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Sunday, September 8, 2002
Government-linked 'suicide' probed
1954 incident bears similarities to death of CIA biochemist
Posted: September 8, 2002
1:00 a.m. Eastern
By H.P. Albarelli Jr.
� 2002 WorldNetDaily.com
Prosecutors in the Manhattan District Attorney's Office have looked
into possible connections between the 1953 death of CIA biochemist
Dr. Frank Olson and the bizarre 1954 suicide of a Texas detective,
WorldNetDaily has learned.

According to sources close to the recently completed grand jury
inquiry into Olson's death, investigators in District Attorney Robert
Morgenthau's office have examined top-secret CIA documents from
a joint 1978 CIA-Department of Justice investigation related to the
death of M.A. Billnitzer, who was a plainclothes investigator with the
Houston, Texas, police department.

Informally dubbed the Victims Task Force, the joint investigation
was initiated in 1979 after U.S. Attorney General Griffen B. Bell
notified the CIA in the fall of 1978 of his opinion that "the
government had a duty to seek out and notify persons who may
have been harmed as a result of their having been used as unwitting
subjects of  [CIA] drug experiments." Chief among the experimental
programs of concern to the attorney general were projects
Artichoke, MKULTRA, MKNAOMI, MKDELTA and MKSEARCH.

In response to Bell's opinion, then-CIA director Stansfield Turner
ordered David Brandwein, director of the CIA's Office of Technical
Services, to conduct a comprehensive search of agency records to
locate the names of any unwitting victims.  Four months later,
Turner informed Bell that the search "confirmed earlier findings that
no subjects of drug experimentation are identified in the available
[CIA] files." However, said Turner, in a January 1975 letter to Bell,
"We have addressed correspondence to researchers and former
employees considered most likely to be helpful" in identifying and
locating unwitting subjects.

"As nearly as we can determine from records available," Turner's
letter continued,  "the CIA and the Bureau of Narcotics engaged in
the operation of joint interest to the two agencies that may in some
way have involved the administration of drugs to human subjects
without their knowledge in safe houses in New York City and San
Francisco."

Turner's letter then went on to make several astonishing
admissions: "Exactly what took place in these facilities has not been
determined, and neither our records nor the records of the Bureau
of Narcotics (Drug Enforcement Administration) disclose any
information that is useful in attempting to establish the persons who
might have visited them for whatever purpose. Moreover, testimony
before the Congress in the fall of 1977 by former employees of CIA
and the Bureau of Narcotics revealed a distressing failure of
recollections about CIA use of safe houses. The question of how the
Bureau of Narcotics used them was never raised. While
fragmentary records and amnesic recollections may render well nigh
impossible the task of reconstructing the uses to which the safe
houses were put by either Agency, and identifying any unwitting
subjects there may have been, I consider it nonetheless incumbent
upon us to make every reasonable effort to do so."

Several weeks later, the Victims Task Force was formed. Its chief
field investigators were Richard Selmi and John H. Laubinger. Selmi
was a former Drug Enforcement Administration agent who worked in
the Far East and with the DEA's internal security branch. Laubinger
is a former CIA employee who joined the agency in early 1952 and
worked as an analytical chemist in the Far East, Germany and
France. Laubinger and Selmi reported to Robert H. Wiltse, a special
assistant to John F. Blake, CIA deputy director of administration.  A
first-generation agency employee, Blake had been a former wartime
OSS officer.

The common denominator between the deaths of Olson and
Billnitzer is George Hunter White, a Federal Narcotics Bureau agent
and also a former OSS officer. White, who died in 1975, worked
surreptitiously from 1952 to 1967 for the CIA under several
contracts related to drug experimentation and other matters. In his
capacity as a CIA contractor, White also oversaw, and participated
in, the operation of at least five CIA-funded safe houses in New
York, Washington, D.C., and California. Three of these safe houses
involved a sophisticated prostitution operation aimed at covertly
eliciting information from targeted American citizens, foreign
nationals, diplomats and drug traffickers.

Occasionally, the safe house prostitutes would carry out their
assignments by using mind-altering substances, but, according to
informed sources, they just as frequently operated along more
conventional lines using sexual favors for information retrieval and
extortion.

A Victim's Task Force report on one of the New York safe houses
reads: "The apartment had been used by visiting politicians, U.N.
personnel, and senior FBN people. It had been used operationally in
the [Victor] Stadter case and others, had been used as a command
post in a case involving diplomats, had been used operationally
while Castro was visiting the U.N., had been used during the
OESingle Convention' as a convenient meeting/entertainment spot,
had been used to meet newspaper people for interviews, etc., and
had been used socially."

A separate 1979 report on the Washington, D.C., safe house reads:
"The three-story walk-up was used often during the afternoon hours
and evening (after work) hours.  It had been used by diplomats,
politicians from the Hill and other visiting elected officials. It had also
been used by various campaign people and on occasion by local
law-enforcement personnel. An English basement apartment with
separate front and rear entrances was used by technicians and
other monitoring personnel."

The Washington, D.C., safe house was located near the State
Department in the Foggy Bottom section of the nation's capital. The
initial New York safe house � there were three � was composed of
two adjoining ground-floor apartments located at the corner of
Bedford and Barrow streets in Greenwich Village. The building,
which was torn down in the late 1970s, that housed the apartments
was owned by a "foreign national engaged in the import-export
business," according to CIA leasing documents. In 1959, another
FBN safe house in New York, located in Greenwich Towers at 105
West 13th St., was funded by the CIA. In California, one of the safe
houses was located in San Francisco at 225 Chestnut St. Another
was a private home in Mill Valley, Marin County, located at 261
Green St.

Detective's mysterious death
The story of White's involvement in the Houston incident is a
particularly odd saga. It is reconstructed here from extensive
interviews conducted with persons close to the event, as well as
from CIA and FBN documents.

George White was ordered to go to Houston, Texas, in May 1954 by
FBN Commissioner Harry Anslinger. Just weeks prior, White had
made a mysterious and unexpected trip to Havana, Cuba, following
a secret two-day meeting at New York's Belmont Plaza Hotel
attended by five physicians who were surreptitiously under contract
with the CIA and Army Chemical Corps. A little over 10 years earlier,
White, as an OSS officer, had conducted a series of "truth-drug"
experiments on unwitting Manhattan Project employees and others
in the same hotel.

Ostensibly, White's objective in Houston was to investigate
confidential informer reports that members of the Houston Police
Department were selling narcotics seized from drug traffickers.
White was joined in Houston by fellow FBN agents Fred Douglas
and Henry L. Giordano. Douglas came from the Washington, D.C.,
branch of the FBN. Giordano, a pharmacist by professional training,
came from Kansas City. (Giordano was appointed head of the FBN
in 1962 by President John F. Kennedy.)

In Houston, White's investigation quickly led to his targeting vice-
squad detective M.A. Billnitzer, whom White suspected of having
detailed knowledge of the illegal dealings of other officers.  White
had been told by other Houston officers that "over $250,000 worth of
heroin caps" had been siphoned off from a hidden stash belonging
to a notorious dealer named Earl Voice.

According to White's written reports to Commissioner Anslinger,
"The heroin was then, a week later, sold back to Voice by the same
detectives that discovered the stash." White's sources on the
scheme were Voice himself and Houston police officer William Pool.
According to White, "Pool had blown the whistle on the rotten apples
in the department by sending word to [Anslinger] in Washington,
D.C."  Pool, who had arrested Voice, told White, "Voice told me that
he had bought back a big chunk of his own heroin within a week
after it had been confiscated by the police. He said he bought it from
a cop."

Billnitzer had been the senior detective brought in on the discovery
of Voice's stash, so White called him in to give a statement.
According to White, Billnitzer "was evasive and got his facts all
jumbled." Dissatisfied, a few days later White asked Billnitzer to
return to his suite in Houston's William Penn Hotel for a second
interview. This time, reported White, Billnitzer changed his story and
"admitted that there had been more heroin than officially reported."

The next day, at around 11 a.m., a police officer working outside
Billnitzer's vice-squad office, was startled to hear a gunshot come
from behind the detective's closed door. As the officer jumped to his
feet, he heard something heavy hitting the floor in the office. Then,
after a moment, a second shot sounded. The officer attempted to
enter Billnitzer's office, but was unable to open the door. When other
officers entered the office they found Billnitzer dead "with two bullet
holes in his heart."

The death was quickly ruled a suicide, and no autopsy was
performed. Odd as it was, the ruling was supported by Houston
Police Chief Leroy Morrison and his lead homicide investigator, who
said there was "not the slightest doubt" that Billnitzer killed himself.

White disagreed. Said White, "If [Billnitzer] killed himself, he is
probably the first man who ever killed himself twice." Over the
protestations of Houston law-enforcement officials, White conducted
his own investigation into the detective's death.  He soon reported
that "the first shot that hit Billnitzer was fired while he was standing
upright." That shot entered the detective's heart.

"Billnitzer then fell to the floor," reads White's report. "While falling,
his head struck a steel filing cabinet so hard that blood and hair
were found on the metal." It was then, White wrote, "after he had
fallen that the second shot was fired into his heart."

Less than a week after Billnitzer's bizarre death, White was
"astounded when I picked up a newspaper and saw a headline that
accused me of driving Billnitzer out of his mind." The accusation
was not the idle speculation of a reporter but the claim of Houston's
city attorney, Will Sears.  Outraged by White's activities in his city,
Sears formally fired off a series of heated telegrams to Anslinger in
Washington, D.C., U.S. Attorney General Herbert Brownell,
Secretary of Treasury George Humphrey and FBI chief J. Edgar
Hoover.

Sears charged that White's actions defied "proper description" and
that the agent's tactics "were absolutely ruthless and extremely
unconventional." He demanded an immediate federal investigation.

"I sincerely believe that agent White used tactics and threats against
a law-enforcement officer that seriously disturbed the balance of the
officer's mind and lead to his 'suicide,'" Sears wrote.

Joining the Houston city attorney in his call for an investigation and
asking that White be expelled from Houston was Chief Morrison,
who also called for a separate "FBI investigation of White's
Gestapo-type tactics."

Rudolph Halley, a close friend of White's and former head of the
New York City Council, called White from Manhattan to report that
the District Attorney's Office there had informed him that the
Houston police had dispatched a team to New York to investigate
White. Warned Halley, "These Texas people are trying to dig up
everything possible on you."

Not surprisingly, White telephoned his CIA superior in Washington,
D.C., Dr. Sidney Gottlieb, director of the agency's Chemical Branch,
to alert him to the investigation. Gottlieb responded that he had
already been informed that efforts were underway to "discredit" and
brand White "as an associate with communists." The CIA official
ordered White to temporarily suspend all New York safe house
activities "until further notification." Months later, the Greenwich
Village safe house was shuttered and White was transferred to San
Francisco. He made only one more trip to Houston, in early 1955, as
part of an official inquiry related to the Billnitzer case. The evening
before he departed for Texas he had a dinner meeting with Gottlieb.

LSD-provoked suicide?
Victim's Task Force investigators Laubinger and Selmi learned of
the strange Houston incident in August 1979 when they interviewed
retired Federal Narcotics agent George Gaffney. According to a
declassified CIA memorandum regarding the interview, Gaffney told
Laubinger that he had been informed by the "resident FBN agent" in
Houston, who was highly critical of White's tactics, "that Billnitzer
had no reason to commit suicide" and  that "he suspected the
suicide had been provoked by excessive threats and abuse by
White."

The memorandum goes on to state that Gaffney told Laubinger that
he "remembered the LSD-provoked suicide by [Frank] Olson and
after the recent revelations put two and two together and suggested
the possibility that White had used a drug (possibly LSD) on
Billnitzer, which had similarly provoked his suicide."

A subsequent Task Force report to John Blake, CIA deputy
administration director, and the attorney general's office does not
mention Frank Olson or his death. It reads: "Billnitzer was found on
the floor, dead, with two bullet holes 'through the heart.' . . .
According to press accounts, one shot was fired while he was
standing and the other after he had hit the floor. There was no
autopsy reported other than an examination of the externals of his
chest."

The report continues, "The speculation was offered during this
investigation that Billnitzer's 'suicide' may have resulted as an
aftereffect of his having received an unwitting dose of LSD from
White." Laubinger and Selmi then explained that they had
interviewed "the one remaining witness" to "the two interrogations of
Billnitzer" by White. This was retired FBN Commissioner Henry
Giordano. Giordano told the two that as he recalled, "no food or
drink was served during or before the interrogation." Said Giordano,
"Even had White been inclined to have surreptitiously slipped LSD
to Billnitzer" he did "not believe" that White "had the opportunity to
have done so."


Intrigue into Olson death grows
In other  developments related to the Olson case, last month, on
Aug. 9, the surviving sons of Frank Olson, Eric and Nils Olson,
reburied their father's remains in a Frederick, Md., cemetery.
Olson's body had been exhumed on June 2, 1994, and subjected to
a thorough forensic examination conducted by a team of 15 experts,
including several pathologists and toxicologists, overseen by
professor James Starrs of George Washington University,
Washington, D.C.

The results of the examination lead Starrs to conclude in 1999, "It is
highly likely that Frank Olson met with foul play." Starrs said last
month, "By the process of exclusion, [murder] is the only reasonable
possibility. For the occurrence of this, the explanation is somebody
got away with murder, literally."

According to a highly controversial televised report broadcast by
WJLA-TV, the Washington, D.C., ABC affiliate, the Olsons, at an
Aug. 8 press conference, claimed "they can now prove Frank Olson
worked for the CIA studying anthrax" and that "biological weapons
were used during the Korean War."

WJLA also reported that Eric Olson said that he has "never before
seen home movies" that "reveal one of the places his father visited
during [his] frequent trips to Europe was a top-secret CIA safe
house" where experiments and interrogations resulted in "German
POWs" and others being "tortured and killed." According to the
WJLA report, Olson said that the home movies also "show aerosol
anthrax being sprayed from a crop duster during government
experiments his father supervised."

However, asked for comment on the claims made in the televised
report, Eric Olson said, "I can't vouch for any of that." On the anthrax
spraying charge, Olson said, "I have no way of knowing whether it
was anthrax, etc., and never claimed to know. . . . There appears an
image of a crop duster within my father's movies. Where this is or
what is being sprayed is not clear." Olson added that the report
concerning the safe house "was taken from" a German
documentary recently aired in that country. "There are no images of
a 'safe house' among my father's slides or movies."  It wasn't clear if
Olson has seen the documentary.

Spokesmen for Fort Detrick, the U.S. Army facility where Frank
Olson worked, flatly denied that the U.S. government ever used
anthrax as a weapon during the Korean War.

"We would love to see those home movies that show anthrax
spraying, but we aren't holding our breath," said one Army official
who declined to be quoted by name.

Former Fort Detrick researchers who knew and worked with Frank
Olson said they were "seriously troubled" and "deeply concerned" by
reports of Olson's home movies. Said one researcher, "I can't
imagine any such films existing. The Frank Olson I knew would
have never done that. Besides, it simply makes no sense. Why
would [Frank] Olson have such a film at home? That would be a
very, very serious breach of security, both then and now."

Said another former Detrick researcher, "This is so far out. I can't
believe anyone said that. [Frank] Olson never worked with anthrax.
It wasn't his thing.

"And we never used it in Korea."

The Olson brothers said in a prepared statement read to the press
on Aug. 9, "The death of Frank Olson on Nov. 28, 1953, was a
murder, not a suicide. . . . He died because of concerns that he
would divulge information concerning a highly classified CIA
interrogation program called Artichoke . . . and [information]
concerning the use of biological weapons by the United States in the
Korean War."

The issue that the United States used biological weapons during the
Korean War has been hotly debated since the mid-1950s after the
Chinese and North Koreans accused America of using infected
insects to disseminate disease in Korea. The debate was heatedly
renewed in 1998 when Stephen Endicott and Edward Hagerman
published a book entitled, "The United States and Biological
Warfare: Secrets From the Early Cold War and Korea." The book
presents what many consider "hard evidence" that the U.S. military
and intelligence communities lied to Congress and to the American
people about their biological-warfare capabilities.

Endicott and Hagerman conclude in their book, "There is a long
circumstantial trail of corroborative evidence that the United States
experimented with biological weapons in Korea." Most visible along
that turning and twisting trail is the myriad of covert research and
operational programs conducted by the Army at Fort Detrick.
Endicott's and Hagerman's book, which is masterfully researched,
contains little about specific projects conducted at Fort Detrick's
ultra-secret Special Operations Division, but through other sources
and documents we are able to glimpse the dimensions of these
projects.

Starvation as a weapon
That biochemist and program administrator Dr. Frank Olson worked
developing new and better ways of biological destruction aimed at
mass populations and targeted individuals is indisputable. A
"Special Biological Department Report" prepared in 1950 by Fort
Detrick's Special Operations Division (Olson's section of
employment) in conjunction with its Crops Division vividly portrays
one project that Olson worked on.  The "Top Secret" report was
obtained from the Department of Defense by this writer after filing
several Freedom of Information requests. The report concerns a
Special Operations project involving the development of "feathers as
carriers of biological-warfare agents." The biological agent of
particular interest in the report � one in a series of 18 such covert
biological-warfare sub-projects listed under the codename ARCHON
� was cereal rust spores.

Cereal rust spores produce rust infection. The infection is lethal, not
to humans, but to edible plants that are grown in concentrations to
sustain life. In the 1950s, Fort Detrick researchers considered the
use of "plant pathogens" to produce various types of plant-killing
fungus to be "a more humane way of eliminating enemy
populations" � starvation.

Olson and several other Special Operations Division scientists, as
detailed by other Defense Department documents, worked intently
for about 18 months on the cereal rust project. The project report is
lengthy and filled with technical jargon, but can be summarized in its
own words.

Preliminary controlled tests conducted by Detrick's SO Division
"demonstrated that birds dusted with cereal rust spores will retain
sufficient numbers of spores to initiate a cereal rust infection." Initial
tests to confirm this "were conducted at Camp Detrick [renamed
Fort Detrick in 1954], consisted of dusting birds with cereal rust
spores (Puccinia graminis avenae, Race 8) and releasing them for 1
1/2 to 24 hours in cages covering approximately 100 square feet of
seedling Vicland oats." The result: "A heavy rust infection resulted
on all of the plots."

The second test conducted by SO was quite dangerous, as infected
birds were released from cages to fly "a 100-mile flight." Used in the
test were 10 "homing pigeons dusted with rust spores" and then
released and "allowed to fly approximately 100 miles to their home
barn" at Fort Detrick. The report states: "This test demonstrated that
sufficient spores will be retained on birds after a 100-mile free flight
to initiate primary infection; it was also shown that large numbers of
viable spores will remain on these birds for at least 19 days."

The third SO test was conducted "at St. Thomas, Virgin Islands,"
using "four test plots covering 1,600 square feet of Vicland oats."
Again, birds were used and "heavy infection resulted in all plots,
demonstrating that birds dusted with rust spores and released from
aircraft will retain sufficient numbers of spores to initiate a cereal
rust infection."

But, the problems of collecting, training, controlling and tidying-up-
after birds were not attractive to SO researchers. One of Olson's
areas of expertise was the airborne delivery of lethal micro-
organisms. He asked, Why use birds when just their feathers will
do? Olson and his colleagues soon devised an ingenious and
diabolical scheme whereby large numbers of birds of multiple kinds
were infected with spores and then their feathers were removed for
placement in what were termed "MI6AI cluster adapters" � or in
plain English, cluster or fragmentation bombs � normally used for
dropping propaganda leaflets. WorldNetDaily found no evidence that
these bombs were used as a weapon in Korea or anywhere else.

Asked by reporters for comment on the claims made at the Olsons'
press conference, the CIA was quick to respond.

"The CIA fully cooperated in [the Rockefeller Commission and
related congressional investigations into Olson's death]. Tens of
thousands of documents were released. If anyone has new
information they should contact the appropriate authorities," said
CIA media officer Paul Novack.  On any charges that the CIA
murdered Frank Olson, Novack said,  "It didn't happen. We
categorically deny that."

A spokesperson for the Manhattan District Attorney's Office declined
to comment on the Billnitzer incident and Olson case, citing "the
district attorney's long-standing policy of not discussing active
cases."

--

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"He made me feel like I'd met the ultimate in evil. I don't think
anything will really scare me, after him."
"Ges Vorrutyer? He was just a little villain. An old-fashioned
craftsman, making crimes one-off. The really unforgivable acts are
committed by calm men in beautiful green silk rooms, who deal
death wholesale, by the shipload, without lust, or anger, or desire, or
any redeeming emotion to excuse them but cold fear of some
pretended future. But the crimes they hope to prevent in that future
are imaginary. The ones they commit in the present--they are
real."
~~dialog between Cordelia Naismith and Aral Vorkosigan,
_Cordelia's Honor_, "Shards of Honor", Lois McMaster Bujold

_Shards of Honor_ was originally published separately 1986, then
combined with _Barrayar_, published in 1991, as _Cordelia's
Honor_, published 1996

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