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Mind Control: The
Current Situation Mind Control: The Current Situation
- part 2 of 4
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.
The "Scientific" Basis for Psychosurgery
(Publications of the Participants)
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, 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.
(Note: Dr West is now a member of the Board of Directors
of the False Memory Syndrome Foundation.)
The Violence Control Center
(Testimony, FOIA documents, Los Angeles Times, San
Francisco Bay Guardian)
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.
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 condemnation 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.
The Victims of MK-ULTRA
(Court Records, Senate Testimony and FOIA Documents)
The Central Intelligence Agency held two major interests
in use of LSD. 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 of 1991
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 LSD 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.
Psychological Warfare Drugs
(Court Records, FOIA Documents, General Accounting Office
investigations)
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."
Doctor Jose Delgado: "Man does not have the right to
develop his own mind."
(Congressional Record, New York Times)
"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.
262E, 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."
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