarding Gottlieb�s bizarre plans to assassinate Fidel Castro and
Patrice Lumumba, see Impact International, April 1999
(http://www.africa2000.com/IMPACT/gottlieb.jpg)

53. "Judge Dominick L. DiCarlo, 71, Narcotics Fighter Under Reagan," New
York Times, 4/30/99, C21. A 3/10/99 Gottlieb obituary written by Tim Weiner
also makes no mention of the Glickman trial.

 54. Daily News, April 28, 1999, p. 2.

 55. Kronisch v. U.S., 150 F.3d 112 (2d Cir. 1988). Posted on New Jersey Law
Journal website: http://www.nylj.com/nyljcontent/072298dd.htm.

 56. Baker, op. cit.







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