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  1. PROJECT MKIULTRA, THE CIA'S PROGRAM OF
  2. RESEARCH INBEHAVIORAL MODIFICATION
  3.  
  4. JOINT HEARING
  5. BEFORE THE
  6.  
  7. SELECT COMMITTEE ON INTELLIGENCE
  8. AND THE
  9.  
  10. SUBCOMMITTEE ON
  11. HEALTH AND SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH
  12. OF THE
  13.  
  14. COMMITTEE ON HUMAN RESOURCES
  15. UNITED STATES SENATE
  16. NINETY-FIFTH CONGRESS
  17. FIRST SESSION
  18.  
  19. AUGUST 3, 1977
  20.  
  21. Printed for the use of the Select Committee on Intelligence
  22. and Committee on Human Resources
  23.  
  24. PROJECT MKULTRA, THE CIA'S PROGRAM OF
  25. RESEARCH INBEHAVIORAL MODIFICATION
  26.  
  27. JOINT HEARING
  28. BEFORE THE
  29.  
  30. SELECT COMMITTEE ON INTELLIGENCE
  31. AND THE
  32.  
  33. SUBCOMMITTEE ON
  34. HEALTH AND SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH
  35. OF THE
  36.  
  37. COMMITTEE ON HUMAN RESOURCES
  38. UNITED STATES SENATE
  39. NINETY-FIFTH CONGRESS
  40. FIRST SESSION
  41.  
  42. AUGUST 3, 1977
  43.  
  44. Printed for the use of the Select Committee on Intelligence
  45. and Committee on Human Resources
  46. U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE
  47. 96-4080
  48.  
  49. WASHINGTON : 1977
  50.  
  51. For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office
  52. Washington, D.C., 20402
  53. Stock No. 052-070-04357-1
  54.  
  55. SENATE SELECT COMMITTEE ON INTELLIGENCE
  56. (Established by S. Res. 400, 94th Cong., 2d sess.)
  57. DANIEL K. INOUYE, Hawaii, Chairman
  58. BARRY GOLDWATER, Arizona, Vice Chairman
  59. BIRCH BAYH, Indiana
  60. ADLAI E. STEVENSON, Illinois
  61. WILLIAM D. HATHAWAY, Maine
  62. WALTER D. HUDDLESTON, Kentucky
  63. JOSEPH R. BIDEN, JR., Delaware
  64. ROBERT MORGAN, North Carolina
  65. GARY HART, Colorado
  66. DANIEL PATRICK MOYNIHAN, New York
  67.  
  68. CLIFFORD P. CAISE, New Jersey
  69. JAKE GARN, Utah
  70. CHARLES MCC. MATHIAS, JR., Maryland
  71. JAMES B. PEARSON, Kansas
  72. JOHN H. CHAFEE, Rhode Island
  73. RICHARD G. LUGAR, Indiana
  74. MALCOLM WALLOP, Wyoming
  75.  
  76. ROBERT C. BYRD, West Virginia, Ex Officio fember.
  77. HOWARD H. BAKER, JR., Tennessee, Ex Officio Member
  78. WILLIAM G. MILLER, Staff Director
  79. EARL D. EISENHOWER, Minority Staff Director
  80. AUDREY H. HATRY, Chief Clerk
  81.  
  82. COMMITTEE ON HUMAN RESOURCES
  83. HARRISON A. WILLIAMS Ja., New Jersey, Chairman
  84. JENNINGS RANDOLPH, West Virginia
  85. 'CLAIBORNE PELL, Rhode Island
  86. EDWARD M. KENNEDY, Massachusetts
  87. GAYLORD NELSON, WisconsinTHOMAS F. EAGLETON, Missouri
  88. ALAN CRANSTON, California
  89. WILLIAM D. HATHAWAY, Maine
  90. Michigan
  91. DONALD W. RIEGLE,
  92.  
  93. JACOB K. JAVITS, New York
  94. RICHARD S. S'CHWEIKER, Pennsylvania
  95. ROBERT T. STAFFORD, Vermont
  96. ORRIN G. HATCH, Utah
  97. JOHN H. CHAPEE, Rhode Island
  98. S. I. HAYAKAWA, California
  99. S.,
  100.  
  101. STEPHEN J. PARADISE, General Counsel and Staff Director
  102. MARJORIE M. WHITTAKER, Chief Clerk
  103. DON A. ZIMMERMAN, Minority Counsel
  104.  
  105. SUBCOMMITTEE ON HEALTH AND SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH
  106. EDWARD M. KENNEDY, Massachusetts, Chairman
  107. CLAIBORNE PELL, Rhode Island
  108. GAYLORD NELSON, Wisconsin
  109. WILLIAM D. HATHAWAY, Maine
  110. HARRISON A. WILLIAMS, JR., New Jersey
  111.  
  112. RICHARD S. SCHWEIKER, Pennsylvania
  113. JACOB K. JAVITS, New York
  114. JOHN H. iCHAFEE, Rhode Island
  115.  
  116. (ex officlio)
  117. LAWRENCE HOROWITZ, ProfessionalStaff Member
  118. DAVID WINSTON, Minority Counsel
  119.  
  120. CONTESTS
  121. Statements of:
  122. Admiral Stansfield Turner, Director, Central Intelligence Agency; accompanied by; Frank Laubinger, Office of Technical Services, Central Intelligence Agency; Al Brody, Office of Inspector General,
  123. Central Intelligence Agency; Ernest Mayerfield, Office of General
  124. Counsel, Central Intelligence Agency, and George Cary, Legislative
  125. Counsel, Central Intelligence Agency ---------------------------Philip Goldman, former employee, Central Intelligence Agency ------John Gittinger, former employee, Central Intelligence Agency --------Appendix A.-XVII. Testing and Use of Chemical and Biological Agents
  126. by the Intelligence Community ----------------------------------Appendix B.-Documents Referring to Discovery of Additional MKULTRA
  127. Material ------------------------------------------------------Appendix C.-Documents Referring to Subprojects --------------------Material Submitted for the Record: .
  128. Psychological Assessments ---------------------------------------"Truth" Drugs in Interrogation ----------------------------------Construction of Gorman Annex-----------------------
  129.  
  130. ----
  131.  
  132. Subproject 54-------------------------------------------------Drug Testing in Foreign Countries
  133. -----------MKSEARCH, OFTEN/CHICKWIT ------------------------------Employees Terminated Because of Their Participation in MKULTRA
  134. Subproject 3 -------------------------------------------------QKHILLTOP Definition -----------------------------------------
  135.  
  136. Page
  137.  
  138. 8
  139. 50
  140. 51
  141. 65
  142. 103
  143. 109
  144. 17
  145. 25
  146. 39
  147.  
  148. 41
  149. 43
  150. 169
  151. 170
  152. 171
  153.  
  154. PROJECT MKULTRA, THE CIA'S PROGRAM OF
  155. RESEARCH IN BEHAVIORAL MODIFICATION
  156. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 3, 1977
  157.  
  158. U.S.
  159.  
  160. SENATE,
  161.  
  162. SELECT COMMITTEE ON INTELLIGENCE,
  163. AND SUBCOMIrrTEE ON HEALTH
  164. AND SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH
  165. OF THE COMMITTEE ON HUMAN RESOURGES,
  166.  
  167. Washington, D.C.
  168.  
  169. The committees met, pursuant to notice, at 9:07 a.m. in room 1202,
  170. Dirksen Senate Office Building, Senator Daniel K. Inouye-(chairman
  171. of the Select Committee on Intelligence) presiding.
  172. Present: Senators Inouye (presiding), Kennedy, Goldwater, Bayh,
  173. Hathaway, Huddleston, Hart, Schweiker, Case, Garn, Chafee, Lugar
  174. and Wallop.
  175. Also present: William G. Miller, staff director, Select Committee on
  176. Intelligence; Dr. Lawrence Horowitz, staff director, Subcommittee
  177. on Health and Scientific Research; and professional staff members of
  178. both committees.
  179. Senator INOUYE. The Senate Select Committee on Intelligence is
  180. meeting today and is joined by the Subcommittee on Health and
  181. Scientific Research chaired by Senator Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts and Senator Richard Schweiker of Pennsylvania. Senator
  182. Hathaway and Senator Chafee are members of both committees. We
  183. are to hear testimony from the Director of Central Intelligence, Adm.
  184. Stansfield Turner, and from other Agency witnesses on issues concerning new documents supplied to the committee in the last week on drug
  185. testing conducted by the Central Intelligence Agency.
  186. It should be made clear from the outset that in general, we are
  187. focusing on events that happened over 12 or as long as 25 years ago.
  188. It should be emphasized that the programs that are of greatest concern have stopped and that we are reviewing these past events in
  189. order to better understand what statutes and other guidelines might be
  190. necessary to prevent the recurrence of such abuses in the future. We
  191. also need to know and understand what is now being done by the CIA
  192. in the field of behavioral research to be certain that no current abuses
  193. are occurring.
  194. I want to commend Admiral Turner for his full cooperation with
  195. this committee and with the Subcommittee on Health in recognizing
  196. that this issue needed our attention. The CIA has assisted our committees and staffs in their investigative efforts and in arriving at
  197. remedies which will serve the best interests of our country.
  198.  
  199. -
  200.  
  201. The reappearance of reports of the abuses of the drug testing program. and reports of other previously unknown drug programs and
  202. projects for behavioral control underline the necessity for effective
  203. oversight procedures both in the executive branch and in the Congress. The Select Committee on Intelligence has been working very
  204. closely with President Carter, the Vice President, and Admiral
  205. Turner and his associates in developing basic concepts for statutory
  206. guidelines which will govern all activities of the intelligence agencies
  207. of the United States.
  208. In fact, it is my expectation that the President will soon announce
  209. his decisions on how he has decided the intelligence agencies of the
  210. United States shall be organized. This committee will be working
  211. closely with the President and Admiral Turner in placing this new
  212. structure under the law and to develop effective oversight procedures.
  213. It is clear that effective oversight requires that information must
  214. be full and forthcoming. Full and timely information is obviously
  215. necessary if the committee and the public is to be confident that any
  216. transgressions can be dealt with quickly and forcefully.
  217. One purpose of this hearing is to give the committee and the public
  218. an understanding of what new information has been discovered that
  219. adds to the knowledge already available from previous Church and
  220. Kennedy inquiries, and to hear the reasons why these documents were
  221. not available to the Church and Kennedy committees. It is also the
  222. purpose of this hearing to address the issues raised by any additional
  223. illegal or improper activities that have emerged from the files and to
  224. develop remedies to prevent such improper activities from occurring
  225. again.
  226. Finally, there is an obligation on the part of both this committee
  227. and the CIA to make every effort to help those individuals or institutions that may have been harmed by any of these improper or illegal
  228. activities. I am certain that Admiral Turner will work with this committee to see that this will be done.
  229. I would now like to welcome the most distinguished Senator from
  230. Massachusetts, the chairman of the Health Subcommittee, Senator
  231. Kennedy.
  232. Senator KENNEDY. Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. We are
  233. delighted to join together in this very important area of public inquiry and public interest.
  234. Some 2 years ago, the Senate Health Subcommittee heard chilling
  235. testimony about the human experimentation activities of the Central
  236. Intelligence Agency. The Deputy Director of the CIA revealed that
  237. over 30 universities and institutions were involved in an "extensive
  238. testing and experimentation" program which included covert drug
  239. tests on unwitting citizens "at all social levels, high and low, native
  240. Americans and foreign." Several of these tests involved the administration of LSD to "unwitting subjects in social situations."
  241. At least one death, that of Dr. Olsen, resulted from these activities.
  242. The Afrency itself acknowledged that these tests made little scientific
  243. sense. The agents doing the monitoring were not qualified scientific
  244. observers. The test subjects were seldom accessible beyond the first
  245. hours of the test. In a number of instances, the test subject became ill
  246. for hours or days, and effective followup was impossible.
  247.  
  248. Other experiments were equally offensive. For example, heroin
  249. addicts were enticed into participating in LSD experiments in order
  250. to get a reward-heroin.
  251. Perhaps most disturbing of all was the fact that the extent of experimentation on human subjects was unknown. The records of all
  252. these activities were destroyed in January 1973, at the instruction of
  253. then CIA Director Richard Helms. In spite of persistent inquiries by
  254. both the Health Subcommittee and the Intelligence Committee, no
  255. additional records or information were forthcoming. And no oneno single individual--could be found who remembered the details, not
  256. the Director of the CIA, who ordered the documents destroyed, not
  257. the official responsible for the program, nor any of his associates.
  258. We believed that the record, incomplete as it was, was as complete
  259. as it was going to be. Then one individual, through a Freedom of Information request, accomplished what two U.S. Senate committees
  260. could not. He spurred the agency into finding additional records pertaining to the CIA's program of experimentation with human subjects.
  261. These new records were discovered by the agency in March. Their
  262. existence was not made known to the Congress until July.
  263. The records reveal a far more extensive series of experiments than
  264. had previously been thought. Eighty-six universities or institutions
  265. were involved. NeV instances of unethical behavior were revealed.
  266. The intelligence community of this Nation, which requires a shroud
  267. of secrecy in order to operate, has a very sacred trust from the
  268. American people. The CIA's program of human experimentation of
  269. the fifties and sixties violated that trust. It was violated again on the
  270. day the bulk of the agency's records were destroyed in 1973. It is
  271. violated each time a responsible official refuses to recollect the details
  272. of the program. The best safeguard against abuses in the future is a
  273. complete public accounting of the abuses of the past.
  274. I think this is illustrated, as Chairman Inouye pointed out. These
  275. are issues, are questions that happened in the fifties and sixties, and
  276. go back some 15, 20 years ago, but they are front page news today, as
  277. we see in the major newspapers and on the television and in the media
  278. of this country; and the reason they are, I think, is because it just continuously begins to trickle out. sort of, month after month, and the
  279. best way to put this period behind us, obviously, is to have the full
  280. information, and I think that is the desire of Admiral Turner and of
  281. the members of this committee.
  282. The Central Intelligence Agency drugged American citizens without their knowledge or consent. It used university facilities and personnel without their knowledge. It funded leading researchers, often
  283. without their knowledge.
  284. These institutes, these individuals, have a right to know who they
  285. are and how and when they were used. As of today, the Agency itself
  286. refuses to declassify the names of those institutions and individuals,
  287. quite appropriately, I might say, with regard to the individuals under
  288. the Privacy Act. It seems to me to be a fundamental responsibility to
  289. notify those individuals or institutions, rather. I think many of them
  290. were caught up in an unwitting manner to do research for the
  291. Agency. Many researchers, distinguished researchers, some of our
  292. most outstanding members of our scientific community, involved in
  293.  
  294. this network, now really do not know whether they were involved or
  295. not, and it seems to me that the whole health and climate in terms of
  296. our university and our scientific and health facilities are entitled to
  297. that response.
  298. So, I intend to do all I can to persuade the Agency to, at the very
  299. least, officially inform those institutions and individuals involved.
  300. Two years ago, when these abuses were first revealed, I introduced
  301. legislation, with Senator Schweiker and Senator Javits, designed to
  302. minimize the potential for any similar abuses in the future. That
  303. legislation expanded the jurisdiction of the National Commission on
  304. Human Subjects of Biomedical and Behavioral Research to cover all
  305. federally funded research involving human subjects. The research
  306. initially was just directed toward HEW activities, but this legislation
  307. covered DOD as well as the CIA.
  308. This Nation has a biomedical and behavioral research capability
  309. second to none. It has had for subjects of HEW funded research for
  310. the past 3 years a system for the protection of human subjects of biomedical and behavioral research second to none, and the Human Experimentation Commission has proven its value. Today's hearings
  311. and the record already established underscore the need to expand its
  312. jurisdiction.
  313. The CIA supported that legislation in 1975, and it passed the Senate
  314. unanimously last year. I believe it is needed in order to assure all
  315. our people that they will have the degree of protection in.human experimentation that they deserve and have every right to expect.
  316. Senator INOUITE. Thank you very much. Now we will proceed with
  317. the hearings.. Admiral Turner?
  318. [The prepared statement of Admiral Turner follows:]
  319. PREPARED STATEMENT OF ADMIRAL STANSFIELD TURNER, DIRECTOR OF CENTRAL
  320.  
  321. INTELLIGENCE
  322. Mr. Chairman: In my letter to you of July 15, 1977, I reported our recent discovery of seven boxes of documents related to Project MKULTRA, a closely held
  323. CIA project conducted from 1953-1964. As you may recall, MKULTRA was an
  324. "umbrella project" under which certain sensitive subprojects were funded, involving among other things research on drugs and behavioral modification. During the Rockefeller Commission and Church Committee investigations in 1975,
  325. the cryptonym became publicly known when details of the drug-related death of
  326. Dr. Frank Olson were publicized. In 1953 Dr. Olson, a civilian employee of the
  327. Army at Fort Detrick, leaped to his death from a hotel room window in New
  328. York City about a week after having unwittingly consumed LSD administered to
  329. him as an experiment at a meeting of LSD researchers called by CIA.
  330. Most of what was known about the Agency's involvement with behavioral
  331. drugs during the investigations in 1975 was contained in a report on Project
  332. MKULTRA prepared by the Inspector General's office in 1963. As a result of
  333. that report's recommendations, unwitting testing of drugs on U.S. citizens was
  334. subsequently discontinued. The MKULTRA-related report was made available to
  335. the Church Committee investigators and to the staff of Senator Kennedy's Subcommittee on Health. Until the recent discovery, it was believed that all of the
  336. MKULTRA files dealing with behavioral modification had been destroyed in
  337. 1973 on the orders of the then retiring Chief of the Office of Technical Service,
  338. with the authorization of the then DCI, as has been previously reported. Almost
  339. all of the people who had had any connection with the aspects of the project
  340. which interested Senate investigators in 1975 were no longer with the Agency
  341. at that time. Thus, there was little detailed knowledge of the 1IKULTRA subprojects available to CIA during the Church Committee investigations. This
  342. lack of available details, moreover, was probably not wholly attributable to the
  343.  
  344. destruction of MKULTRA files in 1973; the 1963 report on MKULTRA by the
  345. Inspector General notes on page 14: "Present practice is to maintain no records
  346. of the planning and approval of test programs."
  347. When I reported to you last on this matter, my staff had not yet had an
  348. opportunity to review the newly located material in depth. This has now been
  349. accomplished, and I am in a position to give you a description of the contents of
  350. the recovered material. I believe you will be most interested in the following
  351. aspects of the recent discovery:
  352. How the material was discovered and why it was not previously found;
  353. The nature of this recently located material;
  354. How much new information there is in the material which may not have
  355. been previously known and reported to Senate investigators; and
  356. What we believe the most significant aspects of this find to be.
  357. To begin, as to how we discovered these materials. The material had been
  358. sent to our Retired Records Center outside of Washington and was discovered
  359. there as a result of the extensive search efforts of an employee charged with responsibility for maintaining our holdings on behavioral drugs and for responding
  360. to Freedom of Information Act requests on this subject. During the Church
  361. Committee investigation in 1975, searches for MKULTRA-related material were
  362. made by examining both the active and retired records of all branches of CIA
  363. considered at all likely to have had association with MKULTRA documents. The
  364. retired records of the Budget and Fiscal Section of the Branch responsible for
  365. such work were not searched, however. This was because financial papers associated with sensitive projects such as MKULTRA were normally maintained
  366. by the Branch itself under the project file, not by the Budget and Fiscal Section.
  367. In the case at hand, however, the newly located material was sent to the Retired Records Center in 1970 by the Budget and Fiscal Section as part of its
  368. own retired holdings. The reason for this departure from normal procedure is not
  369. known. As a result of it, however, the material escaped retrieval and destruction
  370. in 1973 by the then-retiring Director of the Office as well as discovery in 1975
  371. by CIA officials responding to Senate investigators.
  372. The employee who located this material did so by leaving no stone unturned
  373. in his efforts to respond to FOIA requests. He reviewed all listings of material
  374. of this Branch stored at the Retired Records Center, including those of the
  375. Budget and Fiscal Section and, thus, discovered the MKULTRA-related docuinents which had been missed in the previous searches. In sum, the Agency failed
  376. to uncover these particular documents in 1973 in the process of attempting to
  377. destroy them; it similarly failed to locate them in 1975 in response to the Church
  378. Committee hearings. I am convinced that there was no attempt to conceal this
  379. material during the earlier searches.
  380. Next, as to the nature of the recently located material, it is important to
  381. realize that the recovered folders are finance folders. The bulk of the material in
  382. them consists of approvals for advance of funds, vouchers, accountings, and the
  383. like-most of which are not very informative as to the nature of the activities
  384. that were undertaken. Occasional project proposals or memoranda commenting on some aspect of a subproject are scattered throughout this material.
  385. In general, however, the recovered material does not include status reports or
  386. other documents relating to operational considerations or progress in the various
  387. subprojects, though some elaboration of the activities contemplated does appear.
  388. The recovered documents fall roughly into three categories:
  389. First, there are 149 MKULTRA subprojects, many of which appear to have
  390. some connection with research into behavioral modification, drug acquisition
  391. and testing or administering drugs surreptitiously.
  392. Second, there are two boxes of miscellaneous MKULTRA papers, including
  393. audit reports and financial statements from "cut-out" (i.e., intermediary)
  394. funding mechanisms used to conceal CIA's sponsorship of various research
  395. projects.
  396. Finally, there are 33 additional subprojects concerning certain intelligence
  397. activities previously funded under MKULTRA which have nothing to do
  398. either with behavioral modification, drugs, and toxins or with any other related matters.
  399. We have attempted to group the activities covered by the 149 subprojects into
  400. categories under descriptive headings. In broad outline, at least, this presents the
  401. contents of these files. The activities are placed in the following 15 categories:
  402.  
  403. 6
  404. 1. Research into the effects of behavioral drugs and/or alcohol:
  405. 17 subprojects probably not involving human testing;
  406. 14 subprojects definitely involving tests on human volunteers;
  407. 19 subprojects probably including tests on human volunteers. While not
  408. known, some of these subprojects may have included tests on unwitting subjects as well;
  409. 6 subprojects involving tests on unwitting subjects.
  410. 2. Research on hypnosis: 8 subprojects, including 2 involving hypnosis and drugs
  411. in combination.'
  412. 3. Acquisition of chemicals or drugs: 7 subprojects.
  413. 4. Aspects of magicians' art useful in covert operatibns: e.g., surreptitious delivery of drug-related materials: 4 subprojects.
  414. 5. Studies of human behavior, sleep research, and behavioral changes during
  415. psychotherapy: 9 subprojects.
  416. 6. Library searches and attendance at seminars and international conferences
  417. on behavioral modification: 6 subprojects.
  418. 7. Motivational studies, studies of defectors, assessment, and training techniques: 23 subprojects.
  419. 8. Polygraph research : 3 subprojects.
  420. 9. Funding mechanisms for MKULTRA external research activities: 3
  421. subprojects.
  422. 10. Research on drugs, toxins, and biologicals in human tissue; provision of
  423. exotic pathogens and the capability to incorporate them in effective delivery
  424. systems: 6 subprojects.
  425.  
  426. 11. Activities whose objectives cannot be determined from available documentation : 3 subprojects.
  427. 12. Subprojects involving funding support for unspecified activities connected
  428. with the Army's Special Operations Division at Ft. Detrick, Md. This activity is
  429. outline in Book I of the Church Oommittee Report, pp. 388-389. (See Appendix A,
  430. pp. 68-69. Under CIA's Project MKNAOMI, the Army Assisted CIA in developing, testing, and maintaining biological agents and delivery systems for use
  431. against humans as well as against animals and crops. The objectives of these
  432. subprojects cannot be identified from the recovered material beyond the fact
  433. that the money was to be used where normal funding channels would require
  434. more written or oral justification than appeared desirable for security reasons
  435. or where operational considerations dictated short lead times for purchases. About
  436. $11,000 was involved during this period 1953-1960: 3 subprojects.
  437. 13. Single subprojects in such areas as effects of electro-shock, harassment techniques for offensive use, analysis of extrasensory perception, gas propelled sprays
  438. and aerosols, and four subprojects involving crop and material sabotage.
  439. 14. One or two subprojects on each of the following:
  440. "Blood Grouping" research, controlling the activity of animals, energy
  441. storage and transfer in organic systems; and
  442. stimulus and response in biological systems.
  443. 15. Three subprojects cancelled before any work was done on them having to
  444. do with laboratory drug screening, research on brain concussion, and research
  445. on biologically active materials to be tested through the skin on human volunteers.
  446. Now, as to how much new the recovered material adds to what has previously
  447. been reported to the Church Committee and to Senator Kennedy's Subcommittee
  448. on Health on these topics, the answer is additional detail, for the most part: e.g.,
  449. the names of previously unidentified researchers and institutions associated on
  450. either a witting or unwitting basis with MKULTRA activities, and the names of
  451. CIA officials who approved or monitored the various subprojects. Some new substantive material is also present: e.g., details concerning proposals for experimentation and clinical testing associated with various research projects, and a
  452. possibly improper contribution by CIA to a private institution. However, the
  453. principal types of activities included have, for the most part, either been outlined
  454. to some extent or generally described in what was previously available to CIA
  455. in the way of documentation and was supplied by CIA to Senate investigators.
  456. For example:
  457. Financial disbursement records for the period 1960-1964 for 76 of the 149
  458. numbered MKULTRA subprojects had been recovered from the Office of Finance
  459. by CIA and were made available to the Church Committee investigators in August
  460. or September 1975.
  461. The 1963 Inspector General report on MKULTRA made available to both the
  462. Church Committee and Senator Kennedy's Subcommittee mentions electro-shock
  463.  
  464. and harassment substances (pp. 4, 16) ; covert testing
  465. on unwitting U.S. citizens
  466. (PP. 7, 10-12) ; the search for new materials through arrangements
  467. with specialists in universities, pharmaceutical houses, hospitals,
  468. state and federal institutions, and private research organizations (pp. 7, 9) ; and
  469. nical Service Division of CIA had initiated 144 subprojectsthe fact that the Techrelated to the control
  470. of human behavior between 1953-1963 (p. 21).
  471. The relevant section of a 1957 Inspector General report
  472. on the Technical Service Division was also made available to the Church Committee
  473. staff. That report
  474. discusses techniques for human assessment and unorthodox
  475. methods of communication (p. 201) ; discrediting and disabling materials
  476. which can be covertly
  477. administered (pp 201-202) ; studies on magicians' arts as applied
  478. to covert operations (p. 202) ; specific funding mechanisms for research performed
  479. outside of
  480. CIA (pp. 202-203, 205) ; research being done on "K" (knockout)
  481. tolerance, and hypnotism (p. 203) ; research on LSD (p. 204) material, alcohol
  482. anti-personnel
  483. harassment and assassination delivery systems including aerosol ;generators
  484. and
  485. other spray devices (pp. 206-208) ; the role of Fort Detrick in support
  486. Biological/Chemical Warfare capability (p. 208) ; and material sabotage of CIA's
  487. (p. 209). Much of this material is reflected in the Church Committee research
  488. Report,
  489. Book I, pp. 385-422. (See Appendix A, pp. 65-102).
  490. The most significant new data discovered are, first, the names of researchers
  491. and institutions who participated in the MKULTRA project and, secondly,
  492. possibly improper contribution by CIA to a private institution. We are now ina
  493. possession of the names of 185 non-government researchers and assistants who
  494. are identified in the recovered material dealing with the 149 subprojects. The
  495. names of 80 institutions where work was done or with which these people were
  496. affiliated are also mentioned.
  497. The institutions include 44 colleges or universities, 15 research foundations or
  498. chemical or pharmaceutical companies and the like, 12 hospitals or clinics (in addition to those associated with universities), and 3 penal institutions. While the
  499. identities of some of these people and institutions were known previously, the
  500. discovery of the new identities adds to our knowledge of MKULTRA.
  501. The facts as they pertain to the possibly improper contribution are as follows:
  502. One project involves a contribution of $375,000 to a building fund of a private
  503. medical Institution. The fact that a contribution was made was previously
  504. known; indeed it was mentioned in a 1957 Inspector General report on the
  505. Technical Service Division of CIA, pertinent portions of which had been reviewed by the Church Committee staff. The newly discovered material, however,
  506. makes it clear that this contribution was made through an intermediary, which
  507. made it appear to be a private donation. As a private donation, the contribution
  508. was then matched by federal funds. The institution was not made aware of the
  509. true source of the gift. This project was approved by the then DCI, and concurred
  510. in by CIA's top management at the time, including the then General Counsel who
  511. wrote an opinion supporting the legality of the contribution.
  512. The recently discovered documents give a greater insight into the scope of the
  513. unwitting drug testing but contribute little more than that. We now have collaborating information that some of the unwitting drug testing was carried on
  514. in safehouses in San Francisco and New York City, and we have identified that
  515. three individuals were involved In this undertaking as opposed to the previously
  516. reported one person. We also know now that some unwitting testing took place
  517. on criminal sexual psychopaths confined at a State hospital and that, additionally, research was done on a knock-out or "K" drug in parallel with research to
  518. develop pain killers for cancer patients.
  519. These, then are the principal findings identified to date in our review of the
  520. recovered material. As noted earlier,. we believe the detail on the identities of
  521. researchers and institutions involved in CIA's sponsorship of drugs and behavioral modification is a new element and one which poses a considerable problem. Most of the people and institutions involved are not aware of Agency
  522. sponsorship. We should certainly assume that the researchers and institutions
  523. which cooperated with CIA on a witting basis acted in good fai-th and in the
  524. belief that they were aiding their government in a legitimate and proper purpose.
  525. I believe we all have a moral obligation to these researchers and institutions to
  526. protect them from any unjustified embarrassment or damage to their reputations
  527. which revelation of their identities might bring. In addition, I have a legal
  528. obligation under the Privacy Act not to publicly disclose the names of the individual researchers without their consent. This is especially true, of course, for
  529.  
  530. those researchers and institutions which were unwitting participants in CIAsponsored activities.
  531. Nevertheless, recognizing the right and the need of both the Senate Select
  532. Committee on Intelligence and the Senate Subcommittee on Health to investigate
  533. the circumstances of these activities in whatever detail they consider necessary,
  534. I am providing your Committee with all of the names on a classified basis. I
  535. hope that this will facilitate your investigation while protecting the individuals
  536. and institutions involved. Let me emphasize that the MKULTRA events are 12
  537. to 25 years in the past. I assure you that the CIA is in no way engaged in either
  538. witting or unwitting testing of drugs today.
  539. Finally, I am working closely with the Attorney General and with the Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare on. this matter. We are making available
  540. to the Attorney General whatever materials he may deem necessary to any
  541. investigation he may elect to undertake. We are working with both the Attorney
  542. General and the Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare to determine
  543. whether it is practicable from this new evidence to attempt to identify any of
  544. the persons to whom drugs may have been administered unwittingly. No such
  545. names are part of these records, but we are working to determine if there are
  546. adequate clues to lead to their identification; and if so, how to go about fulfilling
  547. the Government's responsibilities in the matter.
  548.  
  549. TESTIMONY OF ADM. STANSFIELD TURNER, DIRECTOR OF CENTRAL
  550. INTELLIGENCE, ACCOMPANIED BY FRANK LAUBINGER, OFFICE
  551. OF TECHNICAL SERVICES; AL BRODY, OFFICE OF INSPECTOR
  552. GENERAL; ERNEST MAYERFIELD, OFFICE OF GENERAL COUNSEL;
  553. AND GEORGE L. CARY, LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL
  554. Admiral TURNER. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I would like to begin
  555. by thanking you and Senator Kennedy for having a joint hearing this
  556. morning. I hope this will expedite and facilitate our getting all the
  557. information that both of your committees need into the record quickly.
  558. I would like also to thank you both for prefacing the remarks today
  559. by reminding us all that the events about which we are here to talk
  560. are 12- to 24-years old. They in no way represent the current activities
  561. or policies of the Central Intelligence Agency.
  562. What we are here to do is to give you all the information that we
  563. now have and which we did not previously have on a subject known
  564. as Project MKULTRA, a project which took place from 1953 to 1964.
  565. It was an umbrella project under which there were numerous subprojects for research, among other things, on drugs and behavioral
  566. modification. What the new material that we offer today is a supplement to the considerable material that was made available in 1975,
  567. during the Church committee hearinas, and also to the Senate Subcommittee on Health and Scientific Research.
  568. At that time, the CIA offered up all of the information and documents it believed it had available. The principal one available at that
  569. time that gave the greatest amount of information on this subject
  570. was a report of the CIA's Inspector General written in 1963, and which
  571. led directly to the termination of this activity in 1964, 13 years ago.
  572. The information available in 1975 to the various investigating
  573. groups was indeed sparse, first because of the destruction of material
  574. that took place in 1973. as detailed by Senator Kennedy a minute ago,
  575. with the concurrence of the then Director of Central Tntelliaence and
  576. under the supervision of the Director of the Office of Technical
  577. Services that supervised Project MKULTRA.
  578.  
  579. The material in 1975 was also sparse because most of the CIA people
  580. who had been involved in 1953 to 1964 in this activity had retired from
  581. the Agency. I would further add that I think the material was sparse
  582. in part because it was the practice at that time not to keep detailed
  583. records in this category.
  584. For instance, the 1963 report of the Inspector General notes:
  585. Present practice is to maintain no records of the planning and approval of
  586. test programs.
  587.  
  588. In brief, there were few records to begin with and less after the
  589. destruction of 1973.
  590. What I would like to do now, though, is to proceed and let you know
  591. what the new material adds to our knowledge of this topic, and I
  592. will start by describing how the material was discovered and why it
  593. was not previously discovered. The material in question, some seven
  594. boxes, had been sent to our Retired Records Center outside of the
  595. Washington area. It was discovered there as the result of an extensive
  596. search by an employee charged with the responsibility for maintaining our holdings on behavioral drugs and for responding to Freedom
  597. of Information Act requests on this subject.
  598. During the Church committee investigation of 1975, searches for
  599. MKULTRA-related material were made by examining both the active
  600. and the retired records of all of the branches of CIA considered likely
  601. to have had an association with MKULTRA documents. The retired
  602. records of the Budget and Fiscal Section of the branch that was responsible for such work were not searched, however. This was because the
  603. financial paper associated with sensitive projects such as MKULTRA
  604. were normally maintained by the branch itself under the project title,
  605. MKULTRA, not by the Budget and Fiscal Section under a special
  606. budget file.
  607. In the case at hand, however, this newly located material had been
  608. sent to the Retired Records Center in 1970 by the Budget and Fiscal
  609. Section of this branch as part of its own retired holdings. In short, what
  610. should have been filed by the branch itself was filed by the Budget
  611. and Fiscal Section, and what should have been filed under the project
  612. title, MKULTRA, was filed under budget and fiscal matters. The reason for this departure from the normal procedure of that time is simply
  613. not known, and as a result of it, however, the material escaped retrieval
  614. and destruction in 1973, as well as discovery in 1975.
  615. The employee who located this material did so by leaving no stone
  616. unturned in his efforts to respond to a Freedom of Information Act
  617. request, or several of them, in fact. He reviewed all of the listings of
  618. material of this branch, stored at the Retired Records Center, including
  619. those of the Budget and Fiscal Section, and thus discovered the
  620. MKULTRA-related documents, which had been missed in the previous
  621. searches.
  622. In sum, the agency failed to uncover these particular documents in
  623. 1973, in the process of attempting to destroy them. It similarly failed
  624. to locate them in 1975, in response to the Church committee hearings.
  625. I am personally persuaded that there is no evidence of any attempt to
  626. conceal this material during the earlier searches. Moreover, as we will
  627. discuss as we proceed, I do not believe the material itself is such that
  628.  
  629. there would be a motive on the part of the CIA to withhold this, having
  630. disclosed what it did in 1975.
  631. Next, let me move to the nature of this recently located material.
  632. It is important to remember what I have just noted, that these folders
  633. that were discovered are finance folders. The bulk of the material in
  634. them consists of approvals for the advance of funds, vouchers, and
  635. accountings and such, most of which are not very informative as to
  636. the nature of the activities that they were supporting. Occasional project proposals or memoranda commenting on some aspect of a subproject
  637. are scattered throughout this material. In general, however, the recovered material does not include overall status reports or other documents relating to operational considerations, or to the progress on
  638. various subprojects, though some elaboration of the activities contemplated does appear from time to time.
  639. There are roughly three categories of projects. First, there are 149
  640. MKULTRA subprojects, many of which appear to have some connection with research into behavioral modification, drug acquisition and
  641. testing, or administering drugs surreptitiously. Second, there are two
  642. boxes of miscellaneous MKULTRA papers, including audit reports
  643. and financial statements from intermediary funding mechanisms used
  644. to conceal CIA sponsorship of various research projects.
  645. Finally, there are 33 additional subprojects concerning certain intelligence activities previously funded under MKULTRA but which
  646. have nothing to do either with behavioral modifications, drugs and
  647. toxins, or any closely related matter.
  648. We have attempted to group the activities covered by the 149 subprojects into categories under descriptive headings. In broad outline,
  649. at least, this presents the contents of these files. The following 15
  650. categories are the ones we have divided these into.
  651. First, research into the effects of behavioral drugs and/or alcohol.
  652. Within this, there are 17 projects probably not involving human testing. There are 14 subprojects definitely involving testing on human
  653. volunteers. There are 19 subprojects probably including tests on human
  654. 'volunteers and 6 subprojects involving tests on unwitting
  655. human beings.
  656. Second, there is research on hypnosis, eight subprojects, including
  657. two involving hypnosis and drugs in combination.
  658. Third, there are seven projects on the acquisition of chemicals or
  659. drugs.
  660. Fourth, four subprojects on the aspects of the magician's art, useful
  661. in covert operations, for instance, the surreptitious delivery of drugrelated materials.
  662. Fifth, there are nine projects on studies of human behavior, sleep
  663. research, and behavioral change during psychotherapy.
  664. Sixth, there are projects on library searches and attendants at seminars and international conferences on behavioral modifications.
  665. Seventh, there are 23 projects on motivational studies, studies of
  666. defectors, assessments of behavior and training techniques.
  667. Eighth, there are three subprojects on polygraph research.
  668. Ninth, there are three subprojects on funding mechanisms for
  669. MKULTRA's external research activities.
  670.  
  671. Tenth, there are six subprojects on research on drugs, toxins, and
  672. biologicals in human tissue, provision of exotic pathogens, and the
  673. capability to incorporate them in effective delivery systems.
  674. Eleventh, there are three subprojects on activities whose nature
  675. simply cannot be determined.
  676. Twelfth, there are subprojects involving funding support for unspecified activities conducted with the Army Special Operations Division at Fort Detrich, Md. This activity is outlined in Book I of the
  677. Church committee report, pages 388 to 389. (See Appendix A, pp.
  678. 68-69).
  679. Under CIA's Project MKNAOMI, the Army assisted the CIA in
  680. developing, testing, and maintaining biological agents and delivery
  681. systems-for use against humans as well as against animals and crops.
  682. Thirteenth, there are single subprojects in such areas as the effects
  683. of electroshock, harassment techniques for offensive use, analysis of
  684. extrasensory perception, gas propelled sprays and aerosols, and four
  685. subprojects involving crop and material sabotage.
  686. Fourteenth, one or two subprojects on each of the following: blood
  687. grouping research; controlling the activities of animals; energy storage and transfer in organic systems; and stimulus and response in
  688. biological systems.
  689. Finally, 15th, there are three subprojects canceled before any work
  690. was done on them having to do with laboratory drug screening, research on brain concussion, and research on biologically active
  691. materials.
  692. Now, let me address how much this newly discovered material adds
  693. to what has previously been reported to the Church committee and
  694. to Senator Kennedy's Subcommittee on Health. The answer is basically additional detail. The principal types of activities included in
  695. these documents have for the most part been outlined or to some
  696. extent generally described in what was previously available in the
  697. way of documentation and which was supplied by the CIA to the
  698. Senate investigators.
  699. For example, financial disbursement records for the period of 1960
  700. to 1964 for 76 of these 149 subprojects had been recovered by the
  701. Office of Finance at CIA and were made available to the Church
  702. committee investigators. For example, the 1963 Inspector General
  703. report on MKULTRA made available to both the Church committee
  704. and the Subcommittee on Health mentions electroshock and harassment substances, covert testing on unwitting U.S. citizens, the search
  705. for new materials through arrangements with specialists in hospitals
  706. and universities, and the fact that the Technical Service Division of
  707. CIA had initiated 144 subprojects related to the control of human
  708. behavior.
  709. For instance also, the relevant section of a 1957 Inspector General
  710. report was also made available to the Church committee staff, and
  711. that report discusses the techniques for human assessment and unorthodox methods of communication, discrediting and disabling materials which can be covertly administered, studies on magicians' arts
  712. as applied to covert operations, and other similar topics.
  713. The most significant new data that has been discovered are, first,
  714. the names of researchers and institutions who participated in
  715.  
  716. MKULTRA projects, and second, a possibly improper contribution
  717. by the CIA to a private institution. We are now in the possession of the names of 185 nongovernment researchers and assistants
  718. who are identified in the recovered material dealing with these 149
  719. subprojects.
  720. There are also names of 80 institutions where work was done or
  721. with which these people were affiliated. The institutions include 44
  722. colleges or universities, 15 research foundation or chemical or pharmaceutical companies or the like, 12 hospitals or clinics, in addition to
  723. those associated with the universities, and 3 penal institutions.
  724. While the identities of some of these people and institutions were
  725. known previously, the discovery of the new identities adds to our
  726. knowledge of MKULTRA.
  727. The facts as they pertain to the possibly improper contribution are
  728. as follows. One project involves a contribution of $375,000 to a building fund of a private medical institution. The fact that that contribution was made was previously known. Indeed, it was mentioned
  729. in the 1957 report of the Inspector General on the Technical Service
  730. Division of CIA that supervised MKULTRA, and pertinent portions
  731. of this had been reviewed by the Church committee staff.
  732. The newly discovered material, however, makes it clear that this
  733. contribution was made through an intermediary, which made it appear to be a private donation. As a private donation, the contribution
  734. was then matched by Federal funds. The institution was not made
  735. aware of the true source of the gift. This project was approved Ithe then Director of Central Intelligence and concurred in by CIA's
  736. top management including the then General Counsel, who wrote an
  737. opinion supporting the legality of the contribution.
  738. The recently discovered documents also give greater insight into
  739. the scope of the unwitting nature of the drug testing, but contribute
  740. little more than that. We now do have corroborating information that
  741. some of the unwitting drug testing was carried out in what is known
  742. in the intelligence trade as safe houses in San Francisco and in New
  743. York City, and we have identified that three individuals were involved in this undertaking, whereas we previously reported there was
  744. only one person.
  745. We also know now that some unwitting testing took place on criminal sexual psychopaths confined at a State hospital, and that additionally research was done on a knockout or K drug in parallel with
  746. research to develop painkillers for cancer patients.
  747. These, then, are the principal findings identified to date in our review of this recovered material. As noted earlier, we believe the detail on the identities of researchers and institutions involved in CIA
  748. sponsorship of drug and behavioral modification research is a new
  749. element and one which poses a considerable problem. Most of the people and institutions involved were not aware of CIA sponsorship. We
  750. should certainly assume that the researchers and institutions which
  751. cooperated with CIA on a witting basis acted in good faith and in
  752. the belief that they were aiding their Government in a legitimate and
  753. proper purpose.
  754. I believe that we all have a moral obligation to these researchers
  755. and institutions to protect them from any unjustified embarrassment
  756.  
  757. or damage to their reputations which revelation of their identities
  758. might bring. In addition, I have a legal obligation under the Privacy
  759. Act not to publicly disclose the names of the individual researchers
  760. without their consent.
  761. This is especially true, of course, for those researchers and institutions which were unwitting participants in CIA sponsored activities.
  762. Nonetheless, Mr. Chairman, I certainly recognize the right and the
  763. need of both the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence and the
  764. Senate Subcommittee on Health and Scientific Research to investigate
  765. the circumstances of these activities in whatever detail you consider
  766. necessary. I am providing your committee with all of the documentation, including all of the names, on a classified basis. I hope that this
  767. will facilitate your investigation while still protecting the individuals
  768. and the institutions involved.
  769. Let me emphasize again that the MKULTRA events are 12 to 24
  770. years in the past, and I assure you that CIA is in no way engaged in
  771. either witting or unwitting testing of drugs today.
  772. Finally, I am working closely with the Attorney General on this
  773. matter. We are making available to the Attorney General whatever
  774. materials he may deem necessary to any investigations that he may
  775. elect to undertake. Beyond that, we are also working with the Attorney
  776. General to determine whether it is practicable from this new evidence
  777. to identify any of the persons to whom drugs may have been administered unwittingly. No such names are part of these records. We have
  778. not identified the individuals to whom drugs were administered, but
  779. we are trying now to determine if there are adequate clues to lead to
  780. their identification, and if so how best to go about fulfilling the Government's responsibilities in this matter.
  781. Mr. Chairman, as we proceed with that process of attempting to
  782. identify the individuals and then determining what is our proper responsibility to them, I will keep both of these committees fully advised. I thank you, sir.
  783. Senator INouYE. Thank you very much, Admiral Turner. Your
  784. spirit of cooperation is much appreciated. I would like to announce to
  785. the committee that in order to give every member an opportunity to
  786. participate in this hearing, that we would set a time limit of 10 minutes
  787. per Senator.
  788. Admiral Turner, please give this committee the genesis of MKUL
  789. TRA. Who or what committee or commission or agency was responsible for dreaming up this grandiose and sinister project, and why was
  790. it necessary? What is the rationale or justification for such a project
  791. and was the President of the United States aware of this?
  792. Admiral TURNER. Mr. Chairman. I am going to ask Mr. Brody on
  793. my right, who is a long-time member of the CIA to address that in
  794. more detail. I believe everything that we know about the genesis was
  795. turned over to the Church committee and is contained in that material. Basically, it was a CIA-initiated project. It started out of a
  796. concern of our being taken advantage of by other powers who would
  797. use drugs against our personnel, and it was approved in the Agency. I
  798. have asked the question you just asked me, and have been assured that
  799. there is no evidence within the Agency of any involvement at higher
  800. echelons, the White House, for instance, or specific approval. That
  801. does not say there was not, but we have no such evidence.
  802.  
  803. 96-408 0 - 77 - 2
  804.  
  805. Mr. Brody, would you amplify on my comments there, please?
  806. Mr. BRODY. Mr. Chairman, I really have very little to add to that.
  807. To my knowledge, there was no Presidential knowledge of this project at the time. It was a CIA project, and as the admiral said, it was
  808. a project designed to attempt to counteract what was then thought to
  809. be a serious threat by our enemies of using drugs against us. Most of
  810. what else we know about it is in the Senate Church committee report.
  811. Senator INOUYE. Were the authorized members of the Congress
  812. made aware of this project through the budgetary process?
  813. Mr. BRODY. We have no knowledge of that, sir.
  814. Senator INOUYE. Are you suggesting that it was intentionally kept
  815. away from the Congress and the President of the United States?
  816. Admiral TURNER. No, sir. We are only saying that we have no evidence one way or the other as to whether the Congress was informed
  817. of this particular project. There are no records to indicate.
  818. Senator INOUYE. Admiral Turner, are you personally satisfied by
  819. actual investigation that this newly discovered information was not
  820. intentionally kept away from the Senate of the United States ?
  821. Admiral TURNER. I have no way to prove that, sir. That is my conviction from everything I have seen of it.
  822. Senator INOUYE. Now, we have been advised that these documents
  823. were initially discovered in March of this year, and you were notified
  824. in July of this year, or June of this year, and the committee was notified in July. Can you tell us why the Director of Central Intelligence
  825. was notified 3 months after its initial discovery, why the delay?
  826. Admiral TURNER. Yes, sir. All this started with several Freedom of
  827. Information Act requests, and Mr. Laubinger on my left was the individual who took it upon himself to pursue these requests with great
  828. diligence, and got permission to go to the Retired Records Center, and
  829. then made the decision to look not only under what would be the expected subject files, but through every file with which the branch that
  830. conducted this type of activity had any conceivable connection.
  831. Very late in March, he discovered these seven boxes. He arranged
  832. to have them shipped from the Retired Records Center to Washington, to our headquarters. They arrived in early April. He advised his
  833. appropriate superiors, who asked him how long he thought it would
  834. take him to go through these and screen them appropriately, clear
  835. them for Freedom of Information Act release.
  836. There are, we originally estimated, 5,000 pages here. We now think
  837. that was an underestimation, and it may be closer to 8,000 pages. He
  838. estimated it would take about 45 days or into the middle of May to
  839. do that. He was told to proceed, and as be did so there was nothing
  840. uncovered in the beginning of these 149 cases that appeared particularly startling or particularly additive to the knowledge that had already been given to the Church committee, some details, but no major
  841. revelations:
  842. He and his associates proceeded with deliberateness, but not a great
  843. sense of urgency. There were other interfering activities that came
  844. and demanded his time also. He was not able to put 100 percent of his
  845. time on it, and there did not appear to be cause for a great rush here.
  846. We were trying to be responsive to the Freedom of Information Act
  847. request within the limits of our manpower and our priorities.
  848.  
  849. In early June, however, he discovered two projects, the one related
  850. to K drugs and the one related to the funding at the institution, and
  851. realized immediately that he had substantial new information, and
  852. he immediately reported this to his superiors.
  853. Two actions were taken. One was to notify the lawyers of the
  854. principal Freedom of Information Act requestor that we would have
  855. substantial new material and that it would be forthcoming as rapidly as
  856. possible, and the second was to start a memorandum up the chain
  857. that indicated his belief that we should notify the Senate Select Comimittee on Intelligence of this discovery because of the character at least
  858. of these two documents.
  859. As that proceeded up from the 13th of June, at each echelon we had
  860. to go through the legal office, the legislative liaison office and at each
  861. echelon about the same question was asked of him: Have you gone
  862. through all of this, so that when we notify the Senate Select Committee we do not notify half of the important relevations and not the
  863. other half? The last thing I want, Mr. Chairman, is in any way
  864. to
  865. be on any topic, give the appearance on any topic of being recalcitrant,
  866. reluctant, or having to have you drag things out of me, and my subordinates, much to my pleasure, had each asked, have you really gone
  867. through these 8,000 pages enough to know that we are not going to
  868. uncover a bombshell down -atthe bottom?
  869. By late June, about the 28th, this process reached my deputy. He
  870. notified me after his review of it on the 7th of July, which is the first
  871. I knew of it. I began reading into it. I asked the same probing question directly. I then notified my superiors, and on the 15th delivered
  872. to you my letter letting you know that we had this, and we have been
  873. working, many people, many hours since then, to be sure that what we
  874. are telling you today does include all the relevant material.
  875. Senator INOUYE. I would like to commend Mr. Laubinger for his
  876. diligence and expertise, but was this diligence the result of the Freedom of Information Act or could this diligence have been exercised
  877. during the Church hearings? Why was it not exercised?
  878. Admiral TURNER. There is no question that theoretically this diligence could have been exercised at any time, and it may well be that
  879. the Freedom of Information Act has made us more aware of this.
  880. Would you speak for yourself, please.
  881. Mr. LAUBINGER. I really don't attribute it, Senator, to diligence so
  882. much as thoroughness. If you can imagine the pressures under an
  883. organization trying to respond, which I think the CIA did at the time
  884. of the Church committee hearings, the hallways of the floor I am on
  885. were full of boxes from our records center. Every box that anyone
  886. thought could possibly contain anything was called up for search. It
  887. was one of a frantic effort to comply.
  888. When the pressure of that situation cools down, and you can start
  889. looking at things systematically, you are apt to find things that you
  890. wouldn't under the heat of a crash program, and that is what happened
  891. here.
  892. Senator INOUYE. Thank you very much. Senator Kennedy?
  893.  
  894. Senator KENNEDY. Admiral Turner, this is an enormously distressing report that you give to the American Congress and to the American
  895. people today. Granted, it happened many years ago, but what we are
  896.  
  897. basically talking about is an activity which took place in the country
  898. that involved the perversion and the corruption of many of our outstanding research centers in this country, with CIA funds, where some
  899. of our top researchers were unwittingly involved in research sponsored by the Agency in which they had no knowledge of the background or the support for.
  900. Much of it was done with American citizens who were completely
  901. unknowing in terms of taking various drugs, and there are perhaps
  902. any number of Americans who are walking around today on the east
  903. coast or west coast who were given drugs, with all the kinds of physical
  904. and psychological damage that can be caused. We have gone over that
  905. in very careful detail, and it is significant and severe indeed.
  906. I do not know what could be done in a less democratic country
  907. that would be more alien to our own traditions than was really done
  908. in this narrow area, and as you give this report to the committee, I
  909. would like to get some sense of your own concern about this type of
  910. activity, and how you react, having assumed this important responsibility with the confidence of President Carter and the overwhelming
  911. support, obviously, of the. Congress, under this set of circumstances.
  912. I did not get much of a feeling in reviewing your statement here this
  913. morning of the kind of abhorrence to this type of past activity which
  914. I think the American people would certainly deplore and which I
  915. believe that you do, but could you comment upon that question, and also
  916. perhaps give us what ideas you have to insure that it cannot happen
  917. again?
  918. Admiral TURNER. Senator Kennedy, it is totally abhorrent to me to
  919. think of using a human being as a guinea pig and in any way jeopardizing his life and his health, no matter how great the cause. I am not
  920. here to pass judgment on my predecessors, but I can assure you that
  921. this is totally beyond the pale of my contemplation of activities that
  922. the CIA or any other of our intelligence agencies should undertake.
  923. I am taking and have taken what I believe are adequate steps to
  924. insure that such things are not continuing today.
  925. Senator KENNEDY. Could you tell us a little bit about that?
  926. Admiral TURNER. I have asked for a special report assuring me that.
  927. there are no drug activities extant, that is, drug activities that involve
  928. experimentation. Obviously, we collect intelligence about drugs and
  929. druo use in other countries, but there are no experimentations being
  930. conducted by the Central Intelligence Agency, and I have had a special
  931. check made because of another incident that was uncovered some years
  932. ago about the unauthorized retention of some toxic materials at the
  933. CIA. I have had an actual inspection made of the storage places and
  934. the certification from the people in charge of those that there are no
  935. such chemical biological materials present in our keeping, and I have
  936. issued express orders that that shall not be the case.
  937. Beyond that, I have to rely in large measure on my sense of command and direction of the people and their knowledge of the attitude
  938. I have just expressed to you in this regard.
  939. Senator KENNEDY. I think that is very commendable.
  940. Admiral TURNER. Thank you, sir.
  941. Senator KENNEDY. I think it is important that the American people
  942. understand that.
  943.  
  944. 17
  945. You know, much of the research which is our area of interest that
  946. of acwas being done by the Agency and the whole involved sequence
  947. in a
  948. done
  949. been
  950. have
  951. could
  952. convinced
  953. am
  954. I
  955. Agency,
  956. the
  957. by
  958. done
  959. tivities
  960. InstiNational
  961. the
  962. of
  963. programs
  964. legitimate way through the research
  965. tutes of Mental Health, other sponsored activities. I mean, that is some
  966. other question, but I think you went to an awful lot of trouble, where
  967. these things could have been.
  968. Let me ask you specifically, on the followup of MKULTRA, are
  969. there now-I think you have answered, but I want to get a complete
  970. answer about any experimentations that are being done on human beings., whether it is drugs or behavioral alterations or patterns or any
  971. support, either directly or indirectly, being provided by the Agency in
  972. terms of any experimentation on human beings.
  973. Admiral TURNER. There is no experimentation with drugs on human
  974. beings, witting or unwitting, being conducted in any way.
  975. Senator KENNEDY. All right. Or being supported indirectly? I mean,
  976. are you contracted out?
  977. Admiral TURNER. Or being in any way supported.
  978. Senator KENNEDY. All right. How about the nondrug experimentation our Committee has seen-psychosurgery, for example, or psychological research?
  979. Admiral TURNER. We are continually involved in what we call assessment of behavior. For instance, we are trying to continually improve our polygraph procedures to, you know, assess whether a person
  980. is lying or not. This does not involve any tampering with the individnal body. This involves studying records of people's behavior under
  981. different circumstances, and so on, but it is not an experimental thing.
  982. Have I described that accurately, Al?
  983. Mr. BRODY. Yes.
  984. Senator KENNEDY. Well, it is limited to those areas?
  985. Admiral TURNER. Yes; it does not involve attempting to modify behavior. It only involves studying behavior conditions, but not trying
  986. to actively modify it, as was one of the objectives of MKULTRA.
  987. Senator KENNEDY. Well, we are scarce on time, but I am interested
  988. in the other areas besides polygraph where you are doing it. Maybe
  989. you can either respond now or submit it for the record, if you would do
  990. that. Would you provide that for the record?
  991. Admiral TURNER. Yes.
  992. [The material on psychological assessments follows:]
  993. Psychological assessments are performed as a service to officers in the operations directorate who recruit and/or handle agents. Except for people involved
  994. in training courses, the subjects of the assessments are foreign nationals. The
  995. assessments are generally done to determine the most successful tactic to persuade
  996. the subject to accept covert employment by the CIA, and to make an appraisal of
  997. his reliability and truthfulness.
  998. A majority of the work is done by a staff of trained psychologists, some of
  999. whom are stationed overseas. The assessments they do may be either direct or
  1000. indirect. Direct assessments involve a personal interview of the subject by the
  1001. psychologist. When possible the subject is asked to complete a formal "intelligence test" which is actually a disguised psychological test. Individuals being
  1002. assessed are not given drugs, nor are they subjected to physical harassment or
  1003. torture. When operating conditions are such that a face-to-face interview is not
  1004. possible, the psychologist may do an indirect assessment, using as source materials descriptions of the subject by others, interviews with people who know
  1005. him, specimens of his writings, etc.
  1006.  
  1007. The other psychological assessments involve handwriting analysis or graphological assessment. The work is done by a pair of trained graphologists, assisted
  1008. by a small number of measurement technicians. They generally require at least
  1009. a page of handwritten script by the subject. Measurements are made of about
  1010. 30 different writing characteristics, and these are charted and furnished to the
  1011. graphologist for assessments.
  1012. The psychologists also give courses in psychological assessment to group of
  1013. operations officers, to sharpen their own capabilities to size up people. As part of
  1014. the training course, the instructor does a psychological assessment of each
  1015. student. The students are witting participants, and results are discussed with
  1016. them.
  1017. It is important to reiterate that psychological assessments are only a service
  1018. to the operations officers. In the final analysis, it is the responsibility of the
  1019. operations officer to decide how a potential agent should be approached, or to
  1020. make a judgement as to whether any agent is telling the truth.
  1021.  
  1022. Admiral TURNER. The kind of thing we are interested in is, what
  1023. will motivate a man to become an agent of the United States in a difficult situation. We have to be familiar with that kind of attitudinal
  1024. response that we can expect from people we approach to for one reason
  1025. or another become our spies, but I will be happy to submit a very
  1026. specific listing of these.
  1027. Senator KENNEDY. Would you do that for the committee?
  1028. In the followups, in the MKSEARCH, in the OFTEN, and the
  1029. CHICKWIT, could you give us also a report on those particular
  1030. programs?
  1031. Admiral TURNER. Yes, sir.
  1032. Senator KENNEDY. Did they involve experimentation, human
  1033. experimentation?
  1034. Admiral TURNER. No, sir.
  1035. Senator KENNEDY. None of them?
  1036. Admiral TURNER. Let me say this, that CHICKWIT program is the
  1037. code name for the CIA participation in what was basically a Department of Defense program. This program was summarized and reported to the Church committee, to the Congress, and I have since they
  1038. have been rementioned in the press in the last 2 days here, I have not
  1039. had time to go through and personally review them. I have ascertained
  1040. that all of the files that we had and made available before are intact,
  1041. and I have put a special order out that nobody will enter those files
  1042. or in any way touch them without my permission at this point, but
  1043. they are in the Retired Records Center outside of Washington, and
  1044. they are available.
  1045. I am not prepared to give you full details on it, because I simply
  1046. haven't read into that part of our history, but in addition I would suggest when we want to get into that we should get the Department of
  1047. Defense in with us.
  1048. Senator KENNEDY. Well, you will supply that information to the
  1049. Intelligence Committee, the relevant, I mean, the health aspects, obviously, and the research we are interested in?
  1050. Admiral TURNER. Yes, sir.
  1051. Senator KENNEDY. Will you let us know, Admiral Turner?
  1052. Admiral TURNER. I will be happy to.
  1053. [See p. 169 for the material referred to.]
  1054. Senator KENNEDY. Thank you. I am running out of time. Do you
  1055. support the extension of the protection of human subjects legislation
  1056. to include the CIA and the DOD? You commented favorably on that
  1057.  
  1058. before, and I am hopeful we can get that on the calendar early in
  1059. September, and that is our strong interest.
  1060. Admiral TURNER. The CIA certainly has no objection to that proposed legislation, sir. It is not my role in the administration to be the
  1061. supporter of it or the endorser of it.
  1062. Senator KENNEDY. As a personal matter, since you have reviewed
  1063. these subjects, would you comment? I know it is maybe unusual, but
  1064. you can understand what we are attempting to do.
  1065. Admiral TURNER. Yes, sir.
  1066. Senator KENNEDY. From your own experience in the agency, you
  1067. can understand the value of it.
  1068. Just finally, in your own testimony now with this additional information, it seems quite apparent to me that you can reconstruct in very
  1069. careful detail this whole project in terms of the responsible CIA
  1070. officials for the program. You have so indicated in your testimony.
  1071. Now with the additional information, and the people, that have been
  1072. revealed in the examination of the documents, it seems to be pretty
  1073. clear that you can track that whole program in very careful detail,
  1074. and I would hope, you know, that you would want to get to the bottom
  1075. of it, as the Congress does as well. I will come back to that in my next
  1076. round. Thank you very much.
  1077. Senator INOUYE. Senator Goldwater?
  1078. Senator GOLDWATER. I have no questions.
  1079. Senator INOUYE. Senator Schweiker?
  1080. Senator SCHWEIKER. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
  1081. Admiral Turner, I would like to go back to your testimony on page
  1082. 12, where you discuss the contribution to the building fund of a
  1083. private medical institution. You state, "Indeed, it was mentioned in a
  1084. 1957 Inspector General report on the Technical Service Division of
  1085. CIA, pertinent portions of which had been reviewed by the Church
  1086. committee staff." I would like to have you consider this question very
  1087. carefully. I served as a member of the original Church committee.
  1088. My staffer did a lot of the work that you are referring to here. He
  1089. made notes on the IG's report. My question to you is, are you saying
  1090. that the section that specifically delineates an improper contribution
  1091. was in fact given to the Church committee staff to see?
  1092. Admiral TURNER. The answer to your question is "Yes." The information that a contribution had been made was made available, to the
  1093. best of my knowledge.
  1094. Senator SCHWEIKER. Only certain sections of the report were made
  1095.  
  1096. available. The report had to be reviewed out at Langley; it was not
  1097. reviewed here, and copies were not given to us here. I just want you to
  1098. carefully consider what you are saying, because the only record we
  1099. have are the notes that the staff took on anything that was of
  1100. significance.
  1101. Admiral TURNER. My understanding was that Mr. Maxwell was
  1102.  
  1103. shown the relevant portion of this report that disclosed that the contribution had been made.
  1104. Senator SCHWEIKER. To follow this up further, I'd like to say that
  1105. I think there was a serious flaw in the way that the IG report was
  1106. handled and the Church committee was limited. I am not making any
  1107. accusations, but because of limited access to the report, we have a situ-
  1108.  
  1109. ation where it is not even clear whether we actually saw that material
  1110. or not, simply because we could not keep a copy of the report under
  1111. the procedures we had to follow. We were limited by notetaking, and
  1112. so it is rather ambiguous as to just what was seen and what was not
  1113. seen. I certainly hope that the new Intelligence Committee will not
  1114. be bound by procedures that so restrict its ability to exercise effective
  1115. oversight.
  1116. I have a second question. Does it concern you, Admiral, that we used
  1117. a subterfuge which resulted in the use of Federal construction grant
  1118. funds to finance facilities for these sorts of experiments on our own
  1119. people? Because as I understand what you are saying, while the CIA
  1120. maybe only put up $375,000, this triggered a response on the part of
  1121. the Federal Government to provide on a good faith basis matching
  1122. hospital funds at the same level. We put up more than $1 million of
  1123. matching funds, some based on an allegedly private donation which
  1124. was really CIA money.
  1125. Isn't there something basically wrong with that?
  1126. Admiral TURNER. I certainly believe there is. As I stated, the General Counsel of the CIA at that time rendered a legal opinion that
  1127. this was a legal undertaking, and again I am hesitant to go back and
  1128. revisit the atmosphere, the laws, the attitudes at that time, so whether
  1129. the counsel was on good legal ground or not, I am not enough of a
  1130. lawyer to be sure, but it certainly would occur to me if it happened
  1131. today as a very questionable activity.
  1132. Senator SCH1WEIKER. Well, I think those of us who worked on and
  1133. amended the Hill-Burton Act and other hospital construction assistance laws over the years, would have a rather different opinion on
  1134. the legal intent or object of Congress in passing laws to provide hospital construction project money. These funds weren't intended for
  1135. this.
  1136. It reminds me a little bit of the shellfish toxin situation which turned
  1137. up when I was on the Church committee. The Public Health Service
  1138. was used to produce a deadly poison with Public Health money. Here
  1139. we are using general hospital construction money to carry on a series of
  1140. drug experiments.
  1141. Admiral TURNER. Excuse me, sir. If I could just be, I think, accurate, I don't think any of this $375,000 or the matching funds were
  1142. used to conduct drug experiments. They were used to build the hospital. Now, the CIA then put more money into a foundation that was
  1143. conducting research on the CIA's behalf supposedly in that hospital, so
  1144. the intent was certainly there, but the money was not used for
  1145. experimentation.
  1146. Senator SCHWEIKER. Well, I understand it was used for bricks and
  1147. mortar, but the bricks were used to build the facility where the experiments were carried on; were they not?
  1148. Admiral TURNER. We do not have positive evidence that they were.
  1149. It certainly would seem that that was the intent, but I do not want to
  1150. draw inferences hereSenator SCHWEIKER. Well, why else would they give this money for
  1151. the building fund if the building was not used for a purpose that
  1152. benefited the CIA program?
  1153. Admiral TURNER. I certainly draw the inference that the CIA
  1154. expected to benefit from it, and some of the wording says the General
  1155.  
  1156. Counsel's opinion was that this was legal only if the CIA was going
  1157. to derive adequate benefit from it, but, sir, there is no evidence of what
  1158. benefit was derived.
  1159. Senator ScHW-EIKER. There must have been some pretty good benefits
  1160. at stake. The Atomic Energy Commission was to bear a share of the
  1161. cost, and when they backed out for some reason or another, the CIA
  1162. picked up part of their tab. So, at two different points there were
  1163. indications that CIA decisionmakers thought there was great benefit
  1164. to be derived from whatever happened within the brick and mortar
  1165. walls of that facility.
  1166. Admiral TURNER. You are absolutely right. I am only taking the
  1167. position that I cannot substantiate that there was benefit derived.
  1168. Senator SCHWEIKER. The agreement documents say that the CIA
  1169. would have access to one-sixth of the space involved in the construction
  1170. of the wing, so how would you enter into an agreement that specifically
  1171. says that you will have access to and use of one-sixth of the space and
  1172. not perform something in that space? I cannot believe it was empty.
  1173. Admiral TURNER. Sir, I am not disputing you at all, but both of us
  1174. are saying that the inference is that one-sixth of the space was used,
  1175. that experimentation was done, and so on, but there is no factual evidence of what went on as a result of that payment or what went on in
  1176. that hospital. It is just missing. It is not that it didn't happen.
  1177. Senator SCHTWEIKER. Admiral Turner, one other
  1178. Senator KENNEDY. Would the Senator yield on that point?
  1179. Senator SCHWEIKEu. I understand that in the agency's documents
  1180. on the agreement it was explicitly stated that one-sixth of the facility
  1181. would be designated for CIA use and made available for CIA research. Are you familiarMr. BnoDY. Senator, as I recall, you are right in that there is a mention of one-sixth, but any mention at all has to do with planning. There
  1182. are no subsequent reports as to what happened after the construction
  1183. took place.
  1184. Senator SCIWKEnR. Admiral Turner, I read in the New York Times
  1185. that part of this series of MKULTRA experiments involved an arrangement with the Federal Bureau of Narcotics to test LSD surreptitiously on unwitting patrons in bars in New York and San
  1186. Francisco. Some of the subjects became violently ill and were hospitalized. I wonder if you would just briefly describe what we were
  1187. doing there and how it was carried out? I assume it was through a safe
  1188. house operation. I don't believe your statement went into much detail.
  1189. Admiral TURNER. I did mention the safe house operation in my
  1190. statement, sir, and that is how these were carried out. What we have
  1191. learned from the new documentation is the location and the dates at
  1192. which the safe houses were run by the CIA and the identification of
  1193. three individuals who were associated with running those safe houses.
  1194. We know something about the construction work that was done in
  1195. them because there were contracts for this. Beyond that, we are pretty
  1196. much drawing inferences as to the things that went on as to what you
  1197. are saying here.
  1198. Senator SCHWEIKER. Well, the subjects were unwitting. You can
  1199. infer that much, right?
  1200. Admiral TURNER. Right.
  1201.  
  1202. Senator SCHWEIKER. If you happened to be at the wrong bar at the
  1203. wrong place and time, you got it.
  1204. Mr. BRODY. Senator, that would be-contacts were made, as we
  1205. understand it, in bars, et cetera, and then the people may have been
  1206. invited to these safe houses. There really isn't any indication as to
  1207. the fact that this took place in the bars.
  1208. Admiral TURNER. We are trying to be very precise with you, sir, and
  1209. not draw an inference here. There are 6 cases of these 149 where we
  1210. have enough evidence in this new documentation to substantiate that
  1211. there was unwitting testing and some of that involves these safe
  1212. houses. There are other cases where it is ambiguous as to whether the
  1213. testing was witting or voluntary. There are others where it was clearly
  1214. voluntary.
  1215. Senator SCHWEIKER. Of course, after a few drinks, it is questionable
  1216. whether informed consent means anything to a- person in a bar
  1217. anyway.
  1218. Admiral TURNER. Well, we don't have any indication that all these
  1219. cases where it is ambiguous involved drinking of any kind. There are
  1220. cases in penal institutions where it is not clear whether the prisoner
  1221. was given a choice or not. I don't know that he wasn't given a choice,
  1222. but I don't positively know that he was, and I classify that as an
  1223. ambiguous incident.
  1224. Senator INoUYE. Your time is up, Senator.
  1225. Senator Huddleston?
  1226. Senator HUDDLESTON. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
  1227. Admiral Turner, you stated in your testimony that you are convinced there was no attempt to conceal this recently discovered documentation during the earlier searches. Did you question the individuals connected with the earlier search before you made that judgment?
  1228. Admiral TURNER. Yes; I haven't, I don't think, questioned everybody who looked in the files or is still on our payroll who looked in
  1229. the files back in 1975, but Mr. Laubinger on my left is the best authority on this, and I have gone over it with him in some detail.
  1230. Senator HUDDLESTON. But you have inquired, you think, sufficiently
  1231. to assure yourself that there was no intent on the part of any person
  1232. to conceal these records from the previous committee?
  1233. Admiral TURNER. I am persuaded of that both by my questioning
  1234. of people and by the circumstances and the way in which these documents were filed, by the fact. which I did not and should have mentioned in my testimony, that these were not the official files. The ones
  1235. that we have received or retrieved were copies of files that were working files that somebody had used, and therefore were slipped into a
  1236. different location, and again I say to you, sir, I can't imagine their
  1237. deliberately concealing these particular files and revealing the other
  1238. things that they did reveal in 1975. I don't see the motive for that,
  1239. because these are not that damning compared with the overall material
  1240. that was provided.
  1241. Senator HUDDLESTON. Is this the kind of operation that if it were
  1242. continuing now or if there were anything similar to it, that you would
  1243. feel compelled to report to the Select Committee on Intelligence?
  1244. Admiral TURNER. Yes, sir. You mean, if I discovered that something like this were going on without my knowledge? Yes, I would
  1245. feel absolutely the requirement to-
  1246.  
  1247. Senator HUDDLESTON. But if it were going on with your knowledge,
  1248. would you report it to the committee? I assume you would.
  1249. Admiral TURNER. Yes. Well, it would not be going on with my
  1250. knowledge, but theoretically the answer is yes, sir.
  1251. Senator HUDDLESTON. Well, then, what suggestions would you have
  1252. as we devise charters for the various intelligence agencies? What
  1253. provision would you suggest to prohibit this kind of activity from
  1254. taking place? Would you suggest that it ought to be specifically outlined in a statutory charter setting out the parameters of the permissible operation of the various agencies?
  1255. Admiral TURNER. I think that certainly is something we must consider as we look at the legislation for charters. I am not on the face
  1256. of it opposed to it. I think we would have to look at the particular
  1257. wording as we are going to have to deal with the whole charter issue
  1258. as to exactly how precise you want to be in delineating restraints and
  1259. curbs on the intelligence activities.
  1260. Senator HUDDLESTON. In the case of sensitive type operations, which
  1261. this certainly was, which might be going on today, is the oversight
  1262. activity of the agency more intensive now than it was at that time?
  1263. Admiral TURNER. Much more so. I mean, I have briefed you, sir,
  1264. and the committee on our sensitive operations. We have the Intelligence Oversight Board. We have a procedure in the National Security Council for approval of very sensitive operations. I think the
  1265. amount of spotlight focused on these activities is many, manyfold
  1266. what it was in these 12 to 24 years ago.
  1267. Senator HUDDLESTON. How about the record keeping?
  1268. Admiral TURNER. Yes; I can't imagine anyone having the gall to
  1269. think that he can just blithely destroy records today with all of the
  1270. attention that has come to this, and certainly we are emphasizing that
  1271. that is not the case.
  1272. Senator HUDDLESTON. Admiral, I was particularly interested in the
  1273. activity that took place at the U.S. Public Health Service Hospital at
  1274. Lexington, Ky., in which a Dr. Harris Isbell conducted experiments
  1275. on people who were presumably patients there. There was a narcotics
  1276. institution, I take it, and Dr. Isbell was, according to the New York
  1277. Times story, carrying on a secret series of correspondence with an
  1278. individual at the agency by the name of Ray. Have you identified who
  1279. that person is?
  1280. Admiral TURNER. Sir, I find myself in a difficult position here at
  1281. a public hearing to confirm or deny these names in view of my legal
  1282. responsibilities under the Privacy Act not to disclose the names of
  1283. individuals here.
  1284. Senator HUDDLESTON. I am just. asking you if you have identified
  1285. the person referred to in that article as Ray. I am not asking you who
  1286. he was. I just want to know if you know who he is.
  1287. Admiral TURNER. No. I am sorry, was this W-r-a-y or R-a-y?
  1288. Senator HUDDLESTON. It is listed in the news article as R-a-y, in
  1289. quotations.
  1290. Admiral TURNER. No, sir, we have not identified him.
  1291. Senator HUDDLESTON. So you have no knowledge of whether or
  1292. not he is still a member of your staff or connected with the Agency in
  1293. any way. Have you attempted to identify him?
  1294.  
  1295. [Pause.]
  1296. Admiral TURNER. Senator, we have a former employee whose
  1297. first
  1298. name is Ray who may have had some connection with these
  1299. activities.
  1300. Senator HUDDLESTON. You suspect that but you have not
  1301. verified
  1302. that at this time, or at least you are not in a position to indicate
  1303. that
  1304. you have verified it?
  1305. Admiral TURNER. That is correct.
  1306. Senator HUDDLESTON. Thank you.
  1307. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
  1308. Senator INOUYE. Senator Wallopi?
  1309. Senator WALLOP. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
  1310. Admiral Turner, not all of the-and in no way trying to excuse
  1311. you of the hideous nature of some of these projects, but not all of the
  1312. projects under MKULTRA are of a sinister or even a moral nature.
  1313. Is that a fair statement?
  1314. Admiral TURNER. That is correct.
  1315. Senator WALLOP. Looking down through some of these 17 projects
  1316. not involving human testing, aspects of the magician's art, it doesn't
  1317. seem as though there is anything very sinister about that. Studies of
  1318. human behavior and sleep research, library searches. Now, those
  1319. things in their way are still of interest, are they not, to the process
  1320. of intelligence gathering?
  1321. Admiral TURNER. Yes, sir. I have not tried to indicate that we
  1322. either are not doing or would not do any of the things that were
  1323. involved in MKULTRA, but when it comes to the witting or unwitting
  1324. testing of people with drugs, that is certainly verboten, but there are
  1325. other things.
  1326. Senator WALLOP. Even with volunteer patients? I mean, I am not
  1327. trying to put you on the spot to say whether it is going on, but I mean,
  1328. it is not an uncommon thing, is it, in the prisons of the United States
  1329. for the Public Health Service to conduct various kinds of experiments
  1330. with vaccines and, say, sunburn creams? I know in Arizona they have
  1331. done so.
  1332. Admiral TURNER. My understanding is, lots of that is authorized.
  1333. but I am not of the opinion that this is not the CIA's business, and
  1334. that if we need some information in that category, I would prefer
  1335. to go to the other a'ppropriate authorities of the Government and ask
  1336. them to get it for us r-ther than to in any waySenator WALLOP. Well, you know, you have library searches and attendants at the national seminars. This is why I wanted to ask you if
  1337. the bulk of these projects were in any way the kinds of things that the
  1338. Agency might not do now. A President would not have been horrified
  1339. by the list of the legitimate types of things. Isn't that probably the
  1340. case?
  1341. Admiral TURNER. Yes, sir.
  1342. Senator WALLOP. And if it did in fact appear in the IG report, is
  1343. there any reason to suppose that the President did not know of this
  1344. project? You said there was no reason to suppose that he did, but let
  1345. me reverse that. Is there any reason to suppose that they did not?
  1346. Admiral TURNER. No.
  1347. Senator WALLOP. Well, you know, I just cannot imagine you or
  1348. literally anybody undertaking projects of the magnitude of dollars
  1349. here and just not knowing about it, not informing your superior that
  1350.  
  1351. these were going on, especially when certain items of it appear in the
  1352. Inspector General's report on budget matters.
  1353. Admiral TURNER. Well, I find it difficult when it is that far back to
  1354. hypothesize what the procedures that the Director was using in terms
  1355. of informing his superiors were. It is quite a different climate from
  1356. today, and I think we do a lot more informing today than they did
  1357. back then, but I find it very difficult to guess what the level of knowledge was.
  1358. Senator WALLOP. I am really not asking you to second-guess it, but
  1359. it just seems to me that, while the past is past, and thank goodness we
  1360. are operating under different sets of circumstances, I think it is naive
  1361. for us to suppose that these things were conducted entirely without the
  1362. knowledge of the Presidents of the United States during those times.
  1363. It is just the kinds of research information that was being sought was
  1364. vital to the United States, not the means, but the information that they
  1365. were trying to find.
  1366. Admiral TURNER. I am sorry. Your question is, was this vital? Did
  1367. we view it as vital?
  1368. Senator WALLOP. Well, your implication at the beginning was that
  1369. it was a response to the kinds of behavior that were seen in Cardinal
  1370. Mindszenty's trial and other things. I mean, somebody must have
  1371. thought that this was an important defensive reaction, if nothing else,
  1372. on the part of the United States.
  1373. Admiral TURNER. Yes, sir, I am sure they did, but again I just don't
  1374. know how high that -permeatedthe executive branch.
  1375. Senator WALLOP. But the kinds of information are still important
  1376. to you. I mean, I am not suggesting that anyone go back and do that
  1377. kind of thing again, but I'm certain it would be of use to you to know
  1378. what was going to -happen to one of your agents assuming someone had
  1379. put one of these things into his bloodstream, or tried to modify his
  1380. behavior.
  1381. Admiral TURNER. Absolutely, and you know, we would be very concerned if we thought there were things like truth serums or other
  1382. things that our agents or others could be subjected to by use or improper use of drugs by other powers against our people or agents.
  1383. Senator WALLOP. Are there? I don't ask you to name them, but are
  1384. there such serums?
  1385. Admiral TURNER. I don't know of them if there are. I would have to
  1386. answer that for the record, sir.
  1387. Senator WALLOP. I would appreciate that.
  1388. [The material referred to follows:]
  1389. "TRUTH"
  1390.  
  1391. DRUGS IN INTERROGATION
  1392.  
  1393. The search for effective aids to interrogation is probably as old as man's need
  1394. to obtain information from an uncooperative source and as persistent as his
  1395. impatience to shortcut any tortuous path. In the annals of police investigation,
  1396. physical coercion has at times been substituted for painstaking and time-consuming inquiry in the belief that direct methods produce quick results. Sir James
  1397. Stephens, writing in 1883, rationalizes a grisly example of "third degree" practices by the police of India : "It is far pleasanter to sit comfortably in the shade
  1398. rubbing red pepper in a poor devil's eyes than to go about in the sun hunting up
  1399. evidence."
  1400. More recently, police officials in some countries have turned to drugs for assistance in extracting confessions from accused persons, drugs which ara esumed
  1401.  
  1402. 26
  1403. to relax the individual's defenses to the point that he unknowingly reveals truthiS
  1404. humanitarian
  1405. he has been trying to conceal. This investigative technique, however of individual
  1406. as an alternative to p~hysical torture, still raises serious questions
  1407. only marginal
  1408. rights and liberties. In this country, where drugs have ofgained
  1409. "psychological third
  1410. acceptance in police work, their use has provoked cries that after a quarter of
  1411. degree" and has precipitated medico-legal controversies
  1412. a century still occasionally flare into the open.
  1413. accepted
  1414. The use of so-called "truth" drugs in police work is similar to the
  1415. in the two procedures lies
  1416. psychiatric practice of narco-analysis; the difference.is concerned with empirical
  1417. in their different objectives. The police investigator
  1418. truth that may be used against the suspect, and therefore almost solely with
  1419. ultimately on
  1420. probative truth: the usefulness of the suspect's revelations depends
  1421. their acceptance in evidence by a court of law. The psychiatist, on the other hand,
  1422. mentally ill, is
  1423. using the same "truth" drugs in diagnosis and treatment of the
  1424. reality rather than
  1425. primarily concerned with psychological truth or psychological
  1426. the time they occur,
  1427. empirical fact. A patient's aberrations are reality for him at rather
  1428. than reliable
  1429. and an accurate account of these fantasies and delusions,
  1430. recollection of past events, can be the key to recovery.
  1431. The notion of drugs capable of illuminating hidden recesses of the mind, helpof justice,
  1432. ing to heal the mentally ill and preventing or reversing the miscarriage
  1433. literature.
  1434. has provided an exceedingly durable theme for the press and popular
  1435. While acknowledging that "truth serum" is a misnomer twice over-the drugs
  1436. are not sera and they do not necessarily bring forth probative truth-journalistic
  1437. accounts continue to exploit the appeal of the term. The formula is to play up
  1438. a few spectacular "truth" drug successess and to imply that the drugs are more
  1439. maligned than need be and more widely employed in criminal investigation than
  1440. can officially be admitted.
  1441. Any technique that promises an increment of success in extracting information
  1442. from an uncompliant source is ipso facto of interest in intelligence operations.
  1443. If the ethical considerations which in Western countries inhibit the use of narcointerrogation in police work are felt also in intelligence, the Western services
  1444. must at least be prepared against its possible employment by the adversary. An
  1445. understanding of "truth" drugs, their characteristic actions, and their potentialities, positive and negative, for eliciting useful information is fundamental to an
  1446. adequate defense against them.
  1447. This discussion, meant to help toward such an understanding, draws primarily
  1448. upon openly published materials. It has the limitations of projecting from criminal investigative practices and from the permissive atmosphere of drug psychotherapy.
  1449. SCOPOLAMINE
  1450.  
  1451. AS "TRUTH SERUM"
  1452.  
  1453. Early in this century physicians began to employ scopolamine, along with
  1454. morphine and chloroform, to induce a state of "twilight sleep" during childbirth.
  1455. A constituent of henbane, scopolamine was known to produce sedation and drowsiness, confusion and disorientation, incoordination, and amnesia for events experienced during intoxication. Yet physicians noted that women in twilight sleep
  1456. answered questions accurately and often volunteered exceedingly candid remarks.
  1457. In 1922 it occurred to Robert House, a Dallas, Texas obstetrician, that a similar
  1458. technique might be employed in the interrogation of suspected criminals, and he
  1459. arranged to interview under scopolamine two. prisoners in the Dallas county
  1460. jail whose guilt seemed clearly confirmed. Under the drug, both men denied the
  1461. charges on which they were held; and both, upon trial, were found not guilty.
  1462. Enthusiastic at this success, House concluded that a patient under the influence
  1463. of scopolamine "cannot create a lie . . . and there is no power to think or reason." [14] His experiment and this conclusion attracted wide attention, and the
  1464. idea of a "truth" drug was thus launched upon the public consciousness.
  1465. The phrase "truth serum" is believed to have appeared first in a news -report
  1466. of House's experiment in the Los Angeles Record, sometime in 1922. House resisted
  1467. the term for a while but eventually came to employ it regularly himself. He published some eleven articles on scopolamine in the years 1921-1929, with a noticeable increase in polemical zeal as time went on. What had begun as something
  1468. of a scientific statement turned finally into a dedicated crusade by the "father of
  1469. truth serum" on behalf of his offspring, wherein he was "grossly indulgent of its
  1470. wayward behavior and stubbornly proud of its minor achievements." [11]
  1471.  
  1472. Only a handful of cases in which scopolamine was used for police interrogation came to public notice, though there is evidence suggesting that some police
  1473. forces may have used it extensively. [2, 16] One police writer claims that the
  1474. threat of scopolamine interrogation has been effective in extracting confessions
  1475. from criminal suspects, who are told they will first be rendered unconscious by
  1476. chloral hydrate placed covertly in their coffee or drinking water.[16]
  1477. Because of a number of undesirable side effects, scopolamine was shortly disqualified as a "truth" drug. Among the most disabling of the side effects are
  1478. hallucinations, disturbed perception, somnolence, and physiological phenomena
  1479. such as headache, rapid heart, and blurred vision, which distract the subject from
  1480. the central purpose of the interview. Furthermore, the physical action is long, far
  1481. outlasting the psychological effects. Scopolamine continues, in some cases, to make
  1482. anesthesia and surgery safer by drying the mouth and throat and reducing secretions that might obstruct the air passages. But the fantastically, almost painfully,
  1483. dry "desert" mouth brought on by the drug is hardly conducive to free talking,
  1484. even in a tractable subject.
  1485. THE BARBITURATES
  1486.  
  1487. The first suggestion that drugs might facilitate communication with emotionally disturbed patients came quite by accident in 1916. Arthur S. Lovenhart
  1488. and his associates at the University of Wisconsin, experimenting with respiratory
  1489. stimulants, were surprised when, after an injection of sodium cyanide, a catatonic
  1490. patient who had long been mute and rigid suddenly relaxed, opened his eyes, and
  1491. even answered a few questions. By the early 1930's a number of psychiatrists
  1492. were experimenting with drugs as an adjunct to established methods of therapy.
  1493. At about this time police officials, still attracted by the possibility that drugs
  1494. migh help in the interrogation of suspects and witnesses, turned to a class of
  1495. depressant drugs known as the barbiturates. By 1935 Clarence W. Muehlberger,
  1496. head of the Michigan Crime Detection Laboratory at East Lansing, Was using
  1497. barbiturates on reluctant suspects, though police work continued to be hampered
  1498. by the courts' rejection of drug-induced confessions except in a few carefully
  1499. circumscribed instances.
  1500. The barbiturates, first synthesized in 1903, are among the oldest of modern
  1501. drugs and the most versatile of all depressants. In this half-century some 2,500
  1502. have been prepared, and about two dozen of these have won an important place
  1503. in medicine. An estimated three to four billion doses of barbiturates are prescribed by physicians in the United States each year, and they have come to be
  1504. known by a variety of commercial names and colorful slang expressions: "goofballs," Luminal, Nembutal, "red devils." "yellow jackets." "pink ladies," etc.
  1505. Three of them which are used in narcoanalysis and have seen service as "truth"
  1506. drugs are sodium amytal (amobarbital), pentothal sodium (thiopental), and to a
  1507. lesser extent seconal (secobarbital).
  1508. As one pharmacologist explains it, a subject coming under the Influence of a
  1509. barbiturate injected intravenously goes through all the stages of progressive
  1510. drunkenness, but the time scale is on the order of minutes instead of hours.
  1511. Outwardly the sedation effect is dramatic, especially if the subject is a psychiatric
  1512. patient in tension. His features slacken, his body relaxes. Some people are
  1513. momentarily excited; a few beocme silly and giggly. This usually passes, and
  1514. most subjects fall asleep, emerging later in disoriented semi-wakefulness.
  1515. The descent into narcosis and beyond with progressively larger doses can be
  1516. divided as follows:
  1517. I. Sedative stage.
  1518. II. Unconsciousness, with exaggerated reflexes (hyperactive stage).
  1519. III. Unconsciousness, without reflex even to painful stimuli.
  1520. IV. Death.
  1521. Whether all these stages can be distinguished in any given subject depends
  1522. largely on the dose and the rapidity with which the drug is induced. In
  1523. anesthesia, stages I and II may last only two or three seconds.
  1524. The first or sedative stage can be further divided:
  1525. Plane 1. No evident effect, or slight sedative effect.
  1526. Plane 2. Cloudiness, calmness, amnesia. (Upon recovery, the subject will
  1527. not remember what happened at this or "lower" planes or stages.)
  1528. Plane 3. Slurred speech, old thought patterns disrupted, inability to integrate or learn new patterns. Poor coordination. Subject becomes unaware
  1529. of paniful stimuli.
  1530.  
  1531. Plane 3 is the psychiatric "work" stage. It may last only a few minutes, but
  1532. it can be extended by further slow injection of drug. The usual practice is to
  1533. bring the subject quickly to Stage II and to conduct the interview as he passes
  1534. back into the sedative stage on the way to full consciousness.
  1535. CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES
  1536.  
  1537. The general abhorrence in Western countries for the use of chemical agents
  1538. "to make people do things against their will" has precluded serious systematic
  1539. study (at least as published openly) of the potentialities of drugs for interrogation. Louis A. Gottschalk, surveying their use in information-seeking interviews, [13] cites 136 references; but only two touch upon the extraction of
  1540. Intelligence information, and one of these concludes merely that Russian techniques in interrogation and indoctrination are derived from age-old police
  1541. methods and do not depend on the use of drugs. On the validity of confessions
  1542. obtained with drugs, Gottschalk found only three published experimental studies
  1543. .that he deemed worth reporting.
  1544. One of these reported experiments by D. P. Morris in which intravenous sodium
  1545. amytal was helpful in detecting malingerers. [12] The subjects, soldiers, were
  1546. at first sullen,.negativistic, and non-productive under amytal, but as the interview proceeded they revealed the fact of and causes for their malingering. Usually
  1547. the interviews turned up a neurotic or psychotic basis for the deception.
  1548. The other two confession studies, being more relevant to the highly specialized, untouched area of drugs in intelligence interrogation, deserve more detailed
  1549. review.
  1550. Gerson and Victoroff [12] conducted amytal interviews with 17 neuropsychiatric
  1551. patients, soldiers who had charges against them, at Tilton General Hospital,
  1552. Fort Dix. First they were interviewed without amytal by a psychiatrist, who,
  1553. neither ignoring nor stressing their situation as prisoners or suspects under
  1554. scrutiny, urged each of them to discuss his social and family background, his
  1555. army career, and his version of the charges pending against him.
  1556.  
  1557. The patients were told only a few minutes in advance that narcoanalysis would
  1558. be performed. The doctor was considerate, but positive and forthright. He indicated that they had no choice but to submit to the procedure. Their attitudes
  1559. varied from unquestioning compliance to downright refusal.
  1560. Each patient was brought to complete narcosis and permitted to sleep. As he
  1561. became semiconscious and could be stimulated to speak, he was held in this stage
  1562. with additional amytal while the questioning proceeded. He was questioned
  1563. first about innocuous matters from his background that he had discussed before
  1564. receiving the drug. Whenever possible, he was manipulated into bringing up
  1565. himself the charges pending against him before being questioned about them.
  1566. If he did this in a too fully conscious state, it proved more effective to ask him
  1567. to "talk about that later" and to interpose a topic that would diminish suspicion,
  1568. delaying the interrogation on his criminal activity until he was back in the
  1569. proper stage of narcosis.
  1570. The procedure differed from therapeutic narcoanalysis in several ways: the
  1571. setting, the type of patients, and the kind of "truth" sought. Also, the subjects
  1572. were kept in twilight consciousness longer than usual. This state proved richest
  1573. in yield of admissions prejudicial to the subject. In it his speech was thick,
  1574. mumbling, and disconnected, but his discretion was markedly reduced. This valuable interrogation period, lasting only five to ten minutes at a time, could be
  1575. reinduced by injecting more amytal and putting the patient back to sleep.
  1576. The interrogation technique varied from case to case according to background
  1577. information about the patient, the seriousness of the charges, the patient's attitude under narcosis, and his rapport with the doctor. Sometimes it was useful to
  1578. pretend, as the patient grew more fully conscious, that he had already confessed
  1579. during the amnestic period of the interrogation, and to urge him, while his memory and sense of self-protection were still limited, to continue to elaborate the
  1580. details of what he had "already described." When it was obvious that a subject
  1581. was withholding the truth, his denials were quickly passed over and ignored,
  1582. and the key questions would be reworded in a new approach.
  1583.  
  1584. Several patients revealed fantasies, fears, and delusions approaching delirium,
  1585.  
  1586. much of which could readily be distinguished from reality. But sometimes there
  1587. was no way for the examiner to distinguish truth from fantasy except by reference to other sources. One subject claimed to have a child that did not exist,
  1588.  
  1589. 29
  1590. another threatened to kill on sight a stepfather who had been dead a year, and
  1591. yet another confessed to participating in a robbery when in fact he had only
  1592. purchased goods from the participants. Testimony concerning dates and specific
  1593. places was untrustworthy and often contradictory because of the patient's loss
  1594. of time-sense. His veracity in citing names and events proved questionable. Because of his confusion about actual events and what he thought or feared had
  1595. happened, the patient at times managed to conceal the truth unintentionally.
  1596. As the subject revived, he would become aware that he was being questioned
  1597. about his secrets and, depending upon his personality, his fear of discovery, or
  1598. the degree of his disillusionment with the doctor, grow negativistic, hostile, or
  1599. physically aggressive. Occasionally patients had to be forcibly restrained during
  1600. this period to prevent injury to themselves or others as the doctor continued to
  1601. interrogate. Some patients, moved by fierce and diffuse anger, the assumption
  1602. that they had already been tricked into confessing, and a still limited sense of
  1603. discretion, defiantly acknowledged their guilt and challenged the observer to
  1604. "do something about it." As the excitement passed, some fell back on their original stories and others verified the confessed material. During the follow-up
  1605. interview nine of the 17 admitted the validity of their confessions; eight repudiated their confessions and reaffirmed their earlier accounts.
  1606. With respect to the reliability of the results of such interrogation, Gerson
  1607. and Victoroff conclude that persistent, careful questioning can reduce ambiguities in drug interrogation, but cannot eliminate them altogether.
  1608. At least one experiment has shown that subjects are capable of maintaining a
  1609. lie while under the influence of a barbiturate. Redlich and his associates at
  1610. Yale[25] administered sodium amytal to nine volunteers, students and professionals, who had previously, for purposes of the experiment, revealed shameful
  1611. and guilt-producing episodes of their past and then invented false self-protective
  1612. stories to cover them. In nearly every case the cover story retained some elements of the guilt inherent in the true story.
  1613. Under the influence of the drug, the subjects were crossexamined on their
  1614. cover stories by a second investigator. The results, though not definitive, showed
  1615. that normal individuals who had good defenses and no overt pathological traits
  1616. could stick to their invented stories and refuse confession. Neurotic individuals
  1617. with strong unconscious self-punitive tendencies, on the other hand, both confessed more easily and were inclined to substitute fantasy for the truth, confessing to offenses never actually committed.
  1618. In recent years drug therapy has made some use of stimulants, most notably
  1619. amphetamine (Benzedrine) and its relative methamphetamine (Methedrine).
  1620. These drugs, used either alone or following intravenous barbiturates, produce
  1621. an outpouring of ideas, emotions, and memories which has been of help in diagnosing mental disorders. The potential of stimulants in interrogation has received little attention, unless in unpublished work. In one study of their psychiatric use Brussel et al. [7] maintain that methedrine gives the liar no time to
  1622. think or to organize his deceptions. Once the drug takes hold, they say, an insurmountable urge to pour out speech traps the malingerer. Gottschalk, on
  1623. the other hand, says that this claim is extravagant, asserting without elaboration that the study lacked proper controls. [13] It is evident that the combined
  1624. use of barbiturates and stimulants, perhaps along with ataraxics (tranquilizers),
  1625. should be further explored.
  1626. OBSERVATIONS
  1627.  
  1628. FROM
  1629.  
  1630. PRACTICE
  1631.  
  1632. J. M. MacDonald, who as a psychiatrist for the District Courts of Denver
  1633. has had extensive experience with narcoanalysis, says that drug interrogation
  1634. is of doubtful value in obtaining confessions to crimes. Criminal suspects under
  1635. the influence of barbiturates may deliberately withhold information, persist in
  1636. giving untruthful answers, or falsely confess to crimes they did not commit.
  1637. The psychopathic personality, in particular, appears to resist successfully the
  1638. influence of drugs.
  1639. MacDonald tells of a criminal psychopath who, having agreed to narco-interrogation, received 1.5 grams of sodium amytal over a period of five hours. This
  1640. man feigned amnesia and gave a false account of a murder. "He displayed little
  1641. or no remorse as he (falsely) described the crime, including burial of the body.
  1642. Indeed he was very self-possessed and he appeared almost to enjoy the examination. From time to time he would request that more amytal be injected."[211
  1643. MacDonald concludes that a person who gives false information prior to re-
  1644.  
  1645. 96-408
  1646.  
  1647. 0 - 77 - 3
  1648.  
  1649. 30
  1650. ceiving drugs is likely to give false information also under narcosis, that the
  1651. drugs are of little value for revealing deceptions, and that they are more effective
  1652. in releasing unconsciously repressed material than in evoking consciously suppressed information.
  1653. Another psychiatrist known for his work with criminals, L. Z. Freedman,
  1654. gave sodium amytal to men accused of various civil and military antisocial acts.
  1655. The subjects were mentally unstable, their conditions ranging from character
  1656. disorders to neuroses and psychoses. The drug interviews proved psychiatrically
  1657. beneficial to the patients, but Freedman found that his view of objective reality
  1658. was seldom improved by their revelations. He was unable to say on the basis of
  1659. the narco-interrogation whether a given act had or had not occurred. Like MacDonald, he found that psychopathic individuals can deny to the point of unconsciousness crimes that every objective sign indicates they have committed.[10]
  1660. F. G. Inbau, Professor of Law at Northwestern University, who has had considerable experience observing and participating in "truth" drug tests, claims
  1661. that they are occasionally effective on persons who would have disclosed the
  1662. truth anyway had they been properly interrogated, but that a person determined to lie will usually be able to continue the deception under drugs.
  1663. The two military psychiatrists who made the most extensive use of narcoanalysis during the war years, Roy R. Grinker and John C. Spiegel, concluded that
  1664. in almost all cases they could obtain from their patients essentially the same
  1665. material and give them the same emotional release by therapy without the use
  1666. of drugs, provided they had sufficient time.
  1667. The essence of these comments from professionals of long experience is that
  1668. drugs provide rapid access to information that is psychiatrically useful but of
  1669. doubtful validity as empirical truth. The same psychological information and a
  1670. less adulterated empirical truth can be obtained from fully conscious subjects
  1671. through non-drug psychotherapy and skillful police interrogation.
  1672. APPLICATION TO CI INTERROGATION
  1673.  
  1674. The almost total absence of controlled experimental studies of "truth" drugs
  1675. and the spotty and anecdotal nature of psychiatric and police evidence require
  1676. that extrapolations to intelligence operations be made with care. Still, enough
  1677. is known about the drugs' action to suggest certain considerations affecting the
  1678. possibilities for their use in interrogations.
  1679. It should be clear from the foregoing that at best a drug can only serve as
  1680. an aid to an interrogator who has a sure understanding of the psychology and
  1681. techniques of normal interrogation. In some respects, indeed, the demands on his
  1682. skill will be increased by the baffling mixture of truth and fantasy in drug-induced
  1683. output. And the tendency against which he must guard in the interrogate to give
  1684. the responses that seem to be wanted without regard for facts will be heightened
  1685. by drugs: the literature abounds with warnings that a subject in narcosis is
  1686. extremely suggestible.
  1687. It seems possible that this suggestibility and the lowered guard of the narcotic
  1688. state might be put to advantage in the case of a subject feigning ignorance of a
  1689. language or some other skill that had become automatic with him. Lipton[20]
  1690. found sodium amytal helpful in determining whether a foreign subject was merely
  1691. pretending not to understand English. By extension, one can guess that a drugged
  1692. interrogatee might have difficulty maintaining the pretense that he did not comprehend the idiom of a profession he was trying to hide.
  1693. There is the further problem of hostility in the interrogator's relationship to
  1694. a resistance source. The accumulated knowledege about "truth" drug reaction
  1695. has come largely from patient-physician relationships of trust and confidence.
  1696. The subject in narcoanalysis is usually motivated a priori to cooperate with the
  1697. psychiatrist, either to obtain relief from mental suffering or to contribute to a
  1698. scientific study. Even in police work, where an atmosphere of anxiety and threat
  1699. may be dominant, a relationship of trust frequently asserts itself: the drug is
  1700. administered by a medical man bound by a strict code of ethics; the suspect
  1701. agreeing to undergo narcoanalysis in a desperate bid for corroboration of his
  1702. testimony trusts both drug and psychiatrist, however apprehensively; and finally,
  1703. as Freedman and MacDonald have indicated, the police psychiatrist frequently
  1704. deals with a "sick" criminal, and some order of patient-physician relationship
  1705. necessarily evolves.
  1706.  
  1707. Rarely has a drug interrogation involved "normal" individuals in a hostile
  1708. or genuinely threatening milieu. It was from a non-threatening experimental
  1709. setting that Eric Lindemann could say that his "normal" subjects "reported a
  1710. general sense of euphoria, ease and confidence, and they exhibited a marked increase in talkativeness and conimunicability."[18] Gerson and Victoroff list poor
  1711. doctor-patient rapport as one factor interfering with the completeness and authenticity of confessions by the Fort Dix soldiers, caught as they were in a
  1712. command performance and told they had no choice but to submit to narcointerrogation.
  1713. From all indications, subject-interrogator rapport is usually crucial to obtaining the psychological release which may lead to unguarded disclosures. Role-playing on the part of the interrogator might be a possible solution to the problem
  1714. of establishing rapport with a drugged subject. In therapy, the British narcoanalyst William Sargent recommends that the therapist deliberately distort the
  1715. facts of the patient's life-experience to achieve heightened emotional response
  1716. and abreaction.[27] In the drunken state of narcoanalysis patients are prone to
  1717. accept the therapist's false constructions. There is reason to expect that a drugged
  1718. subject would communicate freely with an interrogator playing the role of relative, colleague, physician, immediate superior, or any other person to whom his
  1719. background indicated he would be responsive.
  1720. Even when rapport is poor, however, there remains one facet of drug action
  1721. eminently exploitable in interrogation-the fact that subjects emerge from
  1722. narcosis feeling they have revealed a great deal, even when they have not. As
  1723. Gerson and Victoroff demonstrated 'at Fort Dix, this psychological set provides a
  1724. major opening for obtaining genuine confessions.
  1725. POSSIBLE VARIATIONS
  1726. In studies by Beecher and his associates, [3-6] one-third to one-half the
  1727. individuals tested proved to be placebo reactors, subjects who respond with
  1728. symptomatic relief to the administration of any syringe, pill, or capsule, regardless of what it contains. Although no studies are known to have been made of the
  1729. placebo phenomenon as applied to narco-interrogation, it seems reasonable that
  1730. when a subject's sense of guilt interferes with productive interrogation, a placebo
  1731. for pseudo-narcosis could have the effect of absolving him of the responsibility
  1732. for his acts and thus clear the way for free communication. It is notable that
  1733. placebos are most likely to be effective in situations of stress. The individuals
  1734. most likely to react to placebos are the more anxious, more self-centered, more
  1735. dependent on outside stimulation, those who express their needs more freely
  1736. socially, talkers who drain off anxiety by conversing with others. The nonreactors are those clinically more rigid and with better than average emotional
  1737. control. No sex or I.Q. differences between reactors and non-reactors have been
  1738. found.
  1739. Another possibility might be the combined use of drugs with hypnotic trance
  1740. and post-hypnotic suggestion: hypnosis could presumably prevent any recollection of the drug experience. Whether a subject can be brought to trance against
  1741. his will or unaware, however, is a matter of some disagreement. Orne, in a survey
  1742. of the potential uses of hypnosis in interrogation,[23] asserts that it is doubtful, despite many apparent indications to the contrary, that trance can be induced
  1743. in resistant subjects. It may be possible, he adds, to hypnotize a subject unaware,
  1744. but this would require a positive relationship with the hypnotist not likely to
  1745. be found in the interrogation setting.
  1746. In medical hypnosis, pentothal sodium is sometimes employed when only light
  1747. trance has been induced and deeper narcosis is desired. This procedure is a
  1748. possibility for interrogation, but if a satisfactory level of narcosis could be
  1749. achieved through hypnotic trance there would appear to be no need for drugs.
  1750. DEFENSIVE MEASURES
  1751.  
  1752. There is no known way of building tolerance for a "truth" drug without creating a disabling addiction, or of arresting the action of a barbiturate once induced.
  1753. The only full safeguard against narco-interrogation is to prevent the administration of the drug. Short of this, the best defense is to make use of the same
  1754. knowledge that suggests drugs for offensive operations: if a subject knows that
  1755. on emerging from narcosis he will have an exaggerated notion of how much he
  1756. has revealed he can better resolve to deny he has said anything.
  1757.  
  1758. 32
  1759. The disadvantages and shortcomings of drugs in offensive operations become
  1760. positive features of the defense posture. A subject in narco-interrogation is
  1761. intoxicated, wavering between deep sleep and semi-wakefulness. His speech is
  1762. garbled and irrational, the amount of output drastically diminished. Drugs
  1763. disrupt established thought patterns, including the will to resist, but they do so
  1764. indiscriminately and thus also interfere with the patterns of substantive information the interrogator seeks. Even under the conditions most favorable for
  1765. the interrogator, output will be contaminated by fantasy, distortion, and untruth.
  1766. Possibly the most effective way to arm oneself against narco-interrogation
  1767. would be to undergo a "dry run." A trial drug interrogation with output taped
  1768. for playback would familiarize an individual with his own reactions to "truth"
  1769. drugs, and this familiarity would help to reduce the effects of harassment by
  1770. the interrogator before and after the drug has been administered. From the viewpoint of the intelligence service, the trial exposure of a particular operative to
  1771. drugs might provide a rough benchmark for assessing the kind and amount of
  1772. information he would divulge in narcosis.
  1773. There may be concern over the possibility of drug addiction intentionally or
  1774. accidentally induced by an adversary service. Most drugs will cause addiction
  1775. with prolonged use, and the barbiturates are no exception. In recent studies at
  1776. the U.S. Public Health Service Hospital for addicts in Lexington, Ky., subjects
  1777. received large doses of barbiturates over a period of months. Upon removal of
  1778. the drug, they experienced acute withdrawal symptoms and behaved in every
  1779. respect like chronic alcoholics.
  1780. Because their action is extremely short, however, and because there is little
  1781. likelihood that they would be administered regularly over a prolonged period,
  1782. barbiturate "truth" drugs present slight risk of operational addiction. If the
  1783. adversary service were intent on creating addiction in order to exploit withdrawal, it would have other, more rapid.means of producing states as unpleasant
  1784. as withdrawal symptoms.
  1785. The hallucinatory and psychotomimetic drugs such as mescaline, marihuana,
  1786. LSD-25, and microtine are sometimes mistakenly associated with narcoanalytic
  1787. interrogation. These drugs distort the perception and interpretation of the sensory input to the central nervous system and affect vision, audition, smell, the
  1788. sensation of the size of body parts and their position in space, etc. Mescaline and
  1789. LSD-25 have been used to create experimental "psychotic states," and in a
  1790. minor way as aids in psychotherapy.
  1791. Since information obtained from a person in a psychotic drug state would be
  1792. unrealistic, bizarre, and extremely difficult to assess, the self-administration of
  1793. LSD-25, which is effective in minute dosages, might in special circumstances
  1794. offer an operative temporary protection against interrogation. Conceivably, on
  1795. the other hand, an adversary service could use such drugs to produce anxiety or
  1796. terror in medically unsophisticated subjects unable to distinguish drug-induced
  1797. psychosis from actual insanity. An enlightened operative could not be thus
  1798. frightened, however, knowing that the effect of these hallucinogenic agents is
  1799. transient in normal individuals.
  1800. Most broadly, there is evidence that drugs have least effect on well-adjusted
  1801. individuals with good defenses and good emotional control, and that anyone who
  1802. can withstand the stress of competent interrogation in the waking state can do
  1803. so in narcosis. The essential resources for resistance thus appear to lie within
  1804. the individual.
  1805. CONCLUSIONS
  1806. The salient points that emerge from this discussion are the following. No such
  1807. magic brew as the popular notion of truth serum exists. The barbiturates, by
  1808. disrupting defensive patterns, may sometimes be helpful in interrogation, but
  1809. even under the best conditions they will elicit an output contaminated by deception, fantasy, garbled speech, etc. A major vulnerability they produce in the subject is a tendency to believe he has revealed more than he has. It is possible, however, for both normal individuals and psychopaths to resist drug interrogation;
  1810. it seems likely that any individual who can withstand ordinary intensive interrogation can hold out in narcosis. The best aid to a defense against narco-interrogation is foreknowledge of the process and its limitations. There is an acute
  1811. need for controlled experimental studies of drug reaction, not only to depressants
  1812. but also to stimulants and to combinations of depressants, stimulants, and
  1813. ataraxics.
  1814.  
  1815. 33
  1816. REFERENCES
  1817.  
  1818. 1. Adams, E. Barbiturates. Sci. Am., Jan. 1958,198 (1), 60-64.
  1819. 2. Barkham, J. Truth Drugs: The new crime solver. Coronet, Jan. 1951, 29,
  1820. 72-76.
  1821. 3. Beecher, H. K. Anesthesia. Soi. Am., Jan. 1957, 198, p. 70.
  1822. 4. Appraisal of drugs intended to alter subjective Tesponses, symptoms.
  1823. J. Amer. Med. Assn., 1955,158, 399-401.
  1824. 5. . Evidence for increased effectiveness of placebos with increased
  1825. stress. Amer. J. Physiol., 1956.187, 163-169.
  1826. 6. . Experimental pharmacology and measurement of the subjective
  1827. response. Science, 1953, 116. 157-162.
  1828. 7. Brussel, J. A., Wilson, D. C., Jr., & Shankel, L. W. The use of methedrine in
  1829. psychiatric practice. Psychiat. Quart., 1954, 28, 381-394.
  1830. 8. Delay, J. Pharmacologic explorations of the personality: narcoanalysis and
  1831. "mnethedrine" shock. Proc. Roy. Soc. Med., 1949, 42, 492-496.
  1832. 9. deRopp, R. S. Drugs and the Mind. New York: Grove Press, Inc., 1960.
  1833. 10. Freedman. L. Z. "Truth" drugs. Sci. An., March 1960. 145-154.
  1834. 11. Geis, G. In scopolamine veritas. The early history of drug-induced statenients. J. of Grin. Law, Criminal. & Pot. Sci., Nov.-Dec. 1959, 50(4), 347-358.
  1835. 12. Gerson, M. J., & Victoroff, V. Experimental investigation into the validity
  1836. of confessions obtained under sodium amytal narcosis. J. Clin. and Exp. Psychopath., 1948, 9, 359-375.
  1837. 13. Gottschalk, L. A. The use of drugs in information-seeking interviews. Technical report #2, ARDC Study SR 177-D Contract AF 18 (600) 1797. Dec. 1958.
  1838. Bureau of Social Science Research, Inc.
  1839. 14. House, R. E. The use of scopolamine in criminology. Texas St. J. of Med.,
  1840. 1922, 18, 259.
  1841. 15. Houston, F. A preliminary investigation into abreaction comparing methedrine and sodium amytal with other methods. J. Ment. Seo., 1952, 98. 707-710.
  1842. 16. Inbau, F. G. Self-incrimination.Springfield: C. C. Thomas, 1950.
  1843. 17. Kidd., W. R. Police interrogation.1940.
  1844. 18. Legal dose of truth. Newsweek, Feb. 23, 1959, 28.
  1845. 19. Lindemann, E. Psychological changes in normal and abnormal individuals
  1846. under the influence of sodium amytal. Amer. J. Psychiat., 1932, 11, 10&3-1091.
  1847. 20. Lipton, E. L. The amytal interview. A review. Amer. Practit.Digest Treat.,
  1848. 1950, 1, 148-163.
  1849. 21. MacDonald, J. M. Narcoanalysis and criminal law. Amer. J. Psychiat., 1954,
  1850. 111, 283-288.
  1851. 22. Morris, D. P. Intravenous barbiturates: an aid in the diagnosis and treatment of conversion hysteria and malingering. Mil. Surg., 1945, 96, 509-513.
  1852. 23. Orne, M. T. The potential uses of hypnosis in interrogation. An evaluation.
  1853. ARDC Study SR 177-D Contract AF 18(600) 1797, Dec. 1958. Bureau of Social
  1854. Science Research, Inc.
  1855. 24. Pelikan, E. W., & Kensler, C. J. Sedatives: Their pharmacology and uses.
  1856. Reprint from The Medical Clinics of North America. W. B. Saunders Company,
  1857. Sept. 1958.
  1858. 25. Redlich, F. C., Ravitz, L. J., & Dession, G. H. Narcoanalysis and truth.
  1859. Amer. J. Psychiat.,1951. 107, 586-593.
  1860. 26. Rolin, J. Police Drugs. Translated by L. J. Bendit. New York: Philosophical
  1861. Library, 1956.
  1862. 27. Sargant, W., & Slater, E. Physical methods of treatment in psychiatry. (3rd.
  1863. ed.) Baltimore: Williams and Wilkins, 1954.
  1864. 28. Snider, R. S. Cerebellum. Sci. Am., Aug. 1958, 84.
  1865. 29. Uhr, L., & Miller, L. G. (eds.). Drugs and Behavior. New York-London:
  1866. John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1960.
  1867.  
  1868. Senator WALLOP. If they are, I would assume that you would still
  1869. try to find from either theirs or somebody else's information how to
  1870. protect our people from that kind of activity.
  1871. Admiral TURNER. Yes.
  1872. Senator WALLOP. Thank you very much. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
  1873. Senator INOUYE. Senator Chafee?
  1874. Senator CHAFEE. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
  1875.  
  1876. Admiral Turner, I appreciate that these tawdry activities were taking place long before your watch, and I think you have correctly
  1877. labeled them as abhorrent, 'but not only were they abhorrent, it seems
  1878. to me they were rather bungled, amateurish experiments that don't
  1879. seem to have been handled in a very scientific way, at least from the
  1880. scanty evidence we have.
  1881. It seems to me that there were the minimum of reports and the
  1882. Agency didn't have the ability to call it quits. It went on for some 12
  1883. years, as you mentioned. What I would like to get to is, are you convinced now in your Agency that those scientific experiments, legitimate ones that you were conducting with polygraph and so forth, were
  1884. being conducted in a scientific manner and that you are handling it in
  1885. a correct manner to get the best information that you are seeking in
  1886. the end?
  1887. Admiral TURNER. Yes, I am, and I also have a sense of confidence
  1888. that we are limiting ourselves to the areas where we need to be involved as opposed to areas where we can rely on others.
  1889. Senator CHAFEE. I am convinced of that from your report. I just do
  1890. hope that you have people who are trained in not only handling this
  1891. type of experiment, but in preparing the proper reports and drawing
  1892. the proper data from the reports. You are convinced that you have
  1893. this type of people?
  1894. Admiral TURNER. Yes, sir.
  1895. Senator CHAFEE. The second point I am interested in was the final
  1896. lines in your testimony here, which I believe are very important, and
  1897. that is that the Agency is doing all it can in cooperation with other
  1898. branches of the Government to go about tracking down the identity of
  1899. those who were in some way adversely affected, and see what can be
  1900. done to fulfill the government's responsibilities in that respect. I might
  1901. add that I commend you in that, and I hope you will pursue it
  1902. vigorously.
  1903. A hospital in my State was involved in these proceedings, and it is
  1904. unclear exactly what did take place, so I have both a parochial interest
  1905. in this and a national interest as well, and I do hope you will press on
  1906. with it. It involves not only you, I appreciate, but also HEW and perhaps the Attorney General.
  1907. Admiral TURNER. Thank you, sir. We will.
  1908. Senator CHAFEE. Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
  1909. Senator INOUYE. Thank you very much.
  1910. Admiral Turner, MKULTRA subproject 3 was a project involving
  1911. the surreptitious administration of LSD on unwitting persons,.was it
  1912. not?
  1913. Admiral TURNER. Yes, sir.
  1914. Senator INOUYE. In February 1954, and this was in the very early
  1915. stages of MAKULTRA, the Director of Central Intelligence wrote to
  1916. the technical services staff officials criticizing their judgment because
  1917. they had participated in an experiment involving the administration
  1918. of LSD on an unwitting basis to Dr. Frank Olson, who later committed
  1919. suicide. Now, the individuals criticized were the same individuals who
  1920. were responsible for this subproject 3, involving exactly the same practices. Even though these individuals were clearly aware of the dangers
  1921. of surreptitious administration and had been criticized by the Director
  1922.  
  1923. of Central Intelligence, subproject 3 was not terminated immediately
  1924. after Dr. Olson's death.
  1925. In fact. according to documents, it continued for a number of years.
  1926. Can you provide this committee with any explanation of how such
  1927. testing could have continued under these circumstances?
  1928. Admiral TURNER. No, sir, I really can't.
  1929. Senator INOUYE. Are the individuals in the technical services who
  1930. carried on subproject 3 still on the CIA payroll?
  1931. Admiral TURNER. I am sorry. Are you asking, are they today?
  1932. Senator INOUYE. Yes.
  1933. Admiral TURNER. No, sir.
  1934. Senator INOUYE. What would you do if you criticized officials of the
  1935. technical services staff and they continued to carry on experimentation for a number of years?
  1936. Admiral TURNER. I would do two things, sir. One is, I would be sure
  1937. at the beginning that I was explicit enough that they knew that I
  1938. didn't want that to be continued anywhere else, and two, if I found it
  1939. being continued, I would roll some heads.
  1940. Senator INOUYE. Could you provide this committee with information as to whether the individuals involved had their heads rolled?
  1941. Admiral TURNER. I don't believe there is any evidence they did, but
  1942. I will double check that.
  1943. [See p. 170 for material referred to.]
  1944. Senator INOUYE. As you know, Senator Huddleston and his subcommittee are deeply involved in the drafting of charters and guidelines
  1945. for the intelligence community. We will be meeting with the President
  1946. tomorrow. Our concern is, I think, a basic one. Can anything like this
  1947. occur again?
  1948. Admiral TURNER. I think it would be very, very unlikely, first, because we are all much more conscious of these issues than we were back
  1949. in the fifties, second, because we have such thorough oversight procedures. I cannot imagine that this kind of activity could take place
  1950. today without some member of the CIA itself bypassing me, if I were
  1951. authorizing this, and writing to the Intelligence Oversight Board, and
  1952. blowing the whistle on this kind of activity.
  1953. I am also doing my very best, sir, to encourage an openness with
  1954. myself and a free communication in the Agency, so that I am the one
  1955. who finds these things if they should happen. The fact is that we must
  1956. keep you and your committee and now the new committee in the House
  1957. informed of our sensitive activities. I think all of these add up to a
  1958. degree of scrutiny such that this kind of extensive and flagrant activity
  1959. could not happen today without it coming to the attention of the proper
  1960. authorities to stop it.
  1961. Senator INOUYE. A sad aspect of the MKULTRA project was that
  1962. it naturally involved the people who unwittingly or wittingly got involved in experimentation. I would appreciate it if you would report
  1963. back to this committee in 3 months on what the Agency has done to
  1964. notify these individuals and these institutions, and furthermore, to
  1965. notify us as to what steps have been taken to identify victims, and if
  1966. identified, what you have done to assist them, monetarily or otherwise.
  1967. Admiral TURNER. All right, sir. I will be happy to.
  1968. Senator GOLDWATER. Will the Senator yield?
  1969.  
  1970. Senator INoUYE. Yes, Sir.
  1971. Senator GOLDWATER. I wonder if he could include in that report for
  1972. our information only a complete listing of the individuals and the
  1973. experiments done on them, and whether they were'witting or unwitting,
  1974. volunteer or nonvolunteer, and what has been the result in each case.
  1975. I think that would be interesting.
  1976. Admiral TURNER. Fine. Yes, Sir.
  1977. Senator INOUYE. Senator Kennedy?
  1978. Senator KENNEDY. Thank you. It is your intention to notify the individuals who have been the subjects of the research, is that right,
  1979. Admiral Turner? Do you intend to notify those individuals?
  1980. Admiral TURNER. Yes.
  1981. Senator KENNEDY. If you can identify them, you intend to notify
  1982. them?
  1983. Admiral TURNER. Yes.
  1984. Senator KENNEDY. And you intend to notify the universities or research centers as well?
  1985. Admiral TURNER. Senator, I am torn on that. I understand your
  1986. opening statement. I put myself in the position of the president of one
  1987. of those universities, let's say. If he were witting-if his university
  1988. had been witting of this activity with us, he has access to all that information today. If he were not witting, I wonder if the process of
  1989. informing him might put his institution's reputation in more jeopardy
  1990. than letting them go on the way they are today, not knowing. I really
  1991. don't know the equities here.
  1992. Senator KENNEDY. Well, the problem is, all you have to do is pick up
  1993. the newspapers and you see these universities mentioned. In many instances, I think you are putting the university people at an extraordinary disadvantage, where there is a complete change of administration, and they may for one reason or another not have information
  1994. that they are under suspicion. There is innuendo; there is rumor. I
  1995. cannot help but believe that it will just get smeared all over the newspapers in spite of all the security steps that have been taken.
  1996. It seems to me that those universities should be entitled to that information, so that the ones with other administrations can adapt procedures to protect those universities. The importance of preserving the
  1997. independence of our research areas and the communities seems to me to
  1998. be a very fundamental kind of question about the protection of the
  1999. integrity of our universities and our research centers.
  2000. Admiral TURNER. You are saying that you feel that if we identify
  2001. them privately to themselves, we can benefit them in an adequate way to
  2002. cover the risk that this will lead to a more public disclosure? There are
  2003. lots of the 80 who have not been identified publicly at this point.
  2004. Senator KENNEDY. I think the universities themselves should be notified. I think then the universities can take whatever steps in terms of
  2005. their setting up the procedures to protect their own kinds of integrity
  2006. in terms of the future. I would certainly hope that they would feel
  2007. that they could make a public comment or a public statement on it.
  2008. I think it is of general public interest, particularly for the people that
  2009. are involved in those universities, to have some kind of awareness of
  2010. whether they were used or were not used and how they were used.
  2011. I think they are entitled to it, and quite frankly, if there is a public
  2012. official or an official of the university that you notify and he wants
  2013.  
  2014. for his own particular reasons not to have it public, I don't see why
  2015. those in a lesser echelon or lower echelon who have been effectively used
  2016. by it should not have the information as well.
  2017. So, I would hopethat you would notify the universities and then
  2018. also indicate to the public. I can't conceive that this information will
  2019. not be put out in the newspapers, and it puts the university people at
  2020. an extraordinary disadvantage, and of course some of it is wrong,
  2021. which is the fact of the matter, and I think some university official
  2022. saying, well, it isn't so, is a lot different than if they know it is confirmed or it is not confirmed in terms of the Agency itself. I think that
  2023. there is a responsibility there.
  2024. Admiral TURNER. I have great sympathy with what you are saying.
  2025. I have already notified one institution because the involvement was so
  2026. extensive that I thought they really needed to protect themselves, and
  2027. I am most anxious to do this in whatever way will help all of the
  2028. people who were perhaps unwitting participants in this, and the difficulty I will have is, I can't quite do, I think, what you suggested, in
  2029. that I may not be able to tell an institution of the extent and nature of
  2030. its participation.
  2031. Senator KENNEDY. Well, you can tell them to the best of your information, and it seems to me that just because the university or an
  2032. individual is going to be embarrassed is not a reason for classifying
  2033. the information. So, I would hope-I mean, I obviously speak as an
  2034. individual Senator, but I feel that that is an incredible disservice to
  2035. the innocent individuals and, I think, a disservice to the integrity of
  2036. the universities unless they are notified, to be able to develop procedures you are developing with regards to your own institution and
  2037. we are trying to in terms of the Congress. Certainly the universities
  2038. are entitled to the same.
  2039. Admiral TURNER. Yes. Not all of these, of course, were unwitting.
  2040. Senator KENNEDY. That's right.
  2041. Admiral TURNER. Many of them were witting, and therefore they
  2042. can take all those precautionary steps on their own, but I am perfectly
  2043. open to doing this. I am only interested in doing it in a way that when
  2044. identifying a university it will not lead to the public disclosure of the
  2045. individuals, whom I am not allowed to disclose, and so on.
  2046. Senator KENNEDY. That could be done, it seems to me.
  2047. Admiral TURNER. So, we will see if we can devise a way of notifying
  2048. these institutions on a private basis so that they can then make their
  2049. own decision whether their equities are best served by their announcing it publicly or their attempting to maintain itSenator KENNEDY. Or you. I wonder. What if they were to ask you
  2050. to announce or indicate ?
  2051. Admiral TURNER. My personal conscience, sir, at this time, is that I
  2052. would be doing a disserve to these universities if I notified the public.
  2053. Senator KENNEDY. Would you meet with some university officials
  2054. and ask what their views are or whether they feel that the preservation of the integrity of the universities would be better served or not?
  2055. I think that would be useful to find out from small, large, private, and
  2056. public universities' officials how they view the integrity
  2057. Admiral TURNER. Fine. I will phone several university presidents
  2058. today who are my friends and who are not involved in this, and ask
  2059. them what they think the equities would be.
  2060.  
  2061. Senator KENNEDY. All right. You let us know, too.
  2062. Admiral TURNER. But I am not sure that I see that there is any great
  2063. benefit in my notifying the public as opposed to the university notifying them. Let him have his choice whether he wants-each institution
  2064. wants to have it made public.
  2065. Senator KENNEDY. Yes. The fact would remain that the institution's
  2066. credibility would be better served if the institution's president were to
  2067. deny it and the university indicated that it did not participate in that
  2068. program than if the university were to deny it and the Agency says
  2069. nothing. It seems to me that that would be the strongest, and the only
  2070. way that that is going to be credible. I would value it if you would get
  2071. some input from universities as to what they believe is the fairest way
  2072. in terms of the preservation of the integrity of the universities.
  2073. Let me, if I could, ask on the question of the uses of these safe
  2074. houses, as I understand from information that was provided to us in
  2075. the course of our last committee, the testing of various drugs on individuals happened at all social levels, high and low, it happened on
  2076. native Americans and also on foreign nationals. That is what I understand was the nature of the project itself.
  2077. Now, I am just wondering whether those tests were conducted at the
  2078. two locations on the east coast and the west coast which were known
  2079. as safe houses. To your knowledge, is that correct?
  2080. Admiral TURNER. Yes.
  2081. Senator KENNEDY. In terms of the research in this particular program, it did not go beyond the safe houses located on the east coast and
  2082. the west coast? I believe I am correct on that.
  2083. Admiral TURNER. That type of unwitting testing of sort of randomly selected individuals, yes.
  2084. Senator KENNEDY. It was just located in those two places?
  2085. Admiral TURNER. To the best of our knowledge, there were only two
  2086. locations.
  2087. Senator KENNEDY. Well, how do we interpret randomly selected?
  2088.  
  2089. Admiral TURNER. Well, as opposed to prisoners in a prison who were
  2090. somehow selected.
  2091. Senator KENNEDY. All right. Do you know from this information
  2092. how many people were recruited during this period?
  2093. Admiral TURNER. No idea.
  2094. Senator KENNEDY. Do you know approximately?
  2095.  
  2096. Admiral TURNER. I asked that question the other day, and we just
  2097. don't have-apparently we are very-well, either there were no
  2098. records kept of the actual numbers and types of people tested or they
  2099. were destroyed.
  2100. Senator INOUYE. Senator Schweiker.
  2101. Senator SCmWEKER. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
  2102. Admiral Turner, I would like to come back to the experiments
  2103. which may have been conducted at the hospital research facilities
  2104. which the CIA helped to finance. It wasn't clear to me from your previous answers what kind of work was done there. I gather you are unclear on that, too, from your remarks, yet I find in the CIA documentation which you have supplied us, a list describing some of the
  2105. advantages the Agency hoped to gain. It says:
  2106. (a) One-sixth of the total space in the new hospital wing will be available to the
  2107. Chemical Division of TSS * * * ; (b) Agency sponsorship of sensitive research
  2108.  
  2109. projects will be completely deniable; (c) Full professional cover will be provided
  2110. for up to three biochemical employees of the Chemical Division; (4) Human
  2111. patients and volunteers for experimental use will be available under controlled
  2112. clinical conditions with the full supervision of
  2113.  
  2114. and there is a blank, something has been deleted.
  2115. It seems pretty clear to me what they intended to do in that particular wing. Doesn't it to you? Why would you go to such elaborate
  2116.  
  2117. preparations, to buy part of the wing, bring three of your own personnel there, give them a cover, and give them access to patients?
  2118. Why would you go to such trouble and expense to arrange all that, if
  2119. you weren't planning to experiment on people in the hospital?
  2120. Admiral TURNER. I agree with you 100 percent, sir. Those were
  2121. clearly the intentions. I have no evidence that it was carried out in
  2122. that way. I am not trying to be defensive, Senator. I am only trying
  2123. to be absolutely precise here.
  2124. Senator SCHWEIKER. Well, then, as to the nature of what was done
  2125. there, the last paragraph on the same page of the document says,
  2126. "The facilities of the hospital and the. ability to conduct controlled
  2127. experimentations under safe clinical conditions using materials with
  2128. which any agency connection must be completely deniable will augment and complement other programs recently taken over by TSS,
  2129. such as," and then there's another deletion.
  2130. Now, the words following "such as" have been deleted. That is still
  2131. classified, or at least it was removed when this document was sanitized
  2132. and released. It seems to be that whatever was deleted right there would
  2133. give you a pretty good clue as to what they were doing, since it says
  2134. that the activities would "augment and complement other -programs"
  2135. undertaken by TSS. So, I have trouble understanding why you don't
  2136. know what was contemplated. Just the fact.that similar programs are
  2137. referred to in the document, though what they are is still deleted,
  2138. should enable you to check it out.
  2139. You could look at what went on in the similar programs mentioned
  2140. following the "such as" in the classified version of this document.
  2141. Admiral TURNER. Senator, I have not said that we don't know what
  2142. was contemplated being done there. We do not know what was done
  2143. there.
  2144. Senator SCHWEIKER. Why did you delete that reference? Why is
  2145. that still classified, that particular project of whatever it is?
  2146. Admiral TURNER. I don't know this particular case. We will get you
  2147. the exact answer to that one and inform you about it, but it is quite
  2148. probable that that other case is unrelated to this in the-well, not unrelated, but that that was a project that still deserves to be classified.
  2149. [The material referred to follows:]
  2150. Construction of the Gorman Annex was begun in 1957 and the Annex was
  2151.  
  2152. dedicated in March 1959. Of the several MKULTRA projects conducted at
  2153.  
  2154. Georgetown only one involving human testing covered a time span subsequent
  2155. to March 1959. Subproject 45 ran from 1955 to 1963, thus it is possible that
  2156. the final four years (1959-1963) of the subproject could have been spent in
  2157. the Gorman Annex. However, there is no reference to the Gorman Annex or a
  2158. "new Annex" in Subproject 45 papers, neither is there any mention of the subproject moving to a new location in 1959 or later years.
  2159. Authorization to contribute CIA funds toward construction of the Gorman
  2160. Annex is contained in Subproject 35 of MKULTRA. Recently discovered material
  2161. indicated that Dr. Geschickter continued his research for sleep- and amnesiaproducing drugs under Project MKSEARCH through July 1967 at Georgetown
  2162. University Hospital. But it is impossible to determine if the facilities of the
  2163. Gorman Annex were involved.
  2164.  
  2165. Senator SCHWEIKER. I think that would give us a pretty good clue
  2166. as to what was going to be done in the wing the CIA helped to finance.
  2167. Was there any indication at all in the records you found that the
  2168. project ultimately used cancer patients or terminally ill patients in
  2169. connection with this facility?
  2170. Admiral TURNER. I'm sorry. I missed your question because I was
  2171. trying to get the data on the last one. I will read you the blank.
  2172. Senator SCHWEIKER. Go ahead.
  2173. Admiral TURNER. QKHILLTOP. It doesn't help you, butSenator SCHWEIKER. Can you tell us what that is, or is it still
  2174. classified?
  2175. Admiral TURNER. I don't know, and I assume from the fact that
  2176. we deleted it, it is still classified, but I will get you that answer, sir.
  2177. Senator SCHWEIKER. Thank you. I'd like to see that information.
  2178. [See p. 171 for material referred to.]
  2179. *
  2180. Now my next question was: Is there any indication, Admiral, that
  2181. projects in that particular center involved experimentation on terminally ill cancer patients?
  2182. Admiral TURNER. I missed the first part of your question, sir. I am
  2183. very sorry.
  2184. Senator SCHWEIKER. Do you have any indication that some experiments in the facility used terminally ill cancer patients as subjects?
  2185. You do acknowledge in your statement and it is clar from other documents that these kinds of experiments were at some point being done
  2186. somewhere. My question is, is there any indication that cancer patients
  2187. or terminally ill patients were experimented with in this wing?
  2188. Admiral TURNER. Yes, it does appear there is a connection here, sir.
  2189. Senator SCHWEIKER. The other question I had relates to the development of something which has been called the perfect concussion.
  2190. A series of experiments toward that end were described in the CIA
  2191. documents. I wonder if you would just tell us what your understanding
  2192. of perfect concussion is.
  2193. Admiral TURNER. Is that in my testimony, sir, or in some other
  2194. document?
  2195. Senator SCHWEIKER. Subproject 54, MKULTRA, which involved
  2196. examination of techniques to cause brain concussions and amnesia by
  2197. using weapons or sound waves to strike individuals without giving
  2198. warning and without leaving any clear physical marks. Someone
  2199. dubbed it "perfect concussion"-maybe that was poetic license on the
  2200. part of our staff rather than your poets over there. I wonder if you
  2201. could just tell us what brain concussion experiments were about?
  2202. Admiral TURNER. This project, No. 54, was canceled, and never
  2203. carried out.
  2204. Senator SCHWEIKER. Well, I do believe the first year of the project
  2205. in 1955 was carried out by the Office of Naval Research, according to
  2206. the information that you supplied us. The CIA seems to have been participating in some way at that point, because the records go on to say
  2207. that the experimenter at ONR found out about CIA's role, discovered
  2208. that it was a cover, and then the project was transferred to
  2209. MKULTRA in 1956. Again, this is all from the backup material you
  2210. have given us. So, it was canceled at some time. I am not disagreeing
  2211.  
  2212. with that, but apparently for at least a year or two, somebody was
  2213. investigating the production of brain concussions with special blackjacks, sound waves, and other methods as detailed in the backup
  2214. material.
  2215. Admiral TURNER. The data available to me is that this project was
  2216. never funded by the CIA, but I will d)uble-check that and furnish the
  2217. information for the record for you as to whether there was ever any
  2218. connection here and if so, what the nature of the work was.
  2219. [The material referred to follows:]
  2220. Mr. Laubinger corrected his testimony regarding Subproject 54 during the
  2221. September 21, 1977 hearings before the Subcommittee on Health and Scientific
  2222. Research of the Human Resources Committee. The relevant portion is reproduced
  2223. below:
  2224. Mr. LAIBINGER. On project 54, it has got a rather sensational proposal in there,
  2225. in terms of the.work that they propose to do, and you asked about the proposal
  2226. and I said, in fact, it was never funded under MKULTRA. Now, I overlooked--at
  2227. least, my memory did not serve me correctly when I went through that file folder
  2228. to see one memorandum dated January 10, 1956, which makes it quite clear, as a
  2229. matter of fact, that that proposal was based on prior work that was funded by
  2230. the Agency.
  2231. Senator ScnwnxKER. By what?
  2232. Mr. LAUBINGER. By the CIA. So, that information was in their file folder. It
  2233. did not happen to be in my head when I testified.
  2234. Senator SCHWEIKER. I think I might have read you that, and that is why I
  2235. argued at the time with you, because I think I had in front of me, as I recall,
  2236. some indication that it was funded there. I did read that to you. So, you did
  2237. supply it to us; there is no argument about that information.
  2238. Mr. LAUBINGER. Perhaps I am sort of headstrong, myself, and in my own view,
  2239. I am reading under the ULTRA project, that if it had been funded under
  2240. ULTRA, it would have had a project number and identified as such. The thing
  2241. that threw me was that it was funded, apparently, outside of any MKULTRA
  2242. activity and it was under the normal contracting process, so that it was not
  2243. included in MKULTRA as 'any work done under that funding umbrella.
  2244. The file folder that you have and I have, right here, makes it quite clear,
  2245. however, that a year's work was done through navy funding-a navy funding
  2246. mechanism-on which the proposal was based that ultimately came into the
  2247. MKULTRA program. That second proposal was never funded. So, there was
  2248. conflict and I, personally, I think, introduced a little bit of confusion in that in
  2249. my testimony.
  2250.  
  2251. Senator SCHWEIKER. Well, do you agree or not agree with DOD's statement
  2252. here that even though the initial funding was navy, it was really a conduit for
  2253. the CIA?
  2254. Mr. LAUBINGER. I think that is correct.
  2255.  
  2256. Senator SCHWEIKER. Yes; I would appreciate that. I would like to
  2257. know how it went from ONR to CIA after a year. Somebody made a
  2258. decision to make that transfer, and to make this an MKULTRA subject. There had to be some sort of review that led to a decision to
  2259. continue that kind of concussion-total blackout, maximum amnesia,
  2260. and whatever else it was you were interested in-study and testing.
  2261. Mr. LAUBINGER. Senator, if I may try to say a few words on that,
  2262. the files that were available to us for inspection, which are limited,
  2263. indicated that there was a project being carried on by the Navy having
  2264. to do with the effects of brain concussion. The CIA developed an interest in that, and considered funding it, but actually never did, and as
  2265. the admiral testified, the MKULTRA is merely a funding mechanism,
  2266. a place they go for money to do such things, but there is no evidence
  2267. that I know of that that project was ever funded.
  2268.  
  2269. Senator SCHWEIKER. Well, I am confused, because here
  2270. again is another quote from a document that we have seen, which
  2271. you
  2272. have released and supplied to us:
  2273. Following is the technical progress made under
  2274. current [deleted] contract:
  2275. (a) Specialized instrumentation and numerous the
  2276. testing techniques have been
  2277. developed to obtain the desired dynamic data; (b)
  2278. considerable data has now
  2279. been obtained supporting the resonance-cav~ilation theory
  2280. of brain concussion; and
  2281. (c) preliminary accelerationi threshold data has been obtained
  2282. for a fluid-filled
  2283. glass simulated skull.
  2284.  
  2285. It goes on to talk about a blast range and a 2 ,5 0 0 -square-foot
  2286. laboratory. The document notes that "Three blast test series
  2287. have been run
  2288. to date." It describes a special blackjack device, "a pancake-type
  2289. blackjack giving a high peak impact force with a low unit
  2290. surface pressure."
  2291. I agree the records are inconclusive as to the results
  2292. of this work,
  2293. but it certainly seems that some testing was done.
  2294. Mr. LAUBINGER. Senator, you are putting us in
  2295. same position
  2296. I think you were stating that you were in earlier in the
  2297. referring
  2298. to docunments not before us, but I believe you are quoting
  2299. from a proposaL
  2300. that someone sent to the Agency to fund
  2301. this work, and he is referring
  2302. to past work. The past work would have encompassed
  2303. a lot of things
  2304. like that, but CIA was not involved with that.
  2305. Senator SCHWETKER. What do you mean, Admiral, on
  2306. 6 of your
  2307. testimony when you mention projects using magician's page
  2308. art? How do
  2309. magicians get into the spook business?
  2310. Admiral TURNER. I have interpreted this as to how to slip the mickey
  2311. into the finn, but I would like to ask my advisers here to comment.
  2312. Mr. Bory. I think that is essentially it, Senator. It is surreptitious
  2313. administration of material to someone, deceptive practices, how
  2314. to
  2315. distract someone's attention while you are doing something else,
  2316. as
  2317. I understand it. It was also some type of a covert communication
  2318. project involved with the study of how magicians and their assistants
  2319. perhaps communicate mformation to one another without having other
  2320. people know it. This is the type of thing that was involved, sir.
  2321. Senator SCHWEIKER. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
  2322. Senator INoUYE. Senator Huddleston?
  2323. Senator HUDDLESTON. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
  2324. Admiral, in your checking these newly discovered documents and
  2325. interviewing members of the CIA staff, did you find information that
  2326. would confirm the contention described by the reporters for the New
  2327. York Times that this type of experimentation was begun out of a
  2328. fear at the Agency that foreign powers might have had drugs which
  2329. would allow them to alter the behavior of American citizens or agents
  2330. or members of the Armed Forces who were taken into custody, and
  2331. which would have resulted in false confessions and the like? Is my
  2332. question clear?
  2333. Admiral TURNER. Yes, sir. I haven't personally read the documentation on that. In my discussions with the people who are well informed in this area at the Agency, I am told that that is the case.
  2334. Senator HUDDLESTON. Was there any evidence or any indication that
  2335. there were other motives that the Agency might also be looking for
  2336. (1-ugs that could be applied for other purposes, such as debilitating an
  2337. individual or even killing another person? Was this part of this kind
  2338. of experimentation?
  2339.  
  2340. Admiral TURNER. Yes; I think there is. I have not seen in this series
  2341. of documentation evidence of desire to kill, but I think the project
  2342. turned its character from a defensive to an offensive one as it went
  2343. along, and there certainly was an intention here to develop drugs that
  2344. could be of use.
  2345. Senator HUDDLESTON. The project continued for some time after it
  2346. was learned that, in fact, foreign powers did not have such a drug as
  2347. was at first feared, didn't it?
  2348. Admiral TURNER. That is my understanding. Yes, sir.
  2349.  
  2350. Senator HUDDLESTON. Is there any indication that knowledge gained
  2351. as a result of these experiments has been useful or is being applied in
  2352. any way to present operations?
  2353. Mr. BRODY. Senator, I am not sure if there is any body of knowledge.
  2354. A great deal of what there was, I gather, was destroyed in 1973. I
  2355. would like to defer to Frank here. Do you know of any?
  2356. Mr. LAUBINGER. I know of no drugs or anything like that developed
  2357. under this program that ever reached operational use or are in use
  2358. -today.-
  2359.  
  2360. Senator HUDDLESTON.
  2361.  
  2362. So apparently any information that was
  2363.  
  2364. gathered was apparently useless and not worth continuing, not worth
  2365. further development on the part of the Agency.
  2366. Mr. LAUBINGER. I am having difficulty hearing your questions.
  2367. Senator HUDDLESTON. I can hardly hear myself.
  2368.  
  2369. Admiral TURNER. I think the answer to your question is that we have
  2370. no evidence of great usefulness on this, and yet I think we should
  2371. rememberSenator HUDDLESTON. Well, is it accurate to say that this experimentation produced few useful results or had little application at all to the
  2372. operations of the Agency or anybody else as far as we know?
  2373. Admiral TURNER. I think that is basically correct. At the same time,
  2374. I would point out that we had two CIA prisoners in China and one in
  2375. the Soviet Union at this time, and we were concerned as to what kinds
  2376. of things might be done to them, but I am not saying thatSenator HUDDLESTON. Have you detected any sign that any other na-
  2377.  
  2378. tion is continuing or has in the past conducted experiments similar to
  2379. this or with a similar objective?
  2380. Admiral TURNER. I am not prepared to answer that one off the top
  2381. of my head, sir, but I will get it to you.
  2382. [The material referred to follows:]
  2383.  
  2384. We maintain no files of up-to-date information on. the testing of drugs in
  2385. foreign countries. Some years ago we occasionally would review foreign research
  2386. on antibiotics and pharmaceuticals in connection with public bhealth and civil
  2387. defense assesments. For a few years beginning in 1949 we assessed foreign
  2388. research on LSD under Project ARTICHOKE because of concern that such
  2389. drugs might be employed. gainst Agency and other U.S. personnel. Information
  2390. relative to this work has already been provided to relevant Committees. In this
  2391. early work we also occasionally looked at foreign human experimentation; we
  2392. long ago eliminated our holdings on this subject and no collection requirements
  2393. are any longer served. As consumer interest in this area has dropped off
  2394. and higher priority areas need attention, we have virtually no present coverage
  2395. with the possible exception of an occasional scanning of the literature for a
  2396. specific program. To the best of our knowledge no other unit in the Intelligence
  2397. Community is tracking this subject now.
  2398.  
  2399. Senator HUDDLESTON. You don't know whether any of your agents
  2400. anywhere in the world have been subjected to any kind of procedure
  2401. like this?
  2402. Admiral TURNER. We certainly know of other powers conducting
  2403. research in these areas, yes.
  2404. Senator HUDDLESTON. Do you know how they go about that research?
  2405. Admiral TURNER. It is pretty sketchy, the information we have.
  2406. Senator HUDDLESTON. Do you know of any other organization in this
  2407. country or any institution that has conducted extensive research on
  2408. unwitting individuals and through unwitting institutions?
  2409. Admiral TURNER. Well, I have read something in the newspapers
  2410. about this, but I have not familiarized myself with it in specifics.
  2411. Senator HUDDLESTON. It is not a normal mode of operation for human research, is it?
  2412. Admiral TURNER. No, sir.
  2413. Senator HUDDLESTON. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
  2414. Senator INOUYE. Senator Wallop?
  2415. Senator WVALLOP. Mr. Chairman, I only have one to follow up on
  2416. Senator Huddleston's questions and my earlier ones. You are not really
  2417. saying, are you, Admiral Turner, that there are no mind-altering
  2418. drugs or behavior modification procedures which have been used by
  2419. foreign powers?
  2420. Adiniral TURNER. No, sir, I am not.
  2421. Senator WALLOP. I drew that inference partly in answer to my question that you knew of no truth serum. Maybe that is a misnomer, but
  2422. surely there are relaxants that make tongues looser than they would
  2423. otherwise be. Isn't that true?
  2424. Admiral TURNER. Yes.
  2425. Senator WALLOP. So I think it is fair to say, too, that the experience
  2426. of many American prisoners of war in the Korean conflict would
  2427. indicate that there are behavior modification procedures in use by
  2428. foreign powers of a fairly advanced degree of sophistication.
  2429. Admiral TURNER. Yes, sir.
  2430. Senator WALLOP. Again, I will just go back and say I think this
  2431. must have been part of the motivation. I don't think you would have
  2432. mentioned Cardinal Mindszenty had you thought his behavior was
  2433. normal at the time or had anybody else. So, I would just again say
  2434. I think it is a little bit scapegoating. I don't think the object of this
  2435. hearing is in any way to lay blame on those passed or those dead or
  2436. otherwise, but I think it is a little bit scapegoating to say that it
  2437. stopped with the directors of the CIA or the DCI's of the time. Also
  2438. I think it is a little bit scapegoating to say they didn't even know it,
  2439. but that it was some lower echelon acting alone.
  2440. I think this was a behavior pattern that was prevalent in those
  2441. years, and I think the object lesson is that we have discovered, we
  2442. think and we hope, through your assurances and other activities of
  2443. the Congress, means of avoiding future incidents of that kind. I thank
  2444. you, Mr. Chairman.
  2445. Senator INOUYE. Senator Chafee?
  2446. Senator CTrAFEE. No questions.
  2447. Senator INOUYE. Senator Kennedy, I think you have another
  2448. question.
  2449.  
  2450. Senator KENNEDY. Just talking about the two safe houses on the
  2451. east and west coast as being the sources for the unwitting trials, now,
  2452. the importance of this and the magnitude of it, I think, is of significance, because we have seen from your records that these were used
  2453. over a period of 8 or 9 years, and the numbers could have been considerable. You are unable to determine, at least in your own research,
  2454. what the numbers would be and what the drugs were, how many people
  2455. were involved, but it could have been considerable during this period
  2456. of time.
  2457. It would certainly appear to me in examining the documents and
  2458. the flow charts of cash slips that were expended in these areas that it
  2459. was considerable, but that is a judgmental factor on it, but I think
  2460. it is important to try and find out what the Agency is attempting to
  2461. do to get to the bottom of it.
  2462. Now, the principal agent that was involved as I understand it is
  2463. deceased and has been deceased for 2 years. The overall agent, Mr.
  2464. Gottlieb, has indicated a fuzzy memory about this whole area. He
  2465. has testified before the Intelligence Committee. Yet he was responsible for the whole program. Then, the Director had indicated the
  2466. destruction of the various materials and unfamiliarity with the
  2467. project.
  2468. Now, you have indicated in your testimony today that there are two
  2469. additional agents on page 9 of your testimony, you indicated there
  2470. are two additional agents which you have uncovered at the bottom of
  2471. it, and you say, the names of CIA officials who approved or monitored
  2472. the various projects. You talk about the two additional agents in your
  2473. testimony.
  2474. Now, I am just wondering if you intend to interview those agents
  2475. to find out exactly what is being done. I suppose, first of all, shouldn't
  2476. the project manager know what was being done?
  2477. Admiral TURNER. Our first problem, Senator, is that we have been
  2478. unable to associate an individual with those names at this point. We
  2479. are still burrowing to find out who these people are. We haven't identified them as having been CIA employees, and we don't know whether
  2480. these were false names.
  2481. Senator KENNEDY. You are tracking that down, as I understand it?
  2482. Admiral TURNER. Yes, sir.
  2483. Senator KENNEDY. You are tracking that down, and you have every
  2484. intention of interviewing those people to find out whatever you can
  2485. about the program and project?
  2486. Admiral TURNER. My only hesitation here is whether I will do this
  2487. or the Justice Department.
  2488. Senator KENNEDY. It will be pursued, though, I understand?
  2489. Admiral TURNER. Yes, sir.
  2490. Senator KENNEDY. Either through the Agency or through the Justice Department?
  2491. Admiral TURNER. [Nods in the affirmative.]
  2492. Senator KENNEDY. Is it plausible that the director of the program
  2493. would not understand or know about the details of the program?
  2494. Is it plausible that Dr. Gottlieb would not understand the full range
  2495. of activities in those particular safe houses?
  2496.  
  2497. 96-408 0 - 77 - 4
  2498.  
  2499. Admiral TURNER. Let me say it is unlikely. I don't know Mr. Gottlieb.
  2500. Senator KENNEDY. Has anybody in the Agency talked with Mr.
  2501. Gottlieb to find out about this?
  2502. Admiral TURNER. Not since this revelation has come out.
  2503. Senator KENNEDY. Not since this revelation? Well, why not?
  2504. Armiral TURNER. He has left our employ, Senator.
  2505. Senator KENNEDY. Does that mean that anybody who leaves is, you
  2506. know, covered for lifetime?
  2507. Admiral TURNER. No, sir.
  2508. Senator KENNEDY. Why wouldn't you talk with him and find out?
  2509. You have new information about this program. It has been a matter
  2510. of considerable interest both to our committee and to the Intelligence
  2511. Committee. Why wouldn't you talk to Mr. Gottlieb?
  2512. Admiral TURNER. Well, again, I think the issue is whether this
  2513. should be done by the Justice Department or ourselves.
  2514. Senator KENNEDY. Well, are we wrestling around because you and
  2515. Attorney General Bell can't agreeAdmiral TURNER. No, sir.
  2516. Senator KENNEDY [continuing]. On who ought to do it?
  2517. Admiral TURNER. We are proceeding together in complete agreement
  2518. as to how to go. I have, in connection with trying to find all of these
  2519. Americans or others who were unwittingly tested, I have some considerable concern about the CIA running around this country interviewing and interrogating people, because I don't want to give any
  2520. impression that we are doing domestic intelligence.
  2521. Senator KENNEDY. I am just talking about one, in this case. That
  2522. was the man who was responsible for the whole program, and to
  2523. find out whether anyone within the Agency since you have had this
  2524. new material has talked to Gottlieb since 1975, and if the answer is
  2525. no, I want to know why not.
  2526. Admiral TURNER. The reason he was not interviewed in connection
  2527. with the 1975 hearings was that he had left the employ of the CIA
  2528. and there was a concern on the part of the Agency that it would appear
  2529. to the investigators that the CIA was in some way trying to influence
  2530. him and influence his testimony before the committee. If these
  2531. committees have no objection, we would be happy to contact Dr.
  2532. Gottlieb and see if he can augment anything here in this new information, though I don't think there is much in this new information
  2533. that he can add to as opposed to what was available in 1975.
  2534. Senator KENNEDY. Well, you see, Admiral Turner, you come to the
  2535. two committees this morning and indicate that now at last we have the
  2536. information. We don't have to be concerned about anything in the
  2537. future on it. Now, I don't know how you can give those assurances to
  2538. the members of these committees as well as to the American people
  2539. when you haven't since 1975 even talked to the principal person that
  2540. was in charge of the program, and the records were destroyed. He is
  2541. the fellow that was running the program, and the Agency has not
  2542. talked to him since the development of this new material.
  2543. Admiral TURNER. Our only concern here is the proprieties involved,
  2544. and we will dig into this and work with the Justice Department on
  2545.  
  2546. who, if either of us, should get into discussions with Dr. Gottlieb so as
  2547. not to prejudice any legal rights that may be involved 'here, or to appear in any way to be improper.
  2548. Senator KENNEDY. Well, do I understand you have not contacted the
  2549. Justice Department about this particular case since the development
  2550. of this new material about Gottlieb?
  2551. Admiral TURNER. Not about Gottlieb specifically. We have contacted
  2552. him.
  2553. Senator KENNEDY. Well, it is amazing to me. I mean, can you understand the difficulty that any of us might have in terms of comprehending that when you develop a whole new series of materials that are on
  2554. the front page of every newspaper in the country and are on every television, I mean, that means something, but it does not mean nearly as
  2555. much as the interest that we have in the fact about the testing of unwitting Americans, and every single document that the staff reviews
  2556. has Mr. Gottlieb's name on it and you come up to tell us that we don't
  2557. have to worry any more, we have these other final facts, and Mr. Gottlieb has not been talked to?
  2558. Admiral TURNER. Sir, I am not saying that these are in any way the
  2559. final facts. I am saying these are all the facts we have available.
  2560. Senator KENNEDY. And you have not talked to the person who was
  2561. in charge of the program, so what kind of value or what kind of weight
  2562. can we give it?
  2563. Admiral TURNER. We are happy to talk to him. I thinkthe issue
  2564. here again is one of propriety and how to go about this. We have not,
  2565. I believe, enough new information about Gottlieb's participation here
  2566. to signal that his interview would be that much more revealing than
  2567. what was revealed in 1975.
  2568. Senator KENNEDY. The importance of it, I think, from our point
  2569. of view, is, he would know the drugs that were administered, the volume of drugs, how it was administered, and in terms of your ability
  2570. to follow up to protect these people and their health, to the extent that
  2571. it can be done, that opportunity is being lost.
  2572. I want to get on to some others, but will you give us the assurance
  2573. that you will get ahold of Gottlieb or that you will talk to Attorney
  2574. General Bell and talk with Gottlieb?
  2575. Admiral TURNER. Yes, sir.
  2576. Senator KENNEDY. And let us know as to the extent of it. I don't
  2577. see how we can fufill our responsibility in this area on the drug testing without our hearing from Gottlieb as well, but I think it is important that you do so, particularly since all of the materials have
  2578. been destroyed.
  2579. These other two agents, have they talked to them?
  2580. Admiral TURNER. We don't know who they are, sir. We are trying
  2581. to track down and see whether these names can be releated to anybody.
  2582. Senator KENNEDY. That is under active investigation by the Agency?
  2583. Admiral TURNER. Yes, sir.
  2584. Senator KENNEDY. And you have the intention of talking to those
  2585. people when you locate them. Is that correct?
  2586. Admiral TURNER. Yes, sir, under the same circumstances as Gottlieb.
  2587. Senator KENNEDY. And you have people working on it?
  2588. Admiral TURNER. Yes, sir.
  2589.  
  2590. Senator KENNEDY. With regards to the activities that took place in
  2591. these safe houses, as I understand from the records, two-way mirrors
  2592. were used. Is that your understanding?
  2593. Admiral TURNER. Yes, sir. We have records that construction was
  2594. done to put in two-way mirrors.
  2595. Senator KENNEDY. And they were placed in the bedroom, as I
  2596. understand.
  2597. [Pause.]
  2598. Senator KENNEDY. Well, we have documents
  2599. Admiral TURNER. I believe that was in the Church record, but I
  2600. don't have the details.
  2601. Senator KENNEDY. And rather elaborate decorations were added, as
  2602. I understand, at least, to the one in San Francisco, in the bedroom,
  2603. which are French can-can dancers, floral pictures, drapery, including
  2604. installation of bedroom mirrors, three framed Toulouse Lautrec posters with black silk mats, and a number of other-red bedroom curtains and recording equipment, and then a series of documents which
  2605. were provided to the committee which indicate a wide proliferation
  2606. of different cash for $100, generally in the $100 range over any period
  2607. of time on the particular checks. Even the names are blocked out, as
  2608. to the person who is receiving it. Cash for undercover agents, operating expenses, drinks, entertainment while administering, and then it
  2609. is dashed out, and then the other documents, that would suggest, at
  2610. least with the signature of your principal agent out there, that"called to the operation, midnight, and climax."
  2611. What can you tell us that it might suggest to you about what techniques were being used by the Agency in terms of reaching that sort
  2612. of broad-based group of Americans that were being evidently enticed
  2613. for testing in terms of drugs and others? Do you draw any kind of
  2614. conclusion about what might have been going on out there in these
  2615. safe houses?
  2616. Admiral TURNER. No, sir.
  2617. [General laughter.]
  2618. Senator KENNEDY. There is a light side to it, but there is also an
  2619. enormously serious side. And that is that at least the techniques which
  2620. are used or were used in terms of testing, and trying to find out exactly the range of drugs used and the numbers of people involved and
  2621. exactly what that operation was about, as well as the constant reiteration of the use of small sums of cash at irregular intervals. A variety
  2622. of different techniques were employed but there is an awful lot of
  2623. documentation putting these matters together.
  2624. When you look at the fact that it is a broad range population that
  2625. has been tested, tested in these two areas, with the kind of cash slips
  2626. that were used in this, payment mechanisms and decorations and all
  2627. of the rest, we are not able to put a bottom line on it but one thing is
  2628. for sure, and that is, Gottlieb knows. That is one thing for sure, because his name appears on just about every one of these documents,
  2629. and it is, I think, very important to find out what his understanding
  2630. is of the nature of that. So, we will hear more about that.
  2631. Admiral TURNER. I believe Gottlieb has been interviewed by the
  2632. Congress.
  2633. Senator KENNEDY. That's right, he has, and in reviewing the record,
  2634. it is not very satisfactory, and it just seems with the new information
  2635.  
  2636. and the new documentation and the new memoranda-and he did not
  2637. have the checks at that time-and with the wide variety of different
  2638. memoranda with his name on it, his memory could be stimulated on
  2639. that.
  2640. Thank you.
  2641. Senator INOUYE. I would like to thank the admiral and his staff for
  2642. participating in this hearing. I believe the record should show that this
  2643. hearing was held at the request of the Agency and the admiral. It was
  2644. not held because we insisted upon it. It was a volunteer effort on the
  2645. part of the Agency. I think the record should also indicate that Admiral Turner has forwarded to this committee a classified file including
  2646. all of the names of the institutions and the persons involved as the
  2647. experimentors.
  2648. I should also indicate that this hearing is just one step involved in
  2649. the committee's investigation of drug abuse. Just as you have had much
  2650. work in going over the 8,000 pages, the staff of this committee has had
  2651. equal problems, but I would like the record to show that you have
  2652. made these papers and documents available to the committee. I thank
  2653. you for that.
  2654. As part of the ongoing investigation, we had intended to call upon
  2655. many dozens of others, experimentors, or those officials in charge, and
  2656. one of those will be Dr. Gottlieb.
  2657. In thanking you, I would like to say this to the American people,
  2658. that what we have experienced this morning in this committee room
  2659. is not being duplicated in any other committee room in any other part
  2660. of the world. I doubt that very much. Our Agency and our intelligence
  2661. community has been under much criticism and has been subjected to
  2662. much abuse, in many cases justified, but this is the most open society
  2663. that I can think of. For example, in Great Britain there are about six
  2664. people who are aware of the identity of the man in charge of intelligence. In other countries, similar conditions exist. Here in the United
  2665. States we not only know Admiral Turner, we have had open hearings
  2666. with him, such as this. The confirmation hearings were all open.
  2667. In a few weeks, the Senate of the United States will debate a resolution to decide upon whether we should disclose the amounts and funds
  2668. being used for counterintelligence and national intelligence. I would
  2669. hope that in presenting this issue to the public, the media will take note
  2670. that the Agency has cooperated and will continue to. The abuse that
  2671. we have learned about this morning is one I hope will never happen
  2672. again, but without constant oversight on the part of the Executive
  2673. Office, on the part of the Congress, it could happen again. It is important therefore that we continue in this oversight activity.
  2674. So, once again, Admiral, I thank you very much for helping us. We
  2675. will continue to call upon you for your assistance. We would like to
  2676. submit to you several questions that the members and staff have prepared. We hope you will look them over carefully and prepare responses for the record, sir.
  2677. Senator KENNEDY. Mr. Chairman ?
  2678. Senator INOUYE. Yes, sir?
  2679. Senator KENNEDY. I, too, want to thank Admiral Turner for his
  2680. responsiveness. I have had meetings with him in the committees and
  2681. also conversations, telephone conversations, and private meetings, and
  2682.  
  2683. I have found him personally to be extremely responsive, and it is a
  2684. very difficult challenge which he has accepted in heading this Agency.
  2685. I want you to know, personally, I, too, would like to see this put behind
  2686. us. I don't think we are quite there yet in terms of this particular area
  2687. that we are interested in. I think the Intelligence Committee has
  2688. special responsibilities in this area of the testing, so we look forward
  2689. to working with you in expediting the time that we can put it behind,
  2690. but it does seem to me that we have to dig in and finish the chapter.
  2691. So, I want to personally express my appreciation to you, Admiral
  2692. Turner, and thank you for your cooperation and your help, and I look
  2693. forward to working with you.
  2694. Admiral TURNER. Thank you.
  2695. Senator HUDDLESTON. Mr. Chairman, I am not sure you emphasized
  2696. this enough, but I think the record ought to show that Admiral Turner
  2697. informed the Select Committee on his own initiative when the new
  2698. documentation was found. The documentation has been made available to us voluntarily, in a spirit of cooperation.
  2699. I think this shows a vast difference from the mode of operation that
  2700. existed prior to the formation at least of the Church committee, and
  2701. a difference that is very helpful.
  2702. Senator INOUYE. Thank you very much. Thank you very much,
  2703. Admiral.
  2704. We would now like to call upon Mr. Philip Goldman and Mr. John
  2705. Gittinger.
  2706. Mr. Goldman and Mr. Gittinger, will you please rise and take the
  2707. oath.
  2708. Do you solemly swear that the testimony you are about to give is
  2709. the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth, so help you, God?
  2710. Mr. GOLDMAN. I do.
  2711. Mr. GITTINGER. I do.
  2712. Senator INouYE. Thank you, sir.
  2713.  
  2714. Mr. Goldman, will you identify yourself, and after that, Mr.
  2715. Gittinger.
  2716. Senator KENNEDY. Before we start in, we had a third witness, Mr.
  2717. Chairman, Mr. Pasternac, who planned to testify, traveled to Washington-he lives in Washington, and was contacted recently-with
  2718. the intention of testifying this morning. And something-he called
  2719. us late this morning and indicated that he wanted to get a counsel
  2720. before he would wish to testify.
  2721. Senator INOUYE. Mr. Goldman.
  2722.  
  2723. Mr. Goldman, will you identify yourself, sir.
  2724. TESTIMONY OF PHILIP GOLDMAN, FORMER EMPLOYEE, CENTRAL
  2725. INTELLIGENCE AGENCY
  2726. Mr. GOLDMAN. I am Philip Goldman.
  2727. Senator INOUYE. And you are a former employee of the. Central
  2728. Intelligence Agency?
  2729. Mr. GOLDMAN. Over 10 years ago.
  2730. Senator INOUYE. And you were employed at the time when
  2731. MKULTIRA was in operation?
  2732. Mr. GoLDMAN. There were some MKULTRA's in operation at the
  2733. time I was there.
  2734.  
  2735. Senator INoUYE. And Mr. John Gittinger, are you a former employee of the Central Intelligence Agency?
  2736. TESTIMONY OF JOHN GITTINGER, FORMER EMPLOYEE, CENTRAL
  2737. INTELLIGENCE AGENCY
  2738.  
  2739. Mr.
  2740.  
  2741. GITINGER.
  2742.  
  2743. I am.
  2744.  
  2745. Senator INOuYE. Are you still an employee?
  2746. Mr. GITINGER. No.
  2747. Senator INouYE. Were you a member of the Agency at the time
  2748. MKULTRA was in operation?
  2749. Mr. GITINGER. Yes.
  2750. Senator INouYE. Thank you. Senator Kennedy.
  2751. Senator KENNEDY. I want to welcome both of you to the committee.
  2752. If we could start with Mr. Goldman. Were you the project engineer
  2753. for the safe houses in either San Francisco or New York?
  2754. Mr. GOLDMAN. I-know of -no safei-ouse irrSan Francisco.
  2755. Senator KENNEDY. How about in New York?
  2756. Mr. GOLDMAN. I knew of one facility that was established there,
  2757. but I didn't know anything of its operation.
  2758. Senator KENNEDY. Were you a monitor on any testing of drugs on
  2759. unwitting persons in San Francisco?
  2760.  
  2761. Mr. GOLDMAN. No.
  2762. Senator KENNEDY. Well, we have a classified document here that was
  2763. provided by the Agency that lists your name as a monitor of the program and I would appreciate it if you would lookMr. GOLDMAN. I think the misunderstanding arises because I was
  2764. project officer.
  2765. Senator KENNEDY. Well, would you take a look at that?
  2766. [Mr. Goldman inspected the document.]
  2767. Mr. GOLDMAN. This document as it states is correct. However,
  2768. mySenator KENNEDY. That document is correct?
  2769. Mr. GOLDMAN. As far as I see on the first page, the project. But
  2770. mySenator KENNEDY. Well, could I get it back, please.
  2771. That would indicate that you were a monitor of the program.
  2772. Mr. GOLDMAN. I was in charge of disbursing the moneys to Morgan
  2773. Hall.
  2774. Senator KENNEDY. To whom was that?
  2775. Mr. GOLDMAN. To the individual whose name was listed at the top
  2776. of that document.
  2777. Senator KENNEDY. And you knew that he was running the project
  2778. in San Francisco?
  2779. Mr. GOLDMAN. I knew he was the person who was in charge out
  2780. there.
  2781. Senator KENNEDY. All right.
  2782. Mr. GOLDMAN. But I had no knowledge nor did I seek knowledge of
  2783. actually what he was doing, because there would be other things
  2784. involved.
  2785. I did receive
  2786. Senator KENNEDY. What were you doing?
  2787.  
  2788. Mr. GOLDMAN. I was collecting-I had to be sure that all the receipts that ever were turned in balanced with the moneys that were
  2789. paid out to see that everything was run all right. There was no illegal
  2790. use of funds as far as we could determine by the receipts and cash.
  2791. Senator KENNEDY. So even though the Agency document indicates
  2792. that you were a monitor for the program, one of the few monitors of
  2793. that particular program which you mentioned for San Francisco and
  2794. Mill Valley, Calif., you described your responsibility only as a carrier
  2795. of money, is that correct?
  2796. Mr. GOLDMAN. I would say as a disburser or carrying out-seeing
  2797. that the moneys were handled properly. There was within that-I
  2798. don't know what's done or what he did do in conjunction with other
  2799. people.
  2800. Senator KENNEDY. Were you responsible for the disbursement of
  2801. all the funds?
  2802. Mr. GOLDMAN. I was responsible for turning over the check to him.
  2803. Senator KENNEDY. And what did you know of the program itself?
  2804. Mr. GOLDMAN. The only thing I knew of the program was what he
  2805. furnished us in terms of receipts and that sort of thing. I didn't indulge or concern myself in that.
  2806. Senator KENNEDY. You still wrote, and I'll let you examine itit's a classified document-but you wrote a rather substantive review
  2807. of the program in May of 1963, talking about the experiments, the
  2808. factual data that had been collected, covert and realistic field trials,
  2809. albout the necessity of those particular-and talked about the effectiveness of the various programs, the efficiency of various delivery
  2810. systems. That doesn't sound to me like someone who is onlyMr. GOLDMAN. Well, if you would refresh my memory, if I could
  2811. read this I would certainly agree with whatever is said there, if it was
  2812. written.
  2813. Senator KENNEDY. I am trying to gather what your role was. You've
  2814. indicated first of all that you didn't know about-you knew about a
  2815. safe house in New York; now we find out that you're the carrier for
  2816. the resources as well and the agent in San Francisco. We find out now
  2817. that the CIA put you as a monitor. You're testifying that you only were
  2818. the courier, and here we have just one document, and there are many
  2819. others that talk about the substance of that program with your name
  2820. on it and I am just trying to find out exactly what role you were
  2821. playing.
  2822. Mr. GOIDMAN. The only thing I can tell you about this and I am
  2823.  
  2824. drawing completely on my memory is that this individual who was
  2825. in charge out there conducted these things and reported them back to
  2826. the Afrency. I didn't participate in any of them. All I know was that he
  2827. furnished me with receipts for things that were done and told of the
  2828. work that they had done.
  2829. Senator KENNEnY. Well, that document covers more than receipts.
  2830. Mr. GOLDMAN. Yes, it tells of what-they had conducted work out
  2831. there.
  2832. Senator KENNEDY. It describes, does it not? Read the paragraph 2.
  2833. Mr. GOT DMAN. "A numher of covert"
  2834. Senator KENNEDY. Well, you can't read it, it's a classified document,
  2835. and I don't know why, quite frankly, but it relates to the substance
  2836.  
  2837. of those programs and your name is signed to the memorandums on
  2838. it. I am not interested in you trying to review for us now what is in the
  2839. document, but I think it would be unfortunate if we were left with the
  2840. opinion that all you were was a courier of resources when we see a
  2841. document with your name on it, signed, that talks about the substance
  2842. of the program. And what we're interested in is the substance of the
  2843. program. We have the recent documents that were provided by the
  2844. Agency, which do indicate that you were at least involved in the
  2845. substance, and I'm just trying to find out whether you're willing to
  2846. tell us about that.
  2847. Mr. GOLDMAN. I am perfectly willing to tell you everything that
  2848. I can remember.
  2849. Senator KENNEDY. But you can't remember anything.
  2850. Mr. GOLDMAN. I can't remember the substantive parts of these
  2851. things, I really can't.
  2852. Senator KENNEDY. Of the program that was taking place.
  2853. Do you have any greater familiarity with what was happening in
  2854. New York?
  2855. Mr. GOLDMAN. No, no.
  2856. Senator KENNEDY. And you have the same function with regards
  2857. to New York?
  2858. Mr. GOLDMAN. The same function with regard to New York.
  2859. Senator KENNEDY. Did you ever go to San Francisco?
  2860.  
  2861. Mr.
  2862.  
  2863. GOLDMAN.
  2864.  
  2865. Yes.
  2866.  
  2867. Senator KENNEDY. Did you meet with the agent in charge?
  2868.  
  2869. Mr. GOLDMAN. Yes.
  2870. Senator KENNEDY. And why
  2871.  
  2872. aid you meet with him?
  2873.  
  2874. Mr. GOLDMAN. To discuss some of the receipts and things that were
  2875.  
  2876. there to find out if these were indeed true expenditures and to find out
  2877. if everything was going along all right for the work that was being
  2878. done.
  2879. Senator KENNEDY. What work was being done?
  2880.  
  2881. Mr. GOLDMAN. No, the reports of these things and whatever was
  2882. being done. I don't know who he reported to but he did report to
  2883. somebody.
  2884. Senator KENNEDY. You travel out there to find out about the work
  2885.  
  2886. that's being done, and what does he tell you, that the work is being
  2887. done well andMr. GOLDMAN. He told me that the work that they were doing was
  2888. going along, progressing satisfactorily, but to be very frank with
  2889. youSenator KENNEDY. But he didn't tell you what the work was?
  2890. Mr. GOLDMAN. To be very frank with you, Senator, I cannot re-
  2891.  
  2892. member the things that happened back in those days. I've been away
  2893. from the company-from the Agency for over 10 years, and that is
  2894. even farther back than that, and that was just about the time when I
  2895. first engaged in this, so it was my firstSenator KENNEDY. Did they disburse a series of $100 checks, to
  2896.  
  2897. your recollection?
  2898. Mr. GOLDMAN. I don't recollect it, but if you have it there, then
  2899. they did.
  2900. Senator KENNEDY. Did you know Dr. Gottlieb?
  2901. Mr. GOLDMAN. Yes.
  2902.  
  2903. Senator KENNEDY. How did you know Dr. Gottlieb?
  2904. Mr. GOLDMAN. He had been head of the division when I was recruited.
  2905.  
  2906. Senator KENNEDY. Did you talk to him about these programs? Did
  2907.  
  2908. you have anything to do with him during this period of time?
  2909. Mr. GOLDMAN. I didn't have anything to do with him until I would
  2910. say probably in the sixties.
  2911. Senator KENNEDY. And can you tell us what you had to do with
  2912. him then?
  2913. Mr. GOLDMAN. Just what you see there on the papers.
  2914.  
  2915. Senator KENNEDY. Well, that is the request for the money and he
  2916.  
  2917. approves it.
  2918. Mr. GOLDMAN. That is the request for money and he approves it,
  2919. and I am quite sure that I probably discussed with him whether the
  2920. work was going along all right, whether his reports were being turned
  2921. in, and whether he was satisfied with the way things were going
  2922. and did he have any complaints about the way other people were
  2923. requesting him, but I did not engage myself in anything he was doing.
  2924. Senator KENNEDY. Well, did you get the impression that Gottlieb
  2925. knew what was going on?
  2926. Mr. GOLDMAN. I didn't ask.
  2927.  
  2928. Senator KENNEDY. But you told him that your impression that what
  2929. was going on even though you didn't know what was going on, was going on well, I guess? [Laughter.]
  2930.  
  2931. Mr. GOLDMAN. I told Gottlieb what you saw in there was that the
  2932. things appeared to be going along all right. I was repeating and parroting back the words that were giveh to me while I was there.
  2933. Senator KENNEDY. What was the money being spent for, do you
  2934. know?
  2935. Mr. GOLDMAN. No; I can't recall that, sir.
  2936. Senator KENNEDY. Would you remember if we told you it was red
  2937. curtains and can-can picturesMr. GOLDMAN. No, sir.
  2938. Senator KENNEDY. Floral pictures and the rest.
  2939. Mr. GOLDMAN. No, sir.
  2940. Senator KENNEDY. Recorders.
  2941. Mr. GOLDMAN. No, sir.
  2942.  
  2943. Senator KENNEDY. Recorders and two-way mirrors.
  2944. Mr. GOLDMAN. Wait, hold on. You're slipping a word in there now.
  2945. Senator KENNEDY. But you would have authorized those funds,
  2946. would you not, since you were theMr. GOLDMAN. Did you say two-way mirrors?
  2947. Senator KENNEDY. Yes.
  2948. Mr. GOLDMAN. Where?
  2949. Senator KENNEDY. In the safe houses.
  2950. Mr. GOLDMAN. Where?
  2951. Senator KENNEDY. San Francisco.
  2952. Mr. GOLDMAN. No.
  2953. Senator KENNEDY. How about New York?
  2954. Mr. GOLDMAN. Yes.
  2955. Senator KENNEDY. You remember now that you approved expenditures for New York?
  2956.  
  2957. Mr. GOLDMAN. Yes.
  2958.  
  2959. Senator KENNEDY. What were those expenditures for?
  2960.  
  2961. Mr. GOLDMAN. That was a transfer of money over for the use in
  2962. an apartment in New York by the Bureau of Narcotics. It was for
  2963. their use.
  2964. Senator KENNEDY. Do you have any knowledge of what was going
  2965. on in the apartment?
  2966. Mr. GOLDMAN. No, sir, other than I know that it had been used, according to the information that I have been given, it was used by the
  2967. Bureau of Narcotics to make meetings with individuals who they were
  2968. interested in with regard to pushing dope-not pushing dope, but selling narcotics and that sort of thing.
  2969. Senator KENNEDY. Well, I am sure you had many responsibilities and
  2970. it's a long time ago, but the Agency does indicate that you were project
  2971. monitor for that particular program.
  2972. Mr. GOLDMAN. That's correct.
  2973. Senator KENNEDY. Your own testimony indicates you went out to review the expenditures of funds to find out whether they were being
  2974. wisely used, that you came back and talked to the project director, Mr.
  2975. Gottlieb, to give him a progress report about what was going on out
  2976. there.
  2977. Mr. GOLDMAN. Yes, sir, I did.
  2978. Senator KENNEDY. All those things are true, and yet you draw a
  2979. complete blank in terms of what was the project itself. That's where
  2980. the record is now.
  2981. Mr. GOLDMAN. I did not go out there to review the projects nor did
  2982. I come back and talk with Mr. Gottlieb and review what I had observed
  2983. in terms of any projects that they-that is, other parts of the Agency
  2984. might have in operation there. I simply reported back those things
  2985. which were told to me by the individual out there who-and I carried
  2986. them back and they are contained in the report that you have in front
  2987. of you, word for word, just as it was given to me.
  2988. Senator KENNEDY. The report that you examined here is a substantive report on the particular program and project. And I don't think
  2989. anyone who wasn't familiar with the project-this is a personal evaluation-could write a report on the substance of it without knowing
  2990. about it. Now, that's mine. Maybe you can't remember and recollect,
  2991. and that'sMr. GOLDMAN. No; everything I put down in there is things that I
  2992. was told while I was out there, and if there was any -ancillary information involved in there I can tell you I just don't remember that. I really
  2993. don't.
  2994. At the time-that was some years ago. At the time-a lot of time has
  2995. passed since then and I have made quite sure that if I could recollect it
  2996. at all, I would do it. If you have some papers and you want me to certify whether yes, this is so or that is so, I can do that, but I can't recall
  2997. it mentally.
  2998. Senator KENNEDY. You just certified the principal. There are others
  2999. up here.
  3000. I would like to go to Dr. Gittinger.
  3001. Mr. GINGER. It's Mr. Gittinger.
  3002. Senator KENNEDY. How long did you serve with the Agency?
  3003.  
  3004. Mr. GIrrNGER. Twenty-six years.
  3005. Senator KENNEDY. Excuse me?
  3006. Mr. GITINGER. Twenty-six years.,
  3007. Senator KENNEDY. Twenty-six years.
  3008. And at some point you moved into the operational support side, is
  3009. that correct?
  3010. Mr. GrlINGER. Yes.
  3011. Senator KENNEDY. And did you know Sidney Gottlieb?
  3012. Mr. GirrINGER. Yes, sir.
  3013. Senator KENNEDY. And did he inform you about the research projects involving LSD?
  3014. Mr. GITTINGER. Yes, sir.
  3015. Senator KENNEDY. It is my understanding that you were also aware
  3016. of some of the drug testing projects conducted on unwitting subjects
  3017. on the west coast using the Bureau of Narcotics people in the operation.
  3018. Is that true?
  3019.  
  3020. Mr. GITTINGER. I was.
  3021.  
  3022. Senator INOUYE. Excuse me. Would you speak into the microphone?
  3023. I cannot hear you.
  3024. Mr. GITTINGER. Sorry.
  3025. Senator KENNEDY. Do you know which drugs were involved in those
  3026. tests?
  3027. Mr. GIrrINGER. LSD. And I can't remember for sure much of the
  3028. others. What is the substance of marihuana, cannabis, is that right, that
  3029. can be delivered by other than smoking?
  3030. Senator KENNEDY. Cannabis?
  3031. Mr. GITTINGER. There had been some discussion of that; yes.
  3032. Senator KENNEDY. And was heroin also used?
  3033. Mr. GITTINGER. Heroin used by CIA?
  3034. Senator KENNEDY. No. In the west coast operation.
  3035. Mr. GITINGER. Absolutely not.
  3036. Senator KENNEDY. Now, to your knowledge, how were the drugs administered to the unwitting subjects?
  3037. Mr. GIrTINGER. I have no direct knowledge.
  3038. Senator KENNEDY. Why did you go to the safe houses?
  3039. Mr. GITTINGER. It's a very complicated story. Just in justification of
  3040. myself, this came up just day before yesterday. I have not really had
  3041. enough time to get it all straightened in my mind, so I ramble.
  3042. Senator KENNEDY. Well, you take your time and tell us in your own
  3043. words. We've got some time here.
  3044. Mr. GITTINGER. My responsibilities which would involve any of the
  3045. period of time that you were talking about really was not -directly
  3046. related to drugs at all. I was a psychologist charged with the responsibility of trying to develop as much information as I could on various
  3047. cultures, overseas cultures, anthropological type data, if you follow
  3048. what I mean. I was also engaged in trying to work out ways and means
  3049. of assessing people and understanding people.
  3050. I originally became involved in this through working on Chinese
  3051. culture, and over a series of time I was introduced to the problem of
  3052. brainwashing, which is the thing that really was the most compelling
  3053. thing in relationship to this, and became charged with the responsibility of trying to find out a little bit about interrogation techniques.
  3054.  
  3055. And among other things, we decided or I decided that one of the best
  3056. sources of interrogation techniques would be trying to locate and interview and become involved with experienced police interrogators in
  3057. the country and experienced people who had real practical knowledge
  3058. of interrogation. The reason for this is that we had become pretty well
  3059. convinced after the experience of the brainwashing problems coming
  3060. out of China, that it was the techniques of the interrogators that were
  3061. causing the individuals to make confessions and so forth in relationship
  3062. to this, rather than any kind of drugging and so forth. So we were
  3063. very much interested in interrogation techniques, and this led to me
  3064. being introduced to the agent in the west coast, and I began to talk to
  3065. him in connection with these interrogation techniques.
  3066. Senator KENNEDY. OK. Now, that is the agent that ran the tests
  3067. on the west coast on the unwitting people. That's where you come in,
  3068. correct?
  3069. Mr. GirrlNGER. If I understand-would you say that again?
  3070. Senator KENNEDY. The name Morgan Hall has been-that is the
  3071. name that has been used.
  3072. Mr. GrINGER. Yes.
  3073. Senator KENNEDY. And that is the agent that you met with.
  3074. Mr. GIrrlNGER. That is right.
  3075. Senator KENNEDY. And you met at the safe house.
  3076. Mr. GIrrINGER. Yes, sir.
  3077. Senator KENNEDY. Whom did you meet with in the safe house?
  3078. Mr. GITTINGER. This is the part that is hard for me to say, and I am
  3079. sorry that I have to. In connection with some work that we were
  3080. doing, we needed to have some information on sexual habits. Morgan
  3081. Hall provided informants for me to talk to in connection with the sex
  3082. habits that I was interested in trying to find information. During one
  3083. period of time the safe house, as far as I was concerned, was used for
  3084. just these particular type of interviews. And I didn't see the red
  3085. curtains.
  3086. Senator KENNEDY. Those were prostitutes, were they?
  3087. Mr. GITTINGER. Yes, sir.
  3088. Senator KENNEDY. How many different times were you there that
  3089. you had similarMr. GITTINGER. I couldn't possibly say with any certainty on that.
  3090. Four or five times.
  3091. Senator KENNEDY. Four or five times.
  3092. Mr. GirrlNGER. Over-you remember now, the period that I'm talking about when I would have any involvement in this is from about
  3093. 1956 to 1961. So it's about a 4- or 5-year period which is the only time
  3094. that I know anything about what you are talking about here today.
  3095. Senator KENNEDY. Did Morgan Hall make the arrangements for
  3096. the prostitutes to meet with you?
  3097. Mr. GITTINGER. Yes, sir.
  3098. Senator KENNEDY. Did the interviews that you had have anything to
  3099. do with drugs?
  3100. Mr. GIrrINGER. Well, as I tried to explain earlier when this was
  3101. being discussed a little bit beforehand, again I think it is pretty hard
  3102. for most people now to recognize how little there was known about
  3103. drugs at the period of time that we are talking about, because the
  3104.  
  3105. drug age or the drug culture comes later on. Consequently, those of
  3106. us who had any responsibility in this area were interested in trying to
  3107. get as much information as we could on the subculture, the subculture
  3108. drug groups, and obviously the Bureau of Narcotics represented a
  3109. means of doing this. Consequently, other types of things that were
  3110. involved in discussions at that time would have to do with the underground use of drugs.. When 1 am talking about this I am talking about
  3111. the folkways in terms of unwitting use of drugs. Did these people that
  3112. I was talking to have any information about this and on rare instances
  3113. they were able to tell me about their use, and in most cases this would
  3114. largely turn out to be a Mickey Finn or something of that sort rather
  3115. than anything esoteric.
  3116. I also was very much interested because we had relatively little
  3117. information, believe it or not, at that time, in terms of the various
  3118. reactions that people were having to drugs. Therefore, these people
  3119. were very informative in terms of they knew a great deal of information about reactions.
  3120. Senator KENNEDY. At least you gathered-or am I correct in assuming that you gathered the impression that the prostitutes that you had
  3121. talked to were able to slip the drugs to people as I understand it. Did
  3122. you form any impression on that?
  3123. Mr. GITTINGER. I certainly did not form the impression that they
  3124. did this as a rule orSenator KENNEDY. But they had the knowledge.
  3125. Mr. GITTINGER. They had the knowledge or some of them had had
  3126. knowledge of this being done. But again, as it turned out, it was largely
  3127. in this area of knockout drops.
  3128. Senator KENNEDY. Looking back now did you form any impression
  3129. about how the Agency was actually testing the broad spectrum of social
  3130. classes in these safe houses? With the large disbursal of cash in
  3131. small quantities, $100 bills and the kinds of elaborate decorations and
  3132. two-way mirrors in the bedrooms and all the rest, is there any question
  3133. in your own mind what was going on in the safe houses, or the techniques that were being used to administer these drugs?
  3134. Mr. GITTINGER. I find it very difficult to answer that question, sir. I
  3135. had absolutely no direct knowledge there was a large number of this. I
  3136. had no knowledge that anyone other than-than Morgan Hall was in
  3137. any way involved in the unwitting administration of drugs.
  3138. Senator KENNEDY. But Gottlieb would know, would he not?
  3139. Mr. GITTINGER. I believe so, yes, sir.
  3140. Senator KENNEDY. Could we go into the Human Ecology Foundation and talk about that and how it was used as an instrument in terms
  3141. of the support of research?
  3142. Mr. GITTINGER. Yes, sir.
  3143. Senator KENNEDY. Could you describe it to us? Could you describe
  3144. the Human Ecology Foundation, how it functioned and how it worked?
  3145. Mr. GITTINGER. May I tell something about how it evolved, which I
  3146. think is important?
  3147. Senator KENNEDY. Sure.
  3148. Mr. GITTINGER. The Society for the Investigation of Human Ecology, so-called, was actually a-I am confused here now as to whether
  3149. I should name you names.
  3150.  
  3151. Senator KENNEDY. Well, we're not interested in names or institutions, so we prefer that you do not. That has to be worked out in
  3152. arrangements between Admiral Turner and the individuals and the
  3153. institutions.
  3154. But we're interested in what the Foundation really was and how it
  3155. functioned and what its purpose was.
  3156. Mr. GirriNGER. Tell, it was established to undertake research in the
  3157. general area of the behavioral -sciences. It definitely had almost no
  3158. focus or interest in, say, drug-related type of activities except in a very
  3159. minor way, because it was largely set up to attempt to gain a certain
  3160. amount of information and to fund projects which were psychological,
  3161. sociological, anthropological in character. It was established in the
  3162. sense of a period of time that a lot of us who are in it wish we could
  3163. do it over again, but we were interested in trying to get together a panel
  3164. of the most representative high-level behavioral scientists we could to
  3165. oversee and help in terms of developing the Society for the Investigation of Hunan Ecology type of program.
  3166. The Agency in effect provided the money. They did not direct the
  3167. projects. Now, the fact of the matter is, there are a lot of innocent people who received the Society for the Investigation of Human Ecology
  3168. money which I know for a fact they were never asked to do anything
  3169. for the CIA but they did get through this indirectly. They had no
  3170. knowledge that they were getting CIA money.
  3171. Senator KENNEDY. Over what period of time did this take place?
  3172. Mr. GrrrINGER. As far as I was concerned, it was the period of time
  3173. ending in 1961. I believe the Human Ecology fund finally phased out
  3174. in 1965, but I was not involved in this phasing out.
  3175. Senator KENNEDY. Can you give the range of the different sort of
  3176. individual projects of the universities in which it was active?
  3177. Mr. GITTINGER. Well, it would have as many as-I am very fuzzy
  3178. on my memory on the number of projects. It is over 10, 20, 30.
  3179. Senator KENNEDY. After it made the grants, what was the relationship of the Agency with the results of the studies? The Foundation
  3180. acquired the money to make the grants from the Agency, and then it
  3181. made the grants to these various research programs.
  3182. Mr. GrrrlNGER. Yes, sir.
  3183. Senator KENNEDY. And that included eight universities as well as
  3184. individual researchers?
  3185. Mr. GIrlNGER. Yes, sir.
  3186. Senator KENNEDY. Then what follow-up was there to that, sir?
  3187. Mr. GIrrlNGER. Well, in every sense of the word, the organization
  3188. was run exactly like any other foundation, and it carried with it the
  3189. same thing in terms of making certain that the people that they had
  3190. given money to used it for the purpose for which it had been granted,
  3191. that they had access to any of the reports that they had put out, but
  3192. there were no strings attached to anybody. There wasn't any reason
  3193. they couldn't publish anvthing thst thev put out.
  3194. Senator KENNEDY. What sort of budget are we talking about here?
  3195. Mr. GrrrlNGER. I honestly do not remember. I would iuess we are
  3196. talking in the realm of about $150,000 a year, but don't hold me to that,
  3197. because I don't know.
  3198.  
  3199. Senator KENNEDY. What is your view about such funding as a professional person, in terms of compromising the integrity of a university, sir? .
  3200. Mr. GITrlNGER. Well, obviously, sir, insofar as today there is no
  3201. question about it. I will have to say at the time that we were doing this
  3202. there was quite an entirely different kind of an attitude, and I do
  3203. know for a fact that we moved to start towards phasing out the Society for the Investigation of Human Ecology and the Human Ecology Fund for the very reason that we were beginning to recognize that
  3204. it was moving into an area but this would be compromised.
  3205. Senator KENNEDY. Well, that is commendable, both your attitude
  3206. and the reasons for it, but during that period of time it still was involved in behavior research programs, as I understand it.
  3207. Mr. GirlNGERZ. Yes, sir. On its own, in connection with this, it
  3208. participated again, and these again were not CIA-directed projects,
  3209. but these were all things which would theoretically contribute to the
  3210. general knowledge at the time where the things like the study of the
  3211. Hungarian refugees-obviously, the study of the Hungarian refugees
  3212. who came to this country after the Hungarian revolt was a very useful exercise to try to get information about the personality characteristics of the Communists and so forth.
  3213. Senator KENNEDY. Were there other foundations that were doing
  3214. similar kinds of work?
  3215. Mr. GlrrNGER. Not to my knowledge, sir.
  3216. Senator KENNEDY. You believeMr. GirlNGER. You mean, CIA, other CIA?
  3217. Senator KENNEDY. Right.
  3218. Mr. GITrrNGER. Well, my answer is in the sense that I know of no
  3219. other CIA foundations, no. There were, of course, other foundations
  3220. doing similar kinds of work in the United States.
  3221. Senator KENNEDY. Have you heard of the Psychological Assessments Foundation?
  3222. Mr. GIrrlNGER. I certainly have.
  3223. Senator KENNEDY. What was that? What function did that have?
  3224. Mr. GITTrNGER. Now, this was bringing us up to a different era. I
  3225. believe the functions of that organization have nothing whatsoever
  3226. to do with the things that are being talked about here while I was
  3227. associated with it.
  3228. Senator KENNEDY. Rather than getting into the work, it was another
  3229. foundation, was it not? It was another foundation supported by the
  3230. Agency?
  3231. Mr. GrTNGER. What, the Psychological Assessment?
  3232. Senator KENNEDY. Yes.
  3233. Mr. GrnNGER. No, sir, it was not.
  3234. Senator KENNEDY. It did not get any support at all from the
  3235. Agency?
  3236. Mr. GIrlNGER. Oh, yes, sir. It did get support, but it was a business
  3237. firm.
  3238.  
  3239. Senator KENNEDY. It was a business but it got support from the
  3240. Agency?
  3241. Mr. GIrrINGER. It got money from it, but it definitely was not in
  3242.  
  3243. MKULTRA or in any way associated with this.
  3244.  
  3245. Senator KENNEDY. All right. I want to thank you for your helpful
  3246. testimony, Mr. Gittinger. It is not easy to go back into the past. I
  3247. think you have been very fair in your characterizations, and I think
  3248. it is quite appropriately indicated that there are different standards
  3249. now from what they were 25 years ago, and I think you have responded
  3250. very fairly and completely to the inquiries, and I think with a good
  3251. deal of feeling about it.
  3252. You are a person who is obviously attempting to serve the country's
  3253. interest, so I want to thank you very much for your statement and
  3254. for your helpful timeliness.
  3255. Mr. GITINGER. Thank you, sir.
  3256. Senator INoU-i. Senator Case?
  3257. Senator CASE. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I am sorry that I had
  3258. another committee that I had to complete the hearing with this morning before I got here.
  3259. I shall read the testimony with very great interest, and I appreciate your testimony as I have heard it. I would like to comment just on
  3260. one point, and that is, it relates to a story in the press yesterday about
  3261. part of this program involving the funding of a grant at a foreign
  3262. university. I would like to elicit from you a comment as to the additional sensitivity and difficulty that that practice involves from your
  3263. standpoint as a scientist, as well as a citizen, if you will.
  3264. Mr. GITINGER. I will say it was after the fact thinking. It was utter
  3265. stupidity the way things worked out to have used some of this money
  3266. outside the United States when it was CIA money. I can categorically
  3267. state to my knowledge and I don't claim a complete knowledge all the
  3268. way across of the human ecology functions, but to my knowledge, and
  3269. this is unfortunate, those people did not know that they were getting
  3270. money from CIA, and they were not asked to contribute anything to
  3271. CIA as such.
  3272. Senator CASE. It would be interesting to try to examine this by turning the thing around and thinking what we would think if this happened from a foreign official agency to our own university. Thank you,
  3273. Mr. Chairman.
  3274. Senator INOUYE. Senator Schweiker.
  3275.  
  3276. Senator SCHWEIKER. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
  3277. Dr. Goldman, I wonder if you would tell us what your training and
  3278. educational background is?
  3279. Dr. GOLDMAN. I have already given a biography for the record.
  3280. Senator SCHWETKER. I have not seen it. Who has it? Is it classified?
  3281. We may have it for the record, but may I ask you to briefly describe
  3282. your training and background for us now? I hope it is no secret.
  3283. Dr. GOLDMAN. Well, I was told if I was asked this to say that. I was
  3284. told that by your staff people, but I have no objection to telling you.
  3285. I am a resident from Pennsylvania, southwest Pennsylvania, Lancaster County. I went to Penn State, and I am in nutrition.
  3286. Senator SOHWEIKER. In what?
  3287. Dr. GOLDMAN. Nutrition.
  3288. Senator SCHWEIKER. Were you in charge of a section or segment of
  3289. the CIA in your past capacity?
  3290. Dr. GOLDMAN. During the time I was with that organization, I was
  3291. in charge of one small section of it, one small segment of it; yes.
  3292.  
  3293. 96-408 0 - 77 - 5
  3294.  
  3295. Senator SCHWEIKER. What was the function or purpose of that section that you headed?
  3296. Dr. GOLDMAN. To provide support for the other parts of the division.
  3297. Senator SCHWEIKER. Where in the chain of command would that put
  3298. you in relation to Dr. Gottlieb?
  3299. Dr. GOLDMAN. Pretty far down the line.
  3300. Senator SCHWEIKER. Mr. Gittinger, I would just like to ask you a
  3301. few questions. We appreciate your frankness and candor with the committee, and we realize this is a very difficult area to go into. I am not
  3302. quite clear on two matters that were raised earlier. First, were the safe
  3303. houses we were talking about here used on occasion by the prostitutes
  3304. you referred to?
  3305. Mr. GITTINGER. I really have not the slightest idea.
  3306. Senator SCHWEIKER. Were the prostitutes used in any way to slip
  3307. the customers drugs for observation purposes?
  3308. Mr. GrTiNGER. Not to my direct knowledge.
  3309. Senator SCHWEIKER. Would you have been in a position to know the
  3310. answer to either of these questions?
  3311. Mr. GITTINGER. May I say, probably not, and may I make an aside
  3312. to explain a little bit of this, please, sir?
  3313. Senator SCHWEIKER. Mr. Gittinger, a moment ago you mentioned
  3314. brainwashing techniques, as one area that you had, I guess, done some
  3315. work in. How would you characterize the state of the art of brainwashing today? Who has the most expertise in this field, and who is
  3316. or is not doing it in terms of other governments?
  3317. During the Korean war there was a lot of serious discussion about
  3318. brainwashing techniques being used by the North Koreans, and I am
  3319. interested in finding out what the state of the art is today, as you see it.
  3320. Mr. GITTINGER. Well, of course, there has been a great deal of work
  3321. on this, and there is still a great deal of controversy. I can tell you that
  3322. as far as I knew, by 1961, 1962, it was at least proven to my satisfaction that brainwashing, so called, is some kind of an esoteric device
  3323. where drugs or mind-altering kinds of conditions and so forth were
  3324. used, did not exist even though "The Manchurian Candidate" as a
  3325. movie really set us back a long time, because it made something impossible look plausible. Do you follow what I mean ? But by 1962 and
  3326. 1963, the general idea that we were able to come up with is that brainwashing was largely a process of isolating a human being, keeping
  3327. him out of contact, putting him under long stress in relationship to
  3328. interviewing and interrogation, and that they could produce any
  3329. change that way without having to resort to any kind of esoteric
  3330. means.
  3331. Senator SCHWEIKER. Are there ways that we can ascertain this from
  3332. a distance when we see a captive prisoner either go on television, in
  3333. a photograph, or at a press conference? In other words, are there certain signs that you have learned to recognize from your technical
  3334. background, to tell when brainwashing has occurred? Or is that very
  3335. difficult to do?
  3336. Mr. GITTINGER. It is difficult to do. I think it is posible now in terms
  3337. of looking at a picture of somebody who has been in enemy hands for
  3338. a long period of time. We can get some pretty good ideas of what kind
  3339. of circumstances he has been under, if that is what you mean.
  3340.  
  3341. Senator SCHWEIKER. That is all I have, Mr. Chairman. Thank you.
  3342. Senator INOUYE. Thank you very much.
  3343. Before adjourning the hearings, I would like to have the record
  3344. show that Dr. Goldman and Mr. Gittinger have voluntarily cooperated
  3345. with the committee in staff interviews, that they appear this morning
  3346. voluntarily, and they are not under subpena.
  3347. Gentlemen, I realize that this experience may have been an unhappy
  3348. one and possibly a painful one. Therefore, we thank you very much
  3349. for participating this morning. We also realize that the circumstances
  3350. of that time differed very much from this day, and possibly the national attitude, the national political attitude condoned this type of
  3351. activity. So, we have not asked you to come here as persons who have
  3352. committed crimes, but rather in hope that you can assist us in studying
  3353. this problem so that it will not occur once again. In that spirit we
  3354. thank you for your participation, and we look forward to working
  3355. with you further in this case.
  3356. Thank you very much.
  3357. Senator KENNEDY. Mr. Ohairman, I would like also to thank the
  3358. witnesses. These are difficult matters, and I think all of us are very
  3359. grateful.
  3360. Senator SCHWEIKER. I think the witnesses should know that though
  3361. it may not always seem that way, what we are trying to do is to probe
  3362. the past and look at the policies of the past to affect the future. I think
  3363. our emphasis really is on the future, not the past, but it is important
  3364. that we learn from the past as we formulate policies and legislation
  3365. for the future, I hope that all of the witnesses who did come before us
  3366. voluntarily this morning, including Admiral Turner respect the fact
  3367. that we are questioning the past to learn about the future. I think it
  3368. should be looked at in that light.
  3369. Senator KENNEDY. I think that is the spirit in which we have had
  3370. these hearings. It seems to me that from both these witnesses and
  3371. others, Gottlieb knows the information and can best respond, and we
  3372. are going to make every effort in the Senate Health Committee to get
  3373. Mr. Gottlieb to appear, and we obviously look forward to cooperating
  3374. with Senator Inouye and the other members of the committee in getting the final chapter written on this, but we want to thank you very
  3375. much for your appearance here.
  3376. Senator INOUYE. The hearing will stand in recess, subject to the call
  3377. of the Chair.
  3378. [Whereupon, at 12:12 p.m., the -hearing was recessed, subject to the
  3379. call of the Chair.]
  3380.  
  3381. APPENDIX A
  3382. XVII. TESTING AND USE OF CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL AGENTS BY THE INTELLIGENCE COMMUNITY
  3383. Under its mandate ' the Select Committee has studied the testing and
  3384. use of chemical and biological agents by intelligence agencies. Detailed
  3385. descriptions of the programs conducted by intelligence agencies involving chemical and biological agents will be included in a separately
  3386. published appendix to the Senate Select Committee's report. This section of the report will discuss the rationale for the programs, their
  3387. monitoring and control, and what the Committee's investigation has
  3388. revealed about the relationships among the intelligence agencies and
  3389. about their relations with other government agencies and private institutions and individuals.2
  3390. Fears that countries hostile to the United States would use chemical and biological agents against Americans or America's allies led
  3391. to the development of a defensive program designed to discover techniques for American intelligence agencies to detect and counteract
  3392. chemical and biological agents. The defensive orientation soon became
  3393. secondary as the possible use of these agents to obtain information
  3394. from, or gain control over, enemy agents became apparent.
  3395. Research and development programs to find materials which could
  3396. be used to alter human behavior were initiated in the late 1940s and
  3397. early 1950s. These experimental programs originally included testing
  3398. of drugs involving witting human subjects, and culminated in tests
  3399. using unwitting, nonvolunteer human subjects. These tests were designed to determine the potential effects of chemical or biological
  3400. agents when used operationally against individuals unaware that they
  3401. had received a drug.
  3402. The testing programs were considered highly sensitive by the intelligence agencies administering them. Few people, even within the
  3403. agencies, knew of the programs and there is no evidence that either
  3404. the executive branch or Congress were ever informed of them. The
  3405. highly compartmented nature of these programs may be explained in
  3406. part by an observation made by the CIA Inspector General that, "the
  3407. knowledge that the Agency is engaging in unethical and illicit activi1 Senate Resolution 21 directs the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence
  3408. Activities to investigate a number of issues:
  3409. "(a) Whether agencies within the intelligence community conducted illegal
  3410. domestic activities (Section 2(1) and (2));
  3411. "(b) The extent to which agencies within the intelligence community cooperate (Section 2(4) and (8));
  3412. "(c) The adequacy of executive branch and congressional oversight of intelligence activities (Section 2(7) and (11));
  3413. "(d) The adequacy of existing laws to safeguard the rights of American citizens (Section 2(13))."
  3414. 'The details of these programs may never be known. The programs were highly
  3415. compartmented. Few records were kept. What little documentation existed for
  3416. the CIA's principal program was destroyed early in 1973.
  3417. (385)
  3418.  
  3419. (65)
  3420.  
  3421. 386
  3422. ties would have serious repercussions in political and diplomatic circles3
  3423. and would be detrimental to the accomplishment of its missions."
  3424. The research and development program, and particularly the covert testing programs, resulted in massive abridgments of the rights
  3425. of American citizens, sometimes with tra'gic consequences. The deaths
  3426. of two Americans 3a can be attributed to these programs; other participants in the testing programs may still suffer from the residual effects. While some controlled testing of these substances might be defended, the nature of the tests, their scale, and the fact that they were
  3427. continued for years after the danger of surreptitious administration
  3428. of LSD to unwitting individuals was known, demonstrate a fundamental disregard for the value of human life.
  3429. The Select Committee's investigation of the testing and use of chemical and biological agents also raise serious questions about the adequacy of command and control procedures within the Central Intelligence Agency and military intelligence, and about the relationships
  3430. among the intelligence agencies, other governmental agencies, and
  3431. private institutions and individuals. The CIA's normal administrative
  3432. controls were waived for programs involving chemical and biological
  3433. agents to protect. their security. According to the head of the Audit
  3434. Branch O-f the CIA. these waivers produced "gross administrative
  3435. failures." They prevgnted the CIA's internal review mechanisms (the
  3436. Office of General Counsel, the Inspector General, and the Audit Staff)
  3437. from adequately supervising the programs. In general, the waivers had
  3438. the paradoxical effect of providing less restrictive administrative controls and less effective internal review for controversial and highly
  3439. sensitive projects than those governing normal Agency activities.
  3440. The security of the programs was protected not only by waivers
  3441. of normal administrative controls, but also by a high degree of compartmentation within the CIA. This compartmentation excluded the
  3442. CIA's Medical Staff from the principal research and testing program
  3443. employing chemical and biological agents.
  3444. It also may have led to agency policymakers receiving differing
  3445. and inconsistent responses when they posed questions to the CIA
  3446. component involved.
  3447. Jurisdictional uncertainty within the CIA was matched by jurisdictional conflict among the various intelligence agencies. A spirit of
  3448. cooperation and reciprocal exchanges of information which initially
  3449. characterized the programs disappeared. Military testers withheld inlormation from the CIA, ignoring suggestions for coordination from
  3450. their superiors. The CIA similarly failed to provide informiation to
  3451. the military on the CIA's testing program. This failure to cooperate
  3452. was conspicuously manifested in an attempt by the Army to conceal
  3453. 3CIA Inspector General's Survey of TSD, 1957, p. 217.
  3454. " On January 8, 1953. Mr. Harold Blauer died of circulatory collapse and heart
  3455. failure following an intravenous injection of a synthetic mescaline derivative
  3456. while a subject of tests conducted by New York State Psychiatric Institute under
  3457. a contract let by the U.S. Army Chemical Corps. The Committee's investigation
  3458. into drug testing by U.S. intelligence agencies focused on the testing of LSD, however, the committee did receive a copy of the U.S. Army Inspector General's
  3459. Report, issued on October 1975, on the events and circumstances of Mr. Blauer's
  3460. death. His death was directly atributable to the administration of the synthetic
  3461. mescaline derivative.
  3462.  
  3463. 387
  3464. their overseas testing program, which included surreptitious administration of LSD, from the CIA. Learning of the Army's program,
  3465. the Agency surreptitiously attempted to obtain details of it.
  3466. The-decision to institute one of the Army's LSD field testing projects
  3467. had been based, at least in part, on the finding that no long-term residual effects had ever resulted from the drug's administration. The
  3468. CIA's failure to inform the Army of a death which resulted from the
  3469. surreptitious administration of LSD to unwitting Americans, may well
  3470. have resulted in the institution of an unnecessary and potentially lethal
  3471. program.
  3472. The development, testing, and use of chelnical and biological agents
  3473. by intelligence agencies raises serious questions about the relationship
  3474. between the intelligence community and foreign governments, other
  3475. agencies of the Federal Government, and other institutions and individuals. The questions raised range from the legitimacy of American
  3476. complicity in actions abroad which violate American and foreign laws
  3477. to the possible compromise of the integrity of public and private institutions used as cover by intelligence agencies.
  3478.  
  3479. A.
  3480.  
  3481. THE PROGRAMS INVESTIGATED
  3482.  
  3483. 1. Project CHATTER
  3484. Project CHATTER was a Navy program that began in the fall of
  3485. 1947. Responding to reports of "amazing results" achieved by the
  3486. Soviets in using "truth drugs," the program focused on the identification and testing of. such drugs for use in interrogations and in the
  3487. recruitmenc of agents. The research included laboratory experiments
  3488. on animals and hump , subjects involving Anabasis aphylla, scopolamine, and rhescaline in order to determine their speech-inducing qualities. Overseas experiments were conducted as part of the project.
  3489. The project expanded substantially during the Korean War, and
  3490. ended shortly after the war, in 1953. .
  3491.  
  3492. 2. Project BLUEBIRD/ARTICHOKE
  3493. The'earliest of the CIA's major programs involving the use of
  3494. chemical and biological agents, Project BLUEBIRD, was approved by
  3495. the Director in 1950. Its objectives were:
  3496. (a) discovering means of conditioning personnel to prevent
  3497. unauthorized extraction of information from them by known
  3498. means, (b) investigating the possibility of control of an individual by application of special interrogation techniques,
  3499. (c) memory enhancement, and (d) establishing defensive
  3500. means for preventing hostile control of Agency personnel.4
  3501. As a result of interrogations conducted overseas during the project,
  3502. another goal was added-the evaluation of offensive uses of unconvent:ional interrogation techniques, including hypnosis and drugs. In
  3503. *August1951, the project was renamed ARTICHOKE. Project ARTICHOKE included in-house experiments on interrogation techniques,
  3504. conducted "under medical and security controls which would ensure
  3505. 'CIA memorandum to the Select Committee, "Behavioral Drugs and Testing,"
  3506. 2/11/75.
  3507.  
  3508. 388
  3509. that no damage was done to individuals who volunteer for the experiments."' Overseas interrogations utilizing a combination of sodium
  3510. pentothal and hypnosis after physical and psychiatric examinations of
  3511. the subjects were also part of ARTICHOKE.
  3512. The Office of Scientific Intelligence (OSI), which studied scientific
  3513. advances by hostile powers, initially led BLUEBIRD/ARTICHOKE
  3514. efforts. In 1952, overall responsibility for ARTICHOKE was transferred from OSI to'the Inspection and Security Office (I&SO), predecessor to the present Office of Security. The CIA's Technical Services and Medical Staffs were to be called upon as needed; OSI would
  3515. retain liaison function with other government agencies.- The change
  3516. in leadership from an intelligence unit to an operating unit apparently reflected a change in emphasis; from the study of actions by
  3517. hostile powers to the use, both for offensive and defensive purposes,
  3518. of special interrogation techniques-primarily hypnosis and truth
  3519. serums.
  3520. Representatives. from each Agency unit involved in ARTICHOKE
  3521. met almost monthly to discuss their progress. 8These discussions included the planning of overseas interrogations as well as further
  3522. experimentation in the U.S.
  3523. . Information about project ARTICHOKE 'after the fall of 1953
  3524. is scarce. The CIA maintains that the project ended in 1956, but evidence suggests that Office of Security and Office of Medical Services
  3525. use of "special interrogation" techniques continued for several years
  3526. thereafter.
  3527. 3. IKNAOMI
  3528. MKNAOMI was another major CIA program in this area. In 1967,
  3529. the CIA summarized the purposes of MKNAOMI:
  3530. (a) To provide for a covert support base to meet clandestine operational requirements.
  3531. (b) To stockpile severely incapacitating and lethal materials for the specific use of TSD [Technical Services Division].
  3532. (c) To maintain in operational readiness special and unique
  3533. items for the dissemination of biological and chemical materials.
  3534. (d) To provide for the required surveillance, testing, upgrading, and evaluation of materials and items in order to
  3535. of reassure absence of defects and complete predictability
  3536. 9
  3537. sults to be expected under operational conditions.
  3538. Under an agreement reached with the Army in 1952, the Snecial
  3539. Operations Division (SOD) at Fort Detrick was to assist CIA in
  3540. developing, testing, and maintaining biological agents and delivery
  3541. 5
  3542. Memorandum from Robert Taylor, O/DD/P to the Assistant Deputy (Inspection and Security) and Chief of the Medical Staff, 3/22/52.
  3543. a Memorandum from H. Marshall Chadwell. Assistant Director. Scientific Intelligence, to the Deputy Director/Plans (DDP) "Proiect ARTICHOKE," 8/29/52.
  3544. *"Progress Report, Project ARTICHOKE." 1/12/53.
  3545. Memorandum from Chief, TSD/Biological Braneh to Chief. TSD "MKNAOMI:
  3546. Funding. Obiectives. and Accornnli-br-nts." 10/18/17. T). 1. For a fuller description of MKNAOMI and the relationship between CIA and SOD. see p. 360 ff.
  3547.  
  3548. 389
  3549. systems. By this agreement, CIA acquired the knowledge, skill, and
  3550. facilities of the Army to develop biological weapons suited for CIA
  3551. use.
  3552. SOD developed darts coated with biological agents and pills containing several dif.rent biological agents which could remain potent
  3553. for weeks or months. SOD also developed a special gun for firing
  3554. darts coated with a chemical which could allow CIA agents to incapacitate a guard dog, enter an installation secretly, and return the dog to
  3555. consciousness when leaving. SOD scientists were unable to develop
  3556.  
  3557. a similar incapacitant for humans. SOD also physically transferred
  3558. to CIA personnel biological agents in "bulk" form, and delivery
  3559. devices, including some containing biological agents.
  3560. In addition to the CIA's interest in biological weapons for use
  3561. against humans, it also asked SOD to study use of biological agents
  3562. against crops and animals. In its 1967 memorandum, the CIA stated:
  3563. Three methods and systems for carrying out a covert attack
  3564. against crops and causing severe crop loss have been developed and evaluated under field conditions. This was accomplished in anticipAtion of a requirement which was later
  3565. developed but was subsequently scrubbed just prior to putting into action.sa
  3566. MKNAOMI was terminated in 1970. On November 25, 1969, President Nixon renounced the use of any form of biological weapons that
  3567. kill or incapacitate and ordered the disposal of existing stocks of bacteriological weapons. On February 14, 1970, the President clarified the
  3568. extent of his earJier order and indicated that toxins-chemicals that
  3569. are not living organisms but are produced by living organisms-were
  3570. considered biological weapons subject to his previous directive and
  3571. were to be destroyed. Although instructed to relinquish control of
  3572. material held for the CIA by 9OD, a CIA scientist acquired approximately 11 grams of shellfish toxin from SOD personnel at Fort Detrick which were stored in a little-used CIA laboratory where it went
  3573. undetected for five years.' 0
  3574.  
  3575. 4. MKULTRA
  3576. MKULTRA was the principal CIA program involving the research
  3577. and development of chemical and biological agents. It was "concerned with the research and development of chemical, biological, and
  3578. radiological materials capable of employment in clandestine operations to control human behavior." 11
  3579. In January 1973, MKULTRA records were destroyed by Technical
  3580. Services Division personnel actin on the verbal orders of Dr. Sidney
  3581. Gottlieb, Chief of TSD. Dr. Gottlieb has testified, and former Director Helms has confirmed, that in ordering the records destroyed, Dr.
  3582. Gottlieb was carrying out the verbal order of then DCI Helms.
  3583. MKULTRA began with a proposal from the Assistant Deputy
  3584. Director for Plans, Richard Helms, to the DCI, outlining a special
  3585. * Ibid. p. 2.
  3586.  
  3587. Senate Select Committee, 9/16/75, Hearings, Vo. 1.
  3588. n Memorandum from the CIA Inspector General to the Director, 7/26/63.
  3589. '0
  3590.  
  3591. 390
  3592. funding mechanism for highly sensitive CIA research and development projects that studied the use of biological and chemical materials
  3593. in altering human behavior. The projects involved:
  3594. Research to develop a capability in the covert use of biological and chemical materials. This alea involves the production of various physiological conditions which could support
  3595. present or future clandestine operations. Aside from the offefisive potential, the development of a comprehensive capability in this field of covert chemical and biological warfare
  3596. gives us a thorough knowledge of the enemy's theoretical
  3597. potential, thus enabling us to defend ourselves against a foe
  3598. as restrained in the use of these techwho might not 1be
  3599. 2
  3600. niques as we are.
  3601. MKULTRA was approved by the DCI on April 13, 1953 along the
  3602. lines proposed by ADDP Helms.
  3603. Part of the rationale for the establishment of this special funding mechanism was its extreme sensitivity. The Inspector General's
  3604. survey of MKULTRA in 1963 noted the following reasons for this
  3605. sensitivity:
  3606. a. Rih earch in the mailipulation of human behavior is considered by man7. zuthorities in medicine and related fields
  3607. to be professionaily unethical, therefore the reputation of
  3608. professional participants in the MIKULTRA-program are on
  3609. occasion in jeopardy.
  3610. b. Some MKILTRA activities raise questions of legality
  3611. implicit in the original charter.
  3612. - c. A final phase of the testing of MKULTRA products
  3613. places the rights and interests of U.S. citi7ens in jeopardy.
  3614. d. Public disclosure of some aspects of MKULTRA activity could induce serious adverse reaction in U.S. public
  3615. opinion, as well as stimulate offensive and defensive action
  3616. in this field on the part of foreign intelligence services."3
  3617. Over the ten-year life of the program, many "additional avenues to
  3618. the control of human behavior" were designated as appropriate for
  3619. investigation under the MICULTRA charter. These include "radiation,
  3620. electroshock, various fields of psychology, psychiatry, sociology, and
  3621. anthropoloy, graphology, harassment substances, and paramilitary
  3622. devices and materials." 14
  3623. The research and development of materials to be used for altering
  3624. human behavior consisted of three phases: first, the search for materials suitable for study; second, laboratory testing on voluntary
  3625. human snbiects in various types of institutions; third, the application
  3626. of MKTTLTRA materials in normal life settings.
  3627. The search for suitable materials was conducted through standing
  3628. arrangements with snecialists in universities, pharmaceutical houses,
  3629. hospitals, state and federal institutions, and private research orgamu'femorandum from
  3630.  
  3631. ADDP Holms to DCI Dulles, 4/3/53, Tab A, pp. 1-2.
  3632. T.G. Report on MKULTRA, 1963, pp. 1-2.
  3633. rbid, p. 4.
  3634.  
  3635. 71
  3636. 391
  3637. zations. The annual grants of funds to these specialists were made
  3638. under ostensible research foundation auspices, thereby concealing the
  3639. CIA's interest from the specialist's institution.
  3640. The next phase of the MKITLTRA program involved physicians,
  3641. toxicologists, and other specialists in mental, narcotics, and general
  3642. hospitals, and in prisons. Utilizing the products and findings of the
  3643. basic research phase, they conducted intensive tests on human subjects.
  3644. I One of the first studies was conducted by the National Institute of
  3645. Mental Health. This study was intended to test various drugs, including hallucinogenics, at the NIMH Addiction Research Center in Lexington, Kentucky. The "Lexington Rehabilitation Center," as it was
  3646. then called, was a prison for drug addicts serving sentences for drug
  3647. violations.
  3648. The test subjects were volunteer prisoners who, after taking a brief
  3649. physical examination and signing a general consent form, were administered hallucinogenic drugs. As a reward for participation in the
  3650. program, the addicts were provided with the druz of their addiction.
  3651. LSD was one of the materials tested in the MIKULTRA program.
  3652. The final phase of LSD testing involved surreptitious administration
  3653. to unwitting nonvolunteer subjects in normal life settings by undercover officers of the Bureau of Narcotics acting for the CIA.
  3654. The rationale for such testing was "that testing of materials under
  3655. accepted scientific procedures fails to disclose the full pattern of reactions and attributions that may occur in operational situations." 15
  3656. According to the CIA, the advantage of the relationship with the
  3657. Bureau was that
  3658. test subjects could be sought and cultivated within the setting
  3659. of narcotics control. Some subjects have been informers or
  3660. members of suspect criminal elements from whom the [Bureau of Narcotics] has obtained results of orwrational value
  3661. through the tests. On the other hand, the effectiveness of the
  3662. substances on individuals at all social levels, high and low,
  3663. native American and foreign, is of great significance and
  3664. testing has been performed an a variety of individualswithin
  3665. these categories. [Emphasis added.] 16
  3666. A special procedure. designated MKDELTA, was es'ablished to
  3667. govern the use of MKULTRA materials abrond. Such materials were
  3668. used on a number of occasions. Because MKULTRA records were
  3669. dostroved, it is imnossible to reconstruct the operational use of
  3670. MKULTRA materials by the CIA overseas; it has been determined
  3671. that the use of these materials abroad began in 1953, and possibly as
  3672. early as 1950.
  3673. Druns were used primarily as an aid to interrogations. but
  3674. MKULTRA/MKDELTA materials were also used for harassment,
  3675. discrediting, or disabling purposes. According to an Inspector General
  3676. Survey of the Technical Services Division of the CIA in 1957-an
  3677. inspection which did not discover the MKULTRA oroject involving
  3678. the surreptitious administration of LSD to unwitting, nonvolunteer
  3679. SIbid, p. 21.
  3680. * Ibid., pp. 11-12.
  3681.  
  3682. 72
  3683. 392
  3684. subjects-the CIA had developed six drugs for operational use and
  3685. they had been used in six different operations on a total of thirty-three
  3686. subjects.' By 1963 the number of operations and subjects had increased substantially.
  3687. In the spring of 1963, during a wide-ranging Inspector General
  3688. survey of the Technical Services Division, a member of the Inspector
  3689. General's staff, John Vance, learned about MKULTRA and about
  3690. the project involving the surreptitious administration of LSD to unwitting, nonvoluntary human subjects. As a result. of the discovery
  3691. and the Inspector General's subsequent -report,this testing was halted
  3692. and much tighter administrative controls were imposed on the program. According to the CIA, the project was decreased significantly
  3693. each budget year until its complete termination in the late 1960s.
  3694.  
  3695. 5. The Testing of LSD by the Army
  3696. There were three major phases in the Army's testing of LSD. In the
  3697. first, LSD was administered to more than 1,000 American soldiers who
  3698. volunteered to be subjects in chemical warfare experiments. In the
  3699. second phase, Material Testing Program EA 1729, 95 volunteers received LSD in clinical experiments designed to evaluate potential
  3700. intelligence uses of the drug. In the third phase, Projects THIRD
  3701. CHANCE and DERBY HAT, 16 unwitting nonvolunteer subjects
  3702. were interrogated after receiving LSD as part of operational field
  3703. tests.
  3704. B. CIA DRUG TESTING PROGRAMS
  3705.  
  3706. 1. The Rationale for the Testing Programs
  3707. The late 1940s and early 1950s were marked by concern over
  3708. the threat posed by the activities of the Soviet Union, the People's
  3709. Republic of China, and other Communist bloc countries. United States
  3710. concern over the use of chemical and biological agents by these powers
  3711. was acute. The belief that hostile powers had used chemical and biological agents in interrogations, brainwashing, and in attacks designed
  3712. to harass, disable, or kill Allied personnel created considerable pressure for a "defensive" program to investigate chemical and biological
  3713. agents so that the intelligence community could understand the mechanisms by which these substances worked and how their effects could
  3714. be defeated.,"
  3715. Of particular concern was the drug LSD. The CIA had received
  3716. reports that the Soviet Union was engaged in intensive efforts to produce LSD; and that the Soviet Union had attempted to purchase the
  3717. world's supply of the chemical. As one CIA officer who was deeply
  3718. involved in work with this drug described the climate of the times:
  3719. "[It] is awfully hard in this day and age to reproduce how frightening
  3720. all of this was to us at the time, particularly after the drug scene has
  3721. become as widespread and as knowledgeable in this country as it did.
  3722. But we were literally terrified, because this was the one material that we
  3723. Ibid, 1957, p. 201.
  3724. sThus an officer in the Office of Security of the CIA stressed the "urgency of
  3725.  
  3726. the discovery of techniques and method that would permit our personnel, in the
  3727. event of their capture by the enemy, to resist or defeat enemy interrogation."
  3728. (Minutes of the ARTICHOKE conference of 10/22/53.)
  3729.  
  3730. 393
  3731. had ever been able to locate that really had potential fantastic possibilities if used wrongly." 19
  3732. But the defensive orientation soon became secondary. Chemical and
  3733. biological agents were to be studied in order "to perfect techniques . . .
  3734. for the abstraction of information from individuals whether willing or
  3735. not" and in order to "develop means for the control of the activities and
  3736. mental capacities of individuals whether willing or not." 20 One
  3737. Agency official noted that drugs would be useful in order to "gain control of bodies whether they were willing or not" in the process of removing personnel from Europe in the event of a Soviet attack. 2 1 In
  3738. other programs, the CIA began to develop, produce, stockpile, and
  3739. maintain in operational readiness materials which could be used to
  3740. harass, disable, or kill specific targets. 22
  3741. Reports of research and development in the Soviet Union, the People's Republic of China, and the Communist Bloc countries provided
  3742. the basis for the transmutation of American programs from a defensive to an offensive orientation. As the Chief of the Medical Staff of
  3743. the Central Intelligence Agency wrote in 1952:
  3744. There is ample evidence in the reports of innumerable interrogations that the Communists were utilizing drugs, physical
  3745. duress, electric shock, and possibly hypnosis against their enemies. With such evidence it is difficult not to keep from becoming rabid about our apparent laxity. We are forced by this
  3746. mounting evidence to assume a more aggressive role in the
  3747. development of these techniques, but must be cautious to
  3748. maintain strict inviolable control because of the havoc that
  3749. could be wrought by such techniques in unscrupulous hands. 2 3
  3750. In order to meet the perceived threat to the national security, substantial programs for the testing and use of chemical and biological
  3751. agents-including projects involving the surreptitious administration of LSD to unwitting nonvolunteer subjects "at all social levels,
  3752. high and low, native American and foreign"-were conceived, and
  3753. implemented. These programs resulted in substantial violations of the
  3754. rights of individuals within the United States.
  3755.  
  3756. 1 Testimony of CIA
  3757.  
  3758. officer, 11/21/75, p. 33.
  3759.  
  3760. '0 Memorandum from the Director of Security to ARTICHOKE
  3761.  
  3762. representatives, Subject: "ARTICHOKE Restatement of Program."
  3763. n ARTICHOKE memorandum, 7/30/53.
  3764. " The Inspector General's Report of 1957 on the Technical Services Division
  3765. noted that "Six specific products have been developed and are available for operational use. Three of them are discrediting and disabling materials which can be
  3766. administered unwittingly and permit the exercise of a measure of control over the
  3767. actions of the subject."
  3768. A memorandum for the Chief, TSD, Biological Branch to the Chief, TSD,
  3769. 10/18/67, described two of the objectives of the CIA's Project MKNAOMI as:
  3770. "to stockpile severely incapacitating and lethal materials for the specific use of
  3771. TSD" and "to maintain in operational readiness special and unique items for
  3772. the dissemination of biological and chemical materals."
  3773. ' Memorandum from the Chief of the Medical Staff, 1/25/52.
  3774.  
  3775. 394
  3776. inAlthough the CIA recognized these effects of LSD to unwitting
  3777. 24
  3778. dividuals within the United States, the project continued. As the
  3779. Deputy Director for Plans, Richard Helms, wrote the Deputy Director of Central Intelligence during discussions which led to the cessation of unwitting testing:
  3780. While I share your uneasiness and distaste for any program which tends to intrude upon an individual's private
  3781. and legal prerogatives, I believe it is necessary that the
  3782. Agency maintain a central role in this activity, keep current
  3783. of human behavior,
  3784. on enemy capabilities the manipulation
  3785. 25
  3786. and maintain an offensive capability.
  3787. There were no attempts to secure approval for the most controversial
  3788. aspects of these programs from the executive branch or Congress.
  3789. The nature and extent of the programs were closely held secrets; even
  3790. DCI McCone was not briefed on all the details of the program involving the surreptitious administration of LSD until 1963. It was
  3791. deemed imperative that these programs be concealed from the American people. As the CIA's Inspector General wrote in 1957:
  3792. Precautions must be taken not only to protect operations
  3793. from exposure to enemyeforces but also to conceal these activities from the American public in general. The knowledge
  3794. that the Agency is engaging in unethical and illicit activities
  3795. would have serious repercussions in political and diplomatic
  3796. circles and would be detrimental to the accomplishment
  3797. of its mission.26
  3798. 2. The Death of Dr.FrankOlson
  3799. The most tragic result of the testing of LSD by the CIA was the
  3800. death of Dr. Frank Olson, a civilian employee of the Army, who died
  3801. on November 27, 1953. His death followed his participation in a CIA
  3802. experiment with LSD. As part of this experiment, Olson unwittingly
  3803. received approximately 70 micrograms of LSD in a glass of Cointreau
  3804. he drank on November 19, 1953. The drug had been placed in the bottle
  3805. by a CIA officer, Dr. Robert Lashbrook, as part of an experiment
  3806. he and Dr. Sidney Gottlieb performed at a meeting of Army and
  3807. CIA scientists.
  3808. Shortly after this experiment, Olson exhibited symptoms of paranoia and schizophrenia. Accompanied by Dr. Lashbrook, Olson sought
  3809. psychiatric assistance in New York City from a physician, Dr. Harold
  3810. Abramson, whose research on LSD had been funded indirectly by
  3811. the CIA. While in New York for treatment, Olson fell to his death
  3812. from a tenth story window in the Statler Hotel.
  3813. *"Even during the discussions which led to the termination of the unwitting
  3814. testing, the DDP turned down the option of halting such tests within the U.S.
  3815. and continuing them abroad despite the fact that the Technical Services Division had conducted numerous operations abroad making use of LSD. The DDP
  3816. made this decision on the basis of security noting that the past efforts overseas
  3817. had resulted in "making an inordinate number of foreign nationals witting of
  3818. our role in the very sensitive activity." (Memorandum for the Deputy Director
  3819. of 5Central Intelligence from the Deputy Director for Plans, 12/17/63, p. 2.)
  3820. ' Ibid., pp. 2-3.
  3821. 2 I.G. survey of TSD, 1957, p. 217.
  3822.  
  3823. 395
  3824. a. Background.-Olson, an expert in aerobiology who was assigned
  3825. to the Special Operations Division (SOD) of the U.S. Army Biological Center at Camp Detrick, Maryland. This Division had three
  3826. primary functions
  3827. (1) assessing the vulnerability of American installations
  3828. to biological attack;
  3829. (2) developing techniques for offensive use of biological
  3830. weapons; and
  3831. 27
  3832. (3) biological research for the CIA.
  3833. Professionally, Olson was well respected by his colleagues in both
  3834. the Army and the CIA. Colonel Vincent Ruwet, Olson's immediate
  3835. superior at the time of his death, was in almost daily contact with
  3836.  
  3837. Olson. According to Colonel Ruwet: "As a professional man . . . his
  3838. ability . . . was outstanding." 28 Colonel Ruwet stated that "during
  3839. the period prior to the experiment . . . I noticed nothing which
  3840.  
  3841. would lead me to believe that he was of unsound mind." " Dr. Lashbrook, who had monthly contacts with Olson from early 1952 until
  3842. the time of his death, stated publicly that before Olson received LSD,
  3843. "as far as I know, he was perfectly normal." 30 This assessment is in
  3844. direct contradiction to certain statements evaluating Olson's emotional stability made in CIA internal memoranda written after
  3845. Olson's death.
  3846. b. The Experiment.-On November 18, 1953, a group of ten scientists fiom the CIA and Camp Detrick attended a semi-annual review
  3847. and analysis conference at a cabin located at Deep Creek Lake, Maryland. Three of the participants were from the CIA's Technical Services Staff. The Detrick representatives were all from the Special
  3848. Operations Division.
  3849. According to one CIA official, the Special Operations Division
  3850. participants "agreed that an unwitting experiment would be
  3851. desirable." "3This account directly contradicts Vincent Ruwet's recollection. Ruwet recalls no such discussion, and has asserted that he
  3852. would remember any such discussion because the SOD participants
  3853. 32
  3854. would have strenuously objected to testing on unwitting subjects.
  3855. meeting
  3856. In May, 1953, Richard Helms, Assistant DDP, held a staff
  3857. which the Chief of Technical Services Staff attended. At this meeting
  3858. Helms "indicated that the drug [LSD] was dynamite and that he
  3859. should be advised at all times when it was intended to use it." 3 In
  3860. addition, the then DDP, Frank Wisner, sent a memorandum to TSS
  3861. stating the requirement that the DDP personally 34approve the use of
  3862. LSD. Gottlieb went ahead with the experiment, securing the apStaff summary of Vincent Ruwet Interview, 8/13/75, p. 3.
  3863. " Memorandum of Col. Vincent Ruwet, To Whom It May Concern, no date,
  3864. p. 2.
  3865. " Ruwet Memorandum, p. 3.
  3866. aJoseph B. Treaster, New York Times, 7/19/75, p. 1.
  3867. Memorandum for the Record from Lyman Kirkpatrick, 12/1/53, p. 1.
  3868. 2 Ruwet (staff summary), 8/13/75, p. 6.
  3869. * Inspector General Diary, 12/2/53.
  3870. " Ibid. Dr. Gottleib has testified that he does not remember either the meeting
  3871. with Helms nor 'the Wisner memorandum. (Gottlieb, 10/18/75, p. 16.)
  3872. 27
  3873.  
  3874. 396
  3875. proval of his immediate supervisor. Neither the Chief of TSS nor
  3876. the DDP specifically authorized the experiment in which Dr. Olson
  3877. participated.35
  3878. According to Gottlieb.3 6 a "very small dose" of LSD was placed in
  3879. a bottle of Cointreau which was served after dinner on Thursday,
  3880. November 19. The drug was placed in the liqueur by Robert Lashbrook. All but two of the SOD participants received LSD. One did
  3881. not drink; the other had a heart condition.3 7 About twenty minutes
  3882. after they finished their Cointreau, Gottlieb informed the other participants that they had received LSD.
  3883. Dr. Gottlieb stated that "up to the time of the experiment," he
  3884. observed nothing unusual in Olson's behavior.3 7a Once the experiment
  3885. was underway, Gottlieb recalled that "the drug had a definite effect on
  3886. the group to the point that they were boisterous and laughing and they
  3887. could not continue the meeting or engage in sensible conversation."
  3888. The meeting continued until about 1:00 a.m., when the participants
  3889. retired for the evening. Gottlieb recalled that Olson, among others,
  3890. complained of "wakefulness" during the night.3 8 According to Gottlieb
  3891. on Friday morning "aside from some evidence of fatigue, I observed
  3892. nothing unusual in [Olson's] actions, conversation, or general behavior." 39 Ruwet recalls that Olson "appeared to be agitated" at
  3893. breakfast, but that he "did not consider this to be abnormal under the
  3894. circumstances." 40
  3895. c. The Treatment.-The following Monday, November 23, Olson
  3896. was waiting for Ruwet when he came in to work at 7:30 a.m. For the
  3897. next two days Olson's friends and family attempted to reassure hin
  3898. and help him "snap out" of what appeared to be a serious depression.
  3899. On Tuesday, Olson again came to Ruwet and, after an hour long conDr. Gottlieb testified that "given the information we knew up to this time,
  3900. and based on a lot of our own self-administration, we thought it was a fairly
  3901. benign substance in terms of potential harm." This is in conflict not only with 'Mr.
  3902. Helms' statement but also with material which had been supplied to the Technical
  3903. Services Staff. In one long memorandum on current research with LSD which
  3904. was supplied to TSD, Henry Beecher described the dangers involved with such
  3905. research in a prophetic manner. "The second reason to doubt Professor Rothland
  3906. came when I raised the question as to any accidents which had arisen from
  3907. the use of LSD-25. He said in a very positive way, 'none.' As it turned out
  3908. this answer could be called overly positive, for later on in the evening I was
  3909. discussing the matter with Dr. W. A. Stohl, Jr., a psychiatrist in Bleulera's
  3910. Clinic in Zurich where I had gone at Rothland's insistence. Stohl, when asked
  3911. the same question, replied, 'yes,' and added spontaneously, 'there is a case
  3912. Professor Rothland knows about. In Geneva a woman physician who had been
  3913. subject to depression to some extent took LSD-25 in an experiment and became
  3914. severely and suddenly depressed and committed suicide three weeks later.
  3915. While the connection is not definite, common knowledge of this could hardly
  3916. have allowed the positive statement Rothland permitted himself. This case is
  3917. a warning to us to avoid engaging subjects who are depressed, or who have been
  3918. subject to depression.' " Dr. Gottlieb testified that he had no recollection of
  3919. either the report or that particular section of it. (Sidney Gottlieb testimony,
  3920. 10/19/75, p. 78.)
  3921. " Memorandum of Sheffield Edwards for the record, 11/28/53, p. 2.
  3922. ' Lashbrook (staff summary), 7/19/75, p. 3.
  3923. "a Gottlieb Memorandum, 12/7/53, p. 2.
  3924. Edwards memorandum, 11/28/53, p. 3.
  3925. Gottlieb memorandum. 12/7/53, p. 3.
  3926. 0
  3927. ' Ruwet memorandum, p. 3.
  3928.  
  3929. 397
  3930. versation, it was decided that medical assistance for Dr. Olson was
  3931. desirable."1
  3932. Ruwet then called Lashbrook and informed him that "Dr. Olson
  3933. was in serious trouble and needed immediate professional attention." 42
  3934. Lashbrook agreed to make appropriate arrangements and told Ruwet
  3935. to bring Olson to Washington, D.C. Ruwet and Olson proceeded to
  3936. Washington to meet with Lashbrook, and the three left for New York
  3937. at about 2:30 p.m. to meet with Dr. Harold Abramson.
  3938. At that time Dr. Abramson was an allergist and immunologist
  3939. practicing medicine in New York City. He held no degree in psychiatry, but was associated with research projects supported indirectly
  3940. by the CIA. Gottlieb and Dr. Lashbrook both followed his work closely
  3941. in the early 1950s. 4 3 Since Olson needed medical help, they turned to
  3942. Dr. Abramson as the doctor closest to Washington who was experienced with LSD and cleared by the CIA.
  3943. Ruwet, Lashbrook, and Olson remained in New York for two days of
  3944. consultations with Abramson. On Thursday, November 26, 1953, the
  3945. three flew back to Washington so that Olson could spend Thanksgiving
  3946. with his family. En route from the airport Olson told Ruwet that he
  3947. was afraid to face his family. After a lengthy discussion, it was decided that Olson and Lashbrook would return to New York, and that
  3948. Ruwet would go to Frederick to explain these events to Mrs. Olson ."
  3949. Lashbrook and Olson flew back to New York the same day, again
  3950. for consultations with Abramson. They spent Thursday night in a
  3951. Long Island hotel and the next morning returned to the city with
  3952. Abramson. In further discussions with Abramson, it was agreed
  3953. that Olson should be placed under regular psychiatric care at an
  3954. institution closer to his home.4 5
  3955. d. The Death.-Because they could not obtain air transportation for
  3956. a return trip on Friday night, Lashbrook and Olson made reservations
  3957. for Saturday morning and checked into the Statler Hotel. Between
  3958. the time they checked in and 10:00 p.m.; they watched television,
  3959. visited the cocktail lounge, where each had two martinis, and dinner.
  3960. According to Lashbrook, Olson "was cheerful and appeared to enjoy
  3961. the entertainment." He "appeared no longer particulary depressed,
  3962. and almost the Dr. Olson I knew prior to the experiment." 46
  3963. After dinner Lashbrook and Olson watched television for about
  3964. an hour, and at 11:00, Olson suggested that they go to bed, saying that
  3965. "he felt more relaxed and contented than he had since [they] came
  3966. to New York." " Olson then left a call with the hotel operator to wake
  3967. them in the morning. At approximately 2:30 a.m. Saturday, November 28, Lashbrook was awakened by a loud "crash of glass." In his
  3968. report on the incident, he stated only that Olson "had crashed through
  3969. the closed window blind and the closed window and he fell to his death
  3970. from the window of our room on the 10th floor." 48
  3971. "Ibid., p. 4.
  3972. '2 Lashbrook memorandum, 12/7/53, p. 1.
  3973. 43 Staff summary of Dr. Harold Abramson interview, 7/29/75, p. 2.
  3974. " Lashbrook memorandum, 12/7/53, p. 3.
  3975. 4 Abramson memorandum, 12/4/53.
  3976. * Lashbrook memorandum, 12/7/53, p. 3.
  3977. 7 Ibid., p. 4.
  3978. 0 Ibid.
  3979. 96-408 0 - 77 - 6
  3980.  
  3981. 398
  3982. Immediately after finding that Olson had leapt to his death, Lashbrook telephoned Gottlieb at his home and informed him of the incident.4" Gottlieb called Ruwet and informed him of Olson's death
  3983. at approximately 2:45 a.m.50 Lashbrook then called the hotel desk
  3984. and reported the incident to the operator there. Lashbrook called
  3985. Abramson and informed him of the occurrence. Abramson told Lashbrook he "wanted to be kept out of the thing completely," but later
  3986. changed his mind and agreed to assist Lashbrook.5'
  3987. Shortly thereafter, uniformed police officers and some hotel employees came to Lashbrook's room. Lashbrook told the police he didn't
  3988. know why Olson had committed suicide, but he did know that Olson
  3989. "suffered from ulcers." 65
  3990. e. The Aftermath.-Following Dr. Olson's death, the CIA made
  3991. a substantial effort to ensure that his family received death benefits,
  3992. but did not notify the Olsons of the circumstances surrounding his
  3993. demise. The Agency also made considerable efforts to prevent the
  3994. death being connected with the CIA, and supplied complete cover for
  3995. Lashbrook so that his association with the CIA would remain a secret.
  3996. After Dr. Olson's death the CIA conducted an internal investigation of the incident. As part of his responsibilities in this investigation, the General Counsel wrote the Inspector General, stating:
  3997. I'm not happy with what seems to be a very casual attitude
  3998. on the part of TSS representatives to the way this experiment was conducted and the remarks that this is just one of
  3999. the risks running with scientific experimentation. I do not
  4000. eliminate the need for taking risks, but I do believe, especially when human health or life is at stake, that at least the
  4001. prudent, reasonable measures which can be taken to mini. mize the risk must be taken and failure to do so was culpable
  4002. negligence. The actions of the various individuals concerned
  4003. after effects of the experiment on Dr. Olson became manifest
  4004. also revealed the failure to observe normal and reasonable
  4005. precautions."
  4006. As a result of the investigation DCI Allen Dulles sent a personal
  4007. letter to the Chief of Technical Oneiations of the Technical Services
  4008. Staff who had approved the experiment criticizing him for "poor
  4009. judgment... in authorizing the use of this drug on such an unwitting
  4010. basis and without proximate medical safeguards." 54 Dulles also sent
  4011. a letter to Dr. Gotilieb, Chief of the Chemical Division of the Techifiical Services Staff, criticizing him for recommending the "unwitting
  4012. application of the drug" in that the proposal "did not give sufficient
  4013. emphasis for medical collaboration and for the proper consideration
  4014. of the rights of the individual to whom it was being administered."
  4015. CTA Field Office Report, 12/3/53, p. 3.
  4016. Ruwet Memorandum, p. 11.
  4017. CIA Field Office Report, 12/3/53, p. 3.
  4018. Z2 Ibid.
  4019. Memorandum from the General Counsel to the Inspector General. 1/4/54.
  4020. " Memorandum from DCI to Chief, Technical Opeiutions, TSS, 2/12/54.
  4021. 7 Memorandum from DCI to Sidney Gottlieb, 2/12/54.
  4022.  
  4023. 79
  4024. 399
  4025. The letters were hand carried to the individuals to be read and
  4026. returned. Although the letters were critical, a note from the Deputy
  4027. Director of Central Intelligence to Mr. Helms instructed him to inform the individuals that: "These are not reprimands and no personnel file notation are being made." 5
  4028. Thus, although the Rockefeller Commission has characterized them
  4029. as such, these notes were explicitly not reprimands. Nor did participation in the events which led to Dr. Olson's death have any apparent
  4030. effect on the advancement within the CIA of the individuals involved.
  4031. 3. The Surreptitious Administration of LSD to Unwitting NonVolunteer Human Subjects by the CIA After the Death of Dr.
  4032. Olson
  4033. The death of Dr. Olson could be viewed, as some argued at the time,
  4034. as a tragic accident, one of the risks inherent in the testing of new substances. It might be argued that LSD was thought to be benign.
  4035. After the death of Dr. Olson the dangers of the surreptitious administration of LSD were clear, yet the CIA continued or initiated 11 a
  4036. project involving the surreptitious administration of LSD to nonvolunteer human subjects. This program exposed numerous individuals
  4037. in the United States to the risk of death or serious injury without their
  4038. informed consent, without medical supervision, and without necessary
  4039. follow-up to determine any long-term effects.
  4040. Prior to the Olson experiment, the Director of Central Intelligence
  4041. had approved MKULTRA, a research program designed to develop
  4042. a "capability in the covert use of biological and chemical agent
  4043. materials." In the proposal describing MKULTRA Mr. Helms, then
  4044. ADDP, wrote the Director that:
  4045. we intend to investigate the development of a chemical material which causes a reversible non-toxic aberrant mental state,
  4046. the specific nature of which can be reasonably well predicted
  4047. for each individual. This material could potentially aid in
  4048. discrediting individuals, eliciting information, and implanting suggestions and other forms of mental control.5s
  4049. On February 12, 1954, the Director of the Central Intelligence
  4050. Agency wrote TSS officials criticizing them for "poor judgment" in
  4051. administering LSD on "an unwitting basis and without proximate
  4052. medical safeguards" to Dr. Olson and for the lack of "proper consideration of the rights of the individual to whom it was being administered." 59 On the same day, the Inspector General reviewed a report
  4053. on Subproject Number 3 of MKULTRA, in which the same TSS
  4054. officers who had just received letters from the Director were quoted
  4055. as stating that one of the purposes of Subproject Number 3 was to
  4056. 6 Note from DDCI to Richard Helms, 2/13/54.
  4057. " The 1963 IG Report, which described the project involving the surreptitious
  4058. administration of LSD, placed the project beginning in 1955. Other CIA documents reveal that it was in existence as early as February 1954. The CIA has
  4059. told the Committee that the project began in 1953 and that the experiment which
  4060. led to Dr. Olson's death was part of the project.
  4061. " Memorandum from ADDP items to DOI Dulles, 4/3/53, tab A, p. 2.
  4062. 0 Memorandum from DCI to Sidney Gottlieb, 2/12/54; and memorandum from
  4063. DCI to Chief of Operations, TSS, 2/12/54.
  4064.  
  4065. 400
  4066. "observe the behavior of unwitting persons being questioned after
  4067. having been given a drug." o There is no evidence that Subproject
  4068. Number 3 was terminated even though these officers were unequivocally aware of the dangers of the surreptitious administration of LSD
  4069. and the necessity of obtaining informed consent and providing medical
  4070. safeguards. Subproject Number 3, in fact, used methods which showed
  4071. even less concern than did the OLSON experiment for the safety and
  4072. security of the participants. Yet the evidence indicates the project
  4073. continued until 1963.61
  4074. In the project, the individual conducting the test might make
  4075. initial contact with a prospective subject selected at random in a bar.
  4076. He would then invite the person to a "safehouse" where the test drug
  4077. was administered to the subject through drink or in food. CIA personnel might debrief the individual conducting the test, or observe
  4078. the test by using a one-way mirror and tape recorder in an adjoining
  4079. room.
  4080. Prior consent was obviously not obtained from any of the subjects.
  4081. There was also, obviously, no medical prescreening. In addition, the
  4082. tests were conducted by individuals who were not qualified scientific
  4083. observers. There were no medical personnel on hand either to administer the drugs or to observe their effects, and no follow-up was conducted on the test subjects.
  4084. As the Inspector General noted in 1963:
  4085. A significant limitation on the effectiveness of such testing is
  4086. the infeasibility of performing scientific observation of results. The [individuals conducting the test] are not qualified
  4087. scientific observers. Their subjects are seldom accessible beyond the first hours of the test. The testing may be useful in
  4088. perfecting delivery techniques, and in identifying surface
  4089. 62
  4090. characteristics of onset, reaction, attribution, and side-effect.
  4091. This was particularly troublesome as in a
  4092. number of instances, . . . the test subject has become ill for
  4093. hours or days, including hospitalization in at least one case,
  4094. and the agent could only follow up by guarded inquiry
  4095. after the test subject's return to normal life. Possible sickness
  4096. and attendant economic loss are inherent contingent effects
  4097. of the testing.6 3
  4098. Paradoxically, greater care seems to have been taken for the safety
  4099. of foreign nationals against whom LSD was used abroad. In several64
  4100. cases medical examinations were performed prior to the use of LSD.
  4101. 0 Memorandum to Inspector General from Chief, Inspection and Review, on
  4102. Subproject #3 of MKULTRA, 2/10/54.
  4103. IG Report on MKULTRA, 1963.
  4104. * Ibid., p. 12.
  4105.  
  4106. "'Ibid. According to the IG's survey in 1963, physicians associated with
  4107. MKULTRA could be made available in an emergency.
  4108. " The Technical Services Division which was responsible for the operational
  4109. use of LSD abroad took the position that "no physical examination of the subject
  4110. is required prior to administration of [LSD] by TSS trained personnel. A physi-
  4111.  
  4112. 401
  4113. Moreover, the administration abroad was marked -by constant observation made possible because the material was being used against
  4114. prisoners of foreign intelligence or security organizations. Finally,
  4115. during certain of the LSD interrogations abroad, local physicians
  4116. were on call, though these physicians had had no experience with LSD
  4117. 65
  4118. and would not be told that hallucinogens had been administered.
  4119. of
  4120. The CIA's project involving the surreptitious administration
  4121. LSD to unwitting human subjects in the United States was finally
  4122. halted in 1963, as a result of its discovery during the course of an
  4123. Inspector General survey of the Technical Services Division. When
  4124. the Inspector General learned of the project, he spoke to the Deputy
  4125. Director for Plans, who agreed that the Director should be briefed.
  4126. The DDP made it clear that the DCI and his Deputy were generally
  4127. familiar with MKULTRA. He indicated, however, that he, was not
  4128. sure it was necessary to brief the DDCI at that point.
  4129. On May 24, 1963, the DDP advised the Inspector General that he had
  4130. briefed the Director on the MKULTRA program and in particular
  4131. had covered the question of the surreptitious administration of LSD
  4132. to unwitting human subjects. According to the Inspector General, the
  4133. DDP said that "the Director indicated no disagreement and therefore
  4134. the 'testing' will continue." 66
  4135. One copy of an "Eyes Only" draft report on MKULTRA was
  4136. prepared by the Inspector General who recommended the termination
  4137. of the surreptitious administration project. The project was suspended
  4138. following the Inspector General's report.
  4139. On December 17, 1963, Deputy Director for Plans Helms wrote a
  4140. memo to the DDCI, who with the Inspector General and the Executive
  4141. Director-Comptroller had opposed the covert testing. He noted two
  4142. aspects of the problem: (1) "for over a decade the Clandestine Services has had the mission of maintaining a capability for influencing
  4143. human behavior;" and (2) "testing arrangements in furtherance of
  4144. this mission should be as operationally realistic and yet as controllable
  4145. as possible." Helms argued that the individuals must be "unwitting"
  4146. as this was "the only realistic method of maintaining the capability,
  4147. considering the intended operational use of materials to influence
  4148. human behavior as the operational targets will certainly be unwitting.
  4149. Should the subjects of the testing not be unwitting, the program would
  4150. only be "pro forma" resulting in a "false sense of accomplishment and
  4151. readiness." 67 Helms continued:
  4152. clan need not be present. There is no danger medically in the use of this material
  4153. as handled by TSS trained personnel." The Office of Medical Services had taken
  4154. the position that LSD was "medically dangerous." Both the Office of Security
  4155. and the Office of Medical Services argued that LSD "should not be administered
  4156. unless preceded by a medical examination .. . and should be administered only
  4157. by or in the presence of a physician who had studied it and its effect." (Memorandum from James Angleton, Chief, Counterintelligence Staff to Chief of Operations, 12/12/57, pp. 1-2.
  4158. * Physicians might be called with the hope that they would make a diagnosis
  4159. of mental breakdown which would be useful in discrediting the individual who
  4160. was the subject of the CIA interest.
  4161. " Memorandum for the Record prepared by the Inspector General, 5/15/63, p. 1.
  4162. 6
  4163. Ibid., p. 2.
  4164.  
  4165. 402
  4166. If one grants the validity of the mission of maintaining this
  4167. unusual capability and the necessity for unwitting testing,
  4168. there is only then the question of how best to do it. Obviously,
  4169. the testing should be conducted in such a manner as to permit
  4170. the opportunity to observe the results of the administration
  4171. on the target. It also goes without saying that whatever testing arrangement we adopt must afford maximum safeguards
  4172. for the protection of the Agency's role in this activity, as
  4173. well as minimizing the possibility of physical or emotional
  4174. damage to the individual tested. 68
  4175. In another memo to the Director of Central Intelligence in June,
  4176. 1964, Helms again raised the issue of unwitting testing. At that time
  4177. General Carter, then acting DCI, approved several changes in the
  4178. MKTULTRA program proposed by Mr. Helms as a result of negotiations between the Inspector General and the DDP. In a handwritten
  4179. note, however, Director Carter added that "unwitting testing will be
  4180. subject to a separate decision." 69.
  4181. No specific decision was made then or soon after. The testing had
  4182. been halted and, according to Walter Elder, Executive Assistant to
  4183. DCI McCone, the DCI was not inclined to take the positive step of
  4184. authorizing a resumption of the testing. At least through the summer,
  4185. the DDP did not press the issue. On November 9, 1964, the DDP
  4186. raised the issue again in a memo to the DCI, calling the Director's
  4187. attention to what he described as "several other indications during
  4188. the past year of an apparent Soviet aggressiveness in the field of
  4189. covertly administered chemicals which are, to say the least, inexplicable and disturbing." o
  4190. Helms noted that because of the suspension of covert testing, the
  4191. Akgency's "positive operational capability to use drugs is diminishing,
  4192. owing to a lack of realistic testing. With increasing knowledge of the
  4193. state of the art, we are less capable of staying up with Soviet advances
  4194. in this field. This in turn results in a waning capability on our part
  4195. to restrain others in the intelligence community (such as the Department of Defense) from pursuing operations in this area." "
  4196. Helms attributed the cessation of the unwitting testing to the high
  4197. risk of embarrassment to the Agency as well as the "moral problem."
  4198. He noted that no better covert situation had been devised than that
  4199. which had been used, and that "we have no answer to the moral
  4200. issue." 72
  4201.  
  4202. Helms asked for either resumption of the testing project or its definitive cancellation. He argued that the status quo of a research and development program without a realistic testing program was causing
  4203. the Agency to live "with the illusion of a capability which is becoming
  4204. minimal and furthermore is expensive." "7Once again no formal action
  4205. was taken in response to the Helms' request.
  4206. Memorandum from DDP Helms to DDCI Carter, 12/17/63.
  4207. * Memorandum from DDP Helms to DCI, 6/9/64, p. 3.
  4208. 70Ibid., 11/9/64, p. 1.
  4209. n Ibid., pp. 1-2.
  4210. "Ibid., p. 2.
  4211. 7 Ibid.
  4212.  
  4213. 403 .
  4214. From its beginning in the early 1950's until its termination in 1963,
  4215. the program of surreptitious administration of LSD to unwitting nonvolunteer human subjects demonstrates a failure of the CIA's leadership to pay adequate attention to the rights of individuals and to provide effective guidance to CIA employees. Though it was known that
  4216. the testing was dangerous, the lives of subjects were placed in jeopardy and their rights were ignored during the ten years of testing
  4217. which followed Dr. Olson's death. Although it was clear that the laws
  4218. of the United States were being violated, the testing continued. While
  4219. the individuals involved in the Olson experiment were admonished
  4220. by the Director, at the same time they were also told that they were
  4221. not being reprimanded and that their "bad judgment" would not be
  4222. made part of their personnel records. When the covert testing project
  4223. was terminated in 1963, none of the individuals involved were subject
  4224. to any disciplinary action.
  4225. 4. Monitoring and Control of the Testing and Use of-Chemical and
  4226. BiologicalAgents by the CIA
  4227. The Select Committee found numerous failures in the monitoring
  4228. and control of the testing and use of chemical and 'biological agents
  4229. within the CIA.74 An analysis of the failures can be divided into four
  4230. sections: (a) the waiver of normal regulations or requirements; (b)
  4231. the problems in authorization procedures; (c) the failure of internal
  4232. review mechanisms such as the Office of General Counsel, the Inspector
  4233. General, and the Audit Staff; and (d) the effect of compartmentation
  4234. and competition within the CIA.
  4235. a. The Waiver of Administrative Control.-The internal controls
  4236. within any agency rest on: (1) clear and coherent regulations; (2)
  4237. clear lines of authority; and (3) clear rewards for those who conduct
  4238. themselves in accord with agency regulations and understandable and
  4239. immediate sanctions against those who do not. In the case of the testing and use of chemical and biological agents, normal CIA administrative controls were waived. The destruction of the documents on the
  4240. largest CIA program in this area constituted a prominent example of
  4241. the waiver of normal Agency procedures by the Director.
  4242. These documents were destroyed in early 1973 at the order of then
  4243. DCI Richard Helms. According to Helms, Dr. Sidney Gottlieb, then
  4244. Director of TSD:
  4245. ...
  4246.  
  4247. came to me and said that he was retiring and that I was
  4248.  
  4249. retiring and he thought it would be a good idea if these files
  4250. were destroyed. And I also believe part of the reason for
  4251. our thinking this was advisable was there had been relationships with outsiders in government agencies and other organizations and that these would be sensitive in this kind of a
  4252. thing but that since the program was over and finished and
  4253. done with, we thought we would just get rid of the files as
  4254. "Section 2(9) of S. Res. 21 instructs the Committee to examine: the "extent
  4255. to which United States intelligence agencies are governed by Executive Orders,
  4256. rules, or regulations either published or secret."
  4257.  
  4258. 84
  4259. 404
  4260. well, so that anybody who assisted us in the past would not
  4261. be subject to follow-up or questions, embarrassment, if you
  4262. will."
  4263. The destruction was based on a waiver of an internal CIA regulation, CSI 70-10, which regulated the "retirement of inactive records."
  4264. As Thomas Karamessines, then Deputy Director of Plans, wrote in
  4265. regulation CSI-70-10: "Retirement is not a matter of convenience or
  4266. of storage but of conscious judgment in the application of the rules
  4267. modified by knowledge of individual component needs. The heart of
  4268. this judgment is to ensure that the complete story can be reconstructed
  4269. in later years and by people who may be unfamiliar with the events." "
  4270. The destruction of the MKULTRA documents made it impossible
  4271. for the Select Committee to determine the full range and extent of the
  4272. largest CIA research program involving chemical and biological
  4273. agents. The destruction also prevented the CIA from locating and providing medical assistance to the individuals who were subjects in the
  4274. program. Finally, it prevented the Committee from determining the
  4275. full extent of the operations which made use of materials developed in
  4276. the MKULTRA program.7 7
  4277. From the inception of MKULTRA normal Agency procedures were
  4278. waived. In 1953, Mr. Helms, then Assistant Deputy Director for Plans,
  4279. proposed the establishment of MKULTRA. Under the proposal six
  4280. percent of the research and development budget of TSD would be
  4281. expended "without the establishment of formal contractual relations"
  4282. because contracts would reveal government interest. Helms also voted
  4283. that qualified individuals in the field "are most reluctant to enter into
  4284. signed agreements of any sort which connect them with this activity
  4285. since such a connection would jeopardize their professional reputa" Richard Helms testimony, 9/11/75, p. 5.
  4286. 'Many Agency documents recording confidential relationships with individuals
  4287. and organizations are retained without public disclosure. Moreover, in the case of
  4288. MKULTRA the CIA had spent millions of dollars developing both materials and
  4289. delivery systems which could be used by the Clandestine Services; the reconstruction of the research and development program would be difficult if not impossible, without the documents, and at least one assistant to Dr. Gottlieb protested
  4290. against the document destruction on those grounds.
  4291. " Clandestine Services Institution (CSI) 70-10. When asked by the Select
  4292. Committee about the regularity of the procedure by which he authorized Dr.
  4293. Gottlieb to destroy the MKULTRA records, Helms responded:
  4294. "Well, that's hard to say whether it would be part of the regular procedure or
  4295. not, because the record destruction program is conducted according to a certain
  4296. pattern. There's a regular record destruction pattern in the Agency monitored by
  4297. certain people and done a certain way. So that anything outside of that, I suppose,
  4298. would have been unusual. In other words, there were documents being destroyed
  4299. because somebody had raised this specific issue rather than because they were
  4300. encompassed in the regular records destruction program. So I think the answer
  4301. to your question is probably yes." (Helms testimony, 9/11/75, p. 6.)
  4302. 7 Even prior to the destruction of documents, the MKULTRA records were far
  4303. from complete. As the Inspector General noted in 1963:
  4304. "Files are notably incomplete, poorly organized, and lacking in evaluative statements that might give perspective to management policies over time. A substantial portion of the MKULTRA record appears to rest in the memories of the principal officers and is therefore almost certain to be lost with their departures."
  4305. (G Report on MKULTRA, p. 23.)
  4306.  
  4307. 405
  4308. tions"."8 Other Agency procedures, i.e., the forwarding of documents
  4309. in support of invoices and the provision for regular audit procedures,
  4310. were also to be waived. On April 13, 1953, then DCI Allen Dulles
  4311. approved MKULTRA, noting that security considerations precluded
  4312. handling the project through usual contractual agreements.
  4313. Ten years later investigations of MKULTRA by both the Inspector
  4314. General and the Audit Staff noted substantial deficiencies which resulted from the waivers. Because TSD had not reserved the right to
  4315. audit the books of contractors in MKULTRA, the CIA had been
  4316. unable to verify the use of Agency grants by a contractor. Another
  4317. firm had failed to establish controls and safeguards which would assure "proper accountability" in use of government funds with the
  4318. result that "funds have been used for purposes not contemplated by
  4319. grants or allowable under usual contract relationship." " The entire
  4320. MKULTRA arrangement was condemned for having administrative
  4321. lines which were unclear, overly permissive controls, and irresponsible supervision.
  4322. The head of the Audit Branch noted that inspections and audits:
  4323. led us to see MKULTRA as frequently having provided a
  4324. device to escape normal administrative controls for research
  4325. that is not especially sensitive, as having allowed practices
  4326. that produce gross administrative failures, as having permitted the establishment of special relationships with unreliable organizations on an unacceptable basis, and as having
  4327. produced, on at least one occasion, a cavalier treatment of a
  4328. bona fide contracting organization.
  4329. While admitting that there may be a need for special mechanisms
  4330. for handling sensitive projects, the Chief of the Audit Branch wrote
  4331. that "both the terms of reference and the ground rules for handling
  4332. such special projects should be spelled out in advance so that diversion from normal channels does not mean abandonment of controls.
  4333. Special procedures may be necessary to ensure the security of highly
  4334. sensitive operations. To prevent the erosion of normal internal control mechanisms, such waivers should not be extended to less sensitive
  4335. operations. Moreover, only those regulations which would endanger
  4336. security should be waived; to waive regulations generally would
  4337. result in highly sensitive and controversial projects having looser
  4338. rather than stricter administrative controls. MKNAOMI, the Fort
  4339. Detrick CIA project for research and development of chemical and
  4340. biological agents, provides another example where efforts to protect
  4341. the security of agency activties overwhelmed administrative controls.
  4342. No written records of the transfer of agents such as anthrax or shellfish toxin were kept, "because of the sensitivity of the area and the
  4343. desire to keep any possible use of materials like this recordless." 81 The
  4344. 11Memorandum from ADDP Helms to DCI Dulles, 4/3/53, Tab. A, p. 2.
  4345. - Memorandum from IG to Chief, TSD, 11/8/63, as quoted in memorandum
  4346. from Chief, Audit Branch.
  4347. ' The memorandum suggested that administrative exclusions, because of the
  4348. importance of such decisions, should require the personal approval of the Deputy
  4349. Director of Central Intelligence on an inidividual case basis. Present CIA policy
  4350. is that only the DCI can authorize certain exemptions from regulations.
  4351. sxSidney Gottlieb testimony, 10/18/75, Hearings, Vol. 1, p. 51.
  4352.  
  4353. 86
  4354. 406
  4355. result was that the Agency had no way of determining what materials were on hand, and could not be certain whether delivery systems
  4356. such as dart guns, or deadly substances such as cobra venom had been
  4357. issued to the field.
  4358. b. Authorization.-The destruction of the documents regarding
  4359. MKULTRA made it difficult to determine at what level specific projects in the program were authorized. This problem is not solely a result of the document destruction, however. Even at the height of
  4360. MKULTRA the IG noted that, at least with respect to the surreptitious administration of LSD, the "present practice is to maintain no
  4361. records of the planning and approval of test programs." 82
  4362. While it is clear that Allen Dulles authorized MiKULTRA, the record is unclear as to who authorized specific projects such as that involving the surreptitious administration of LSD to unwitting nonvolunteer human subjects. Even given the sensitive and controversial
  4363. nature of the project, there is no evidence that when John McCone
  4364. replaced Allen Dulles as the Director of the Central Intelligence
  4365. Agency he was briefed on the details of this project and asked whether
  4366. it should be continued."3 Even during the 1963 discussions on the propriety of unwitting testing, the DDP questioned whether it was "necessary to brief General Carter," the Deputy Director of Central Intelligence and the Director's "alter ago," because CIA officers felt it necessary to keep details of the project restricted to an absolute minimum
  4367. number of people. 4
  4368. In May of 1963, DDP Helms told the Inspector General that the
  4369. covert testing program was authorized because he had gone to the
  4370. Director, briefed him on it and "the Director indicated no disagreement and therefore the testing will continue." 85 Such authorization
  4371. even for noncontroversial matters is clearly less desirable than explicit authorization; in areas such as the surreptitious administration
  4372. of drugs, it is particularly undesirable. Yet according to testimony
  4373. 2 IG Report on MKULTRA,
  4374. 1963, p. 14.
  4375. " According to an assistant to Dr. Gottlieb, there were annual briefings of the
  4376. DCI and the DDP on MKULTRA by the Chief of TSD or his deputy. However, a
  4377. May 15, 1963 Memorandum for the Record from the Inspector General noted that
  4378. Mr. McCone had not been briefed in detail about the program. Mr. McCone's Executive Officer, Walter Elder, testified that it was "perfectly apparent to me" that
  4379. neither Mr. McCone nor General Carter, then the DDCI, was aware of the surreptitious administration project "or if they had been briefed they had not understood it." (Elder, 12/18/75, p. 13.) Mr. McCone testified that he "did not know"
  4380. whether he talked to anyone about the project but that no one had told him about
  4381. it in a way that "would have turned on all the lights." (John McCone testimony,
  4382. 2/3/76, p. 10.)
  4383. " According to Elder's testimony, "no Deputy Director, to my knowledge,
  4384. has ever been briefed or was it ever thought necessary to brief them to the extent
  4385. to which you would brief the Director."
  4386. " IG Memorandum for the Record. 5/15/63.
  4387. On the question of authorization of the covert testing program, Elder testified
  4388. as follows:
  4389. "But my reasonable judgment is that this was considered to be in the area of
  4390. continuing approval, having once been approved by the Director."
  4391. The theory of authorization carrying over from one administration to the next
  4392. seems particularly inappropriate for less visible, highly sensitive operations
  4393. which, unless brought to his attention by subordinates, would not come to the
  4394. attention of the Director.
  4395.  
  4396. 87
  4397. 407
  4398. before the Committee, authorization through lack of agreement -is
  4399. even more prevalent in sensitive situations."
  4400. * The unauthorized retention of shellfish toxin by Dr. Nathan Gordon
  4401. and his subordinates, in violation of a Presidential Directive, may have
  4402. resulted from the failure of the Director to issue written instructions to
  4403. Agency officials. The retention was not authorized by senior officials in
  4404. the Agency. The Director, Mr. Helms, had instructed Mr. Karamessines, the Deputy Director of Plans, and Dr. Gottlieb, the Chief of
  4405. Technical Services Division, to relinquish control to the Army of any
  4406. chemical or biological agents being retained for the CIA at Fort Detrick. Dr. Gottlieb passed this instruction on to Dr. Gordon. While
  4407. orders may be disregarded in any organization, one of the reasons that
  4408. Dr. Gordon used to defend the retention was the fact that he had not
  4409. received written instructions forbidding it.87
  4410. In some situations the existence of written instructions did not prevent unauthorized actions. According to an investigation by the CIA's
  4411. Inspector General TSD officers had been informed orally that Mr.
  4412. Helns was to be "advised at all times" when LSD was to be used. In
  4413. addition TSD had received a memo advising the staff that LSD was
  4414. not to be used without the permission of the DDP, Frank Wisner. The
  4415. experiment involving Dr. Olson went ahead without notification of
  4416. either Mr. Wisner or Mr. Helms. The absence of clear and immediate
  4417. punishment for that act must undercut the force of other internal instructions and regulations.
  4418. One last issue must be raised about authorization procedures within
  4419. the Agency. Chemical agents were used abroad until 1959 for discrediting or disabling operations, or for the purpose of interrogations
  4420. with the approval of the Chief of Operations of the DDP. Later the
  4421. approval of the Deputy Director for Plans was required for such
  4422. operations. Although the medical staff sought to be part of the approval process for these operations, they were excluded because, as the
  4423. Inspector General wrote in 1957:
  4424. Operational determinations are the responsibility of the
  4425. DD/P and it is he who should advise the DCI in these
  4426. respects just as it is he who is responsible for the results. It
  4427. is completely unrealistic to consider assigning to the Chief,
  4428. Medical Staff, (what, in effect, would be authority over clandestine operations.)"
  4429. Given the expertise and training of physicians, participation of the
  4430. Medical Staff might well have been useful.
  4431. Questions about authorization also exist in regard to those agencies
  4432. which assisted the CIA. For instance, the project involving the surreptitious administration of LSD to unwitting non-volunteer human
  4433. subjects was conducted in coordination with the Bureau of Narcotics
  4434. and Dangerous Drugs. There is some question as to the Commissioner
  4435. of Narcotics' knowledge about the project.
  4436.  
  4437. a Mr. Elder was asked whether the process of bringing forward a description of
  4438. actions by the Agency in getting approval through the absence of disagreement
  4439. was a common one. He responded, "It was not uncommon. . . . The more sensitive
  4440. the project the more likely it would lean toward being a common practice, based
  4441. on the need to keep the written record to a minimum."
  4442. 8 Nathan Gordan testimony, 9/16/75, Hearings, Vol. 1.
  4443. * 1957 IG Report.
  4444.  
  4445. 88
  4446. -
  4447.  
  4448. 408
  4449.  
  4450. In 1963, the Inspector General noted that the head of the BNDD
  4451. had been briefed about the project, but the IG's report did not indicate the level of detail provided to him. Dr. Gottlieb testified that "I
  4452. remember meeting Mr. Anslinger and had the general feeling that he
  4453. was aware." 89 Another CIA officer did not recall any discussion of
  4454. testing on unwitting subjects when he and Dr. Gottlieb met with Commissioner Anslinger.
  4455. In a memorandum for the record in 1967 Dr. Gottlieb stated that
  4456. Harry Giordano, who replaced Mr. Anslinger, told Dr. Gottlieb that
  4457. when he became Commissioner he was "only generally briefed on the
  4458. arrangements, gave it his general blessing, and said he didn't want to
  4459. know the details." The same memorandum states, however, that there
  4460. were several comments which indicated to Dr. Gottlieb that Mr. Giordano was aware of the substance of the project. It is possible that
  4461. the Commissioner provided a general authorization for the arrangement without understanding what it entailed or considering its propriety. A reluctance to seek detailed information from the CIA, and
  4462. the CIA's hesitancy to volunteer it, has -been found in a number of
  4463. instances during the Select Committee's investigations. This problem
  4464. is not confined to the executive branch but has also marked congressional relationships with the Agency.
  4465. c. Internal Review.-The waiver of regulations and the absence of
  4466. documentation make it difficult to determine now who authorized
  4467. which activities. More importantly, they made internal Agency review
  4468. mechanisms much less effective."o Controversial and highly sensitive
  4469. projects which should have been subject to the most rigorous inspection
  4470. lacked effective internal review.
  4471. Given the role of the General Counsel and his reaction to the surreptitious administration of LSD to Dr. Olson, it would have seemed
  4472. likely that he would be asked about the le'ality or propriety of any
  4473. subsequent projects involving such administration. This was not done.
  4474. He did not learn about this testing until the 1970's. Nor was the General Counsel's opinion sought on other MKULTRA projects, though
  4475. these had been characterized by the Inspector General in the 1957
  4476. Report on TSD as "unethical and illicit."91
  4477. There is no mention in the report of the 1957 Inspector General's
  4478. survey of TSD of the project involving the surreptitious administration of LSD. That project was apparently not brought to the attention
  4479. of the survey team. The Inspector who discovered it during the IG's
  4480. 1963 survey of TSD recalls coming upon evidence of it inadvertently,
  4481. " Gottlieb, 10/18/75, p. 28.
  4482. 9 The IG's report on MKULTRA In 1963 stated:
  4483. "The original charter documents specified that TSD maintain exacting control of MKULTRA activities. In so doing, however, TSD has pursued a philosophy of minimum documentation in keeping with the high sensitivity of some
  4484. of the projects. Some files were found to present a reasonably complete record,
  4485. including most sensitive matters, while others with parallel objectives contained
  4486. little or no data at all. The lack of consistent records precluded use of routine
  4487. inspection procedures and raised a variety of questions concerning management and fiscal controls."
  4488. " CIA, Inspector General's report on TSD, 1957, p. 217.
  4489.  
  4490. 409
  4491. been called to his attention as an especially
  4492. rather than its having
  4493. sensitive project. 9 2
  4494. Thus both the General Counsel and the Inspector General, the principal internal mechanisms for the control of possibly improper actions,
  4495. were excluded from regular reviews of the project. When the project
  4496. was discovered the Executive Director-Comptroller voiced strong opposition to it; it is possible that the project would have been terminated in 1957 if it had been called to his attention when he then served
  4497. as Inspector General.
  4498. The Audit Staff, which also serves an internal review function
  4499. through the examination of Agency expenditures, also encountered
  4500. substantial difficulty with MKULTRA. When MKULTRA was first
  4501. proposed the Audit Staff was to be excluded from any function. This
  4502. was soon changed. However, the waiver of normal "contractual procedures" in MIULTRA increased the likelihood of "irregularities"
  4503. as well as the difficulty in detecting them. The head of the Audit
  4504. Branch characterized the MKULTRA procedures as "having allowed
  4505. practices that produced gross administrative failures," including a
  4506. lack of controls within outside contractors which would "assure proper
  4507. accountability in use of government funds." It also diminished the
  4508. CIA's capacity to verify the accountings provided by outside firms.
  4509. d. Compartmentation and Jurisdictional Conflict Within the
  4510. Agency.-As has been noted, the testing and use of chemical and
  4511. biological agents yas treated as a highly sensitive activity within the
  4512. CIA, This resulted in a high degree of compartmentation. At the same
  4513. time substantial jurisdictional conflict existed within the Agency between the Technical Services Division, and the Office of Medical Services and the Office of Security.
  4514. This compartmentation and jurisdictional conflict may well have
  4515. led to duplication of effort within the CIA and to Agency policymakers being deprived of useful information.
  4516. During the early 1950's first the BLUEBIRD Committee and then
  4517. the ARTICHOKE Committee were instituted to bring together representatives of the Agency components which had a legitimate interest in the area of the alteration of human behavior. By 1957 both these
  4518. committees had fallen into disuse. No information went to the Technical Services Division (a component supposedly represented on the
  4519. ARTICHOKE Committee) about ARTICHOKE operations being
  4520. conducted by the Office of Security and the Office of Medical Services.
  4521. The Technical Services Division which was providing support to the
  4522. Clandestine Services in the use of chemical and biological agents, but
  4523. provided little or no information to either the Office of Security or the
  4524. Office of Medical Services. As one TSD officer involved in these prowe were acquainted, we certainly didn't
  4525. grams testified: "Although
  4526. 93
  4527. share experiences."
  4528. " Even after the Inspector came upon it the IG did not perform a complete
  4529. investigation of it. It was discovered at the end of an extensive survey of TSD
  4530. and the Inspector was in the process of being transferred to another post within
  4531. the Agency.
  4532. "Testimony of CIA officer, 11/21/75, p. 14.
  4533.  
  4534. 90
  4535. 410
  4536. QKHILLTOP, another group designed to coordinate research in
  4537. this area also had little success. The group met infrequently-only
  4538. twice a year-and little specific information was exchanged. 9
  4539. Concern over security obviously played some role in the failure to
  4540. share information,95 but this appears not to be the only reason. A TSD
  4541. officer stated that the Office of Medical Services simply wasn't "particularly interested in what we were doing" and never sought such
  4542. information.6 On the other hand, a representative of the Office of
  4543. Medical Services consistently sought to have medical personnel participate in the use of chemical and biological agents suggested that
  4544. TSD did not inform the Office of Medical Services in order to prevent their involvement.
  4545. Jurisdictional conflict was constant in this area. The Office of
  4546. Security, which had been assigned responsibility for direction of
  4547. ARTICHOKE, consistently sought to bring TSD operations involving psychochemicals under the ARTICHOKE umbrella. The
  4548. Office of Medical Services sought to have OMS physicians advise and
  4549. participate in the operational use of drugs. As the Inspector General described it in 1957, "the basic issue is concerned with the extent
  4550. of authority that should be exercised by the Chief, Medical Staff, over
  4551. the activities of TSD which encroach upon or enter into the medical
  4552. field," and which are conducted by TSD "without seeking the prior
  4553. approval of the Chief, Medical Staff, and often without informing
  4554. him of their nature and extent." 97
  4555. As was noted previously, because the projects and programs of
  4556. TSD stemmed directly from operational needs controlled by the
  4557. DDP, the IG recommended no further supervision of these activities by the Medical Staff :
  4558. It is completely unrealistic to consider assigning to the
  4559. Chief, Medical Staff, what, in effect, would be authority over
  4560. clandestine operations. Furthermore, some of the activities
  4561. of Chemical Division are not only unorthodox but unethical
  4562. and sometimes illegal. The DDP is in a better position to
  4563. evaluate the justification for such operations than the Chief,
  4564. Medical Staff .9 [Emphasis added.]
  4565. Because the advice of the Director of Security was needed for
  4566. "evaluating the risks involved" in the programs and because the
  4567. knowledge that the CIA was "engaging in unethical and illicit activities would have serious repercussions in political and diplomatic
  4568. circles," the IG recommended that the Director of Security be fully
  4569. advised of TSD's activities in these areas.
  4570. Even after the Inspector General's Report of 1957, the compartmentation and jurisdictional conflict continued. They may have had a subThe one set of minutes from a QKHILLTOP meeting indicated that individuals in the Office of Medical Services stressed the need for more contact.
  4571. ' When asked why information on the surreptitious administration of LSI)
  4572. was not presented to the ARTICHOKE committee, Dr. Gottlieb responded: "I
  4573. imagine the only reason would have been a concern for broadening the awareness of its existence."
  4574. 'IA ifficer. 11/21/75. p. 14.
  4575. IG Survey of TS), 1957. p. 217.
  4576. 0a
  4577.  
  4578. Ibid.
  4579.  
  4580. 91
  4581. 411
  4582. stantial negative impact on policymaking in the Agency. As the Deputy Chief of the Counterintelligence Staff noted in 1958, due to the
  4583. different positions taken by TSS, the Office of Security, and the Office
  4584. of Medical Services on the use of chemical or biological agents, it was
  4585. possible that the individual who authorized the use of a chemical or
  4586. biological agent could be presented with "incomplete facts upon which
  4587. to make a decision relevant to its use." Even a committee set up by the
  4588. DDP in 1958 to attempt to rationalize Agency policy did not have access to records of testing and use. This was due, in part, to excessive
  4589. compartmentation, and jurisdictional conflict.
  4590. TESTING ON HUMAN SUBJECTS BY MILITARY INTELLIGENCE
  4591. MATERIAL TESTING PROGRAM EA 1729, PROJECT THIRD
  4592. CHANGE, AND PROJECT DERBY HAT
  4593.  
  4594. C. COVERT
  4595.  
  4596. Gnours:
  4597.  
  4598. EA 1729 is the designator used in the Army drug testing program
  4599. for Ivsergic acid diethylamide (LSD). Interest in LSD was originally
  4600. by open literaaroused at the Army's Chemical Warfare Laboratories
  4601. 99
  4602. intellipositive
  4603. The
  4604. compound.
  4605. the
  4606. of
  4607. effects
  4608. unusual
  4609. the
  4610. on
  4611. ture
  4612. compounds like
  4613. gence and counterintelligence potential envisioned for
  4614. 100
  4615. supported the
  4616. LSD, and suspected Soviet interest in such materials,
  4617. development of an American military capability and resulted in experiments conducted jointly by the U.S. Army Intelligence Board and
  4618. the Chemical Warfare Laboratories.
  4619. These experiments, designed to evaluate potential intelligence uses
  4620. of LSD, were known collectively as "Material Testing Program EA
  4621. 1729." Two projects of particular interest conducted as part of these
  4622. experiments, "THIRD CHANCE" and "DERBY HAT", involved
  4623. the administration of LSD to unwitting subjects in Europe and the
  4624. Far East.
  4625. In many respects, the Army's testing programs duplicated research
  4626. which had already been conducted by the CIA. They certainly involved
  4627. the risks inherent in the early phases of drug testing. In the Army's
  4628. tests, as with those of the CIA, individual rights were also subordinated to national security considerations; informed consent and followup examinations of subjects were neglected in efforts to maintain the
  4629. secrecy of the tests. Finally, the command and control problems which
  4630. were apparent in the CIA's programs are paralleled by a lack of clear
  4631. authorization and supervision in the Army's programs.
  4632. " USAINTC staff study, "Material Testing Program, EA 1729," 10/15/59, p. 4.
  4633. 'This same USAINTC study cited "A 1952 (several years prior to initial U.S.
  4634. interest in LSD-25) report that the Soviets purchased a large quantity of LSD-25
  4635. from the Sandoz Company in 1951, reputed to be sufficient for 50 million doses."
  4636. (Ibid., p. 16.)
  4637. Generally accepted Soviet methods and counterintelligence concerns were also
  4638. strong motivating factors in the initiation of this research:
  4639. "A primary justification for field experimentation in intelligence with EA 1729
  4640. is the counter-intelligence or defense implication. We know that the enemy philosophy condones any kind of coercion or violence for intelligence purposes. There
  4641. is proof that his intelligence service has used drugs in the past. There is strong
  4642. evidence of keen interest in EA 1729 by him. If for no other purpose than to know
  4643. what to expect from enemy intelligence use of the material and to, thus, he prepared to counter it, field experimentation is justified." (Ibid, p. 34)
  4644.  
  4645. 412
  4646. 1. Scope of Testing
  4647. Between 1955 and 1958 research was initiated by the Army Chemical
  4648. Corps to evaluate the potential for LSD as a chemical warfare incapacitating agent.. In the course of this research, LSD was administered
  4649. to more than 1,000 American volunteers who then participated in a
  4650. series of tests designed to ascertain the effects of the drug on their
  4651. ability to function as soldiers. With the exception of one set of tests
  4652. at Fort Bragg, these and subsequent laboratory experiments to evaluate chemical warfare potential were conducted at the Army Chemical
  4653. Warfare Laboratories, Edgewood, Maryland.
  4654. In 1958 a new series of laboratory tests were initiated at Edgewood.
  4655. These experiments were conducted as the initial phase of Material
  4656. Testing Program EA 1729 to evaluate the intelligence potential of
  4657. LSD, and included LSD tests on 95 volunteers.o' As part of these
  4658. tests, three structured experiments were conducted:
  4659. 1. LSD was administered surreptitiously at a simulated
  4660. social reception to volunteer subjects who were unaware of
  4661. the purpose or nature of the tests in which they were
  4662. participating;
  4663. 2. LSD was administered to volunteers who were subsequently polygraphed; and
  4664. 3. LSD was administered to volunteers who were then
  4665. confined to "isolation chambers".
  4666. These structured experiments were designed to evaluate the validity
  4667. of the traditional security training all subjects had undergone in the
  4668. face of unconventional, drug enhanced, interrogations.
  4669. At the conclusion of the laboratory test phase of Material Testing
  4670. Program EA 1729 in 1960, the Army Assistant Chief of Staff for
  4671. Intelligence (ACSI) authorized operational field testing of LSD. The
  4672. first field tests were conducted in Europe by an Army Special Purpose Team (SPT) during the period from May to August of 1961.
  4673. These tests were known as Project THIRD CHANCE and involved
  4674. eleven separate interrogations of ten subjects, None of the subjects
  4675. were volunteers and none were aware that they were to receive
  4676. LSD. All but one subject, a U.S. soldier implicated in the theft of
  4677. classified documents, were alleged to be foreign intelligence sources
  4678. or agents. While interrogations of these individuals were only moderately successful, at least one subject (the U.S. soldier) exhibited
  4679. symptoms of severe paranoia while under the influence of the drug.
  4680. The second series of field tests, Project DERBY HAT, were conducted by an Army SPT in the Far East during the period
  4681. from August to November of 1962. Seven subjects were interrogated
  4682. under DERBY HAT, all of whom were foreign nationals either suspected of dealing in narcotics or implicated in foreign intelligence
  4683. operations. The purpose of this second set of experiments was to collect additional data on the utility of LSD in field interrogations, and
  4684. to evaluate any different effects the drug might have on "Orientals."
  4685. Inspector General of the Army Report. "Use of Volunteers in Chemical Agent
  4686. Research," 3/10/76. p. 138.
  4687. Wt
  4688.  
  4689. 413
  4690.  
  4691. 2. Inadequate CoordinationAmong IntelligenceAgencies
  4692. On October 15, 1959, the U.S. Army Intelligence Center prepared
  4693. lengthy staff study on Material Testing Program EA 1729. The stated
  4694. purpose of the staff study was: "to determine the desirability of EA
  4695. 1729 on non-US subjects in selected actual operations under controlled
  4696. conditions. 1 0 2 It was on the basis of this study that operational field
  4697. tests were later conducted.
  4698. After noting that the Chemical Warfare Laboratories began experiments with LSD on humans in 1955 and had administered the drug
  4699. to over 1,000 volunteers, the "background" section of the study
  4700. concluded:
  4701. There has not been a single case of residual ill effect. Study
  4702. of the prolific scientific literature on LSD-25 and personal
  4703. communication between US Army Chemical Corps personnel and other researchers in this field have failed to disclose
  4704. an authenticated instance of irreversible change being produced in normal humans by the drug. 0 3
  4705. This conclusion was reached despite an awareness that there were
  4706. inherent medical dangers in such experimentation. In the body of this
  4707. same study it is noted that:
  4708. The view has been expressed that EA 1729 is a potentially
  4709. dangerous drug, whose pharmaceutical actions are not fully
  4710. understood and there has been cited the possibility of the
  4711. continuance of a chemically induced psychosis in chronic:
  4712. form, particularly if a latent schizophrenic were a subject,
  4713. with consequent claim or representation against the U.S.
  4714. Government.'0
  4715. An attempt was made to minimize potential medical hazards by careful selection of subjects prior to field tests. Rejecting evidence that
  4716. the drug might be hazardous, the study continued:
  4717. The claim of possible permanent damage caused by EA 1729
  4718. is an unproven hypothesis based on the characteristic effect
  4719. of the material. While the added stress of a real situation
  4720. may increase the probability of permanent adverse effect,
  4721. the resulting risk is deemed to be slight by the medical research personnel of the Chemical Warfare Laboratories.To
  4722. prevent even such a slight risk, the proposed plan for field
  4723. experimentation calls for overt, if possible, or contrivedthrough-ruse, if necessary, physical and mental examination
  4724. of any real situation subject prior to employment of the
  4725. subject.10 5
  4726. This conclusion was drawn six years after one deaith had occurred
  4727. which could be attributed, at least in part., to the effects of the
  4728. very drug the Army was proposing to field test.. The USAINTC staff,
  4729. however, was apparently unaware of the circumstances surrounding Dr. Olson's death. This lack of knowledge is indicative of the
  4730. TISAINTC staff study. "Material TEsting Program EA 1729." 10/15/.9, p. 4.
  4731. Ibid., p. 4.
  4732. 'Ibid.. p. 25.
  4733.  
  4734. "
  4735.  
  4736. "03
  4737.  
  4738. 10
  4739.  
  4740. Ibid.
  4741.  
  4742. 96-408 0 - 77 - 7
  4743.  
  4744. 414
  4745. general lack of interagency communication on drug related research.
  4746. As the October 1959 study noted, "there has been no coordination
  4747. with other intelligence agencies up to the present." 10G
  4748.  
  4749. On December 7, 1959, the Army Assistant Chief of Staff for Intelli-
  4750.  
  4751. gence (ACSI, apparently a General Willems) was briefed on the
  4752. proposed operational use of LSD by VUSAINTC Project Officer Jacobson, in preparation for Project. THIRD CHANCE. General Willems
  4753. expressed concern that the project had not been coordinated with the
  4754. FBI and the CIA. He is quoted as saying "that if this project is going
  4755. to be worth anything it [LSD] should be used on higher types of
  4756. non-U.S. subjects" in other words "staffers." He indicated this could
  4757. be accomplished if the CIA were brought in. The summary of the
  4758. briefing prepared by a MajorMIehorskY continues: "Of particular note
  4759. is that ACSI did not. direct coordination with CIA and the FBI but
  4760. only mentioned it for consideration by the planners." 107
  4761. After the briefing, four colonels, two lieutenant colonels and Major
  4762. Mehovsky iet to discuss interagency cooperation with CIA and FBI.
  4763. The group consensus was to postplone efforts toward coordination:
  4764. Lt. Col. Jacobson commented that before we coordinate with
  4765. CIA we should have more factual findings from field experimentation with counterintelligence cases that will strengthen
  4766. our position and proposal for cooperation. This approach
  4767. was agreed to by the conferees. 08
  4768. Had such coordination been achieved, the safety of these experiments
  4769. might have been viewed differently and the tests themselves might
  4770. have been seen as unnecessary.
  4771. 3. Subordination of Individual Rights to National Security Considerations
  4772. Just as many of these experiments may have been unnecessary, the
  4773. nature of the operational tests (polygraph-assisted interrogations of
  4774. drugged suspects) reflects a basic disregard for the fundamental
  4775. human rights of the subjects. The interrogation of an American
  4776. soldier as part of the THIRD CHANCE 1961 tests is an example of
  4777. this disregard.
  4778. The "trip report" for Project THIRD CHANCE, dated September 6, 1961, recounts the circumstances surrounding and the results of
  4779. the tests as follows:
  4780. [The subject] was a U.S. soldier who had confessed to theft
  4781. of classified documents. Conventional methods had failed to
  4782. ascertain whether espionage intent was involved. A significant
  4783. new admission by subject that lie told a fellow soldier of the
  4784. theft while lie still had the documents in his possession was
  4785. obtained during the EA 1729 interrogation along with other
  4786. variations of Subject's previous account. The interrogation
  4787. results were deemed by the local operational authority satisfactory evidence of Subject's claim of innocence in regard to
  4788. espionage intent.o 9
  4789.  
  4790. 'Ibid.,
  4791. 0
  4792. 1'
  4793. 10
  4794.  
  4795. p. 6.
  4796.  
  4797. Mehovsky Fact Sheet, 12/9/60, p. 1.
  4798. Ibid., p. 2.
  4799.  
  4800. SPT Trip Report, Operation THIRD CHANCE, 9/6/61, p. 5.
  4801.  
  4802. 415
  4803. The subject apparently reacted very strongly to the drug, and the
  4804. interrogation, while productive, was difficult. The trip report
  4805. concluded:
  4806. (1) This case demonstrated the ability to interrogate a
  4807. subject profitably throughout a highly sustained and almost
  4808. incapacitating reaction to EA 1729.
  4809. (2) The apparent value of bringing a subject into the EA
  4810. 1729 situation in a highly stressed state was indicated.
  4811. (3) The usefulness of employing as a duress factor the device of inviting the subject's attention to his EA 1729influenced state and threatening to extend this state indefinitely even to a permanent condition of insanity, or to
  4812. bring it to an end at the discretion of the interrogators was
  4813. shown to be effective.
  4814. (4) The need for preplanned precautions against extreme
  4815. paranoiac reaction to EA 1729 was indicated.
  4816. (5) It was brought to attention by this case that where subject has undergone extended intensive interrogation prior to
  4817. the EA 1729 episode and has persisted in a version repeatedly
  4818. during conventional interrogation, adherence to the same version while under EA 1729 influence, however extreme the reaction, may not necessarily be evidence of truth but merely the
  4819. ability to adhere to a well rehearsed story."x0
  4820. This strong reaction to the drug and the accompanying discomfort
  4821. this individual suffered were exploited by the use of traditional interrogation techniques. While there is no evidence that physical violence
  4822. or torture were employed in connection with this interrogation, physical and psychological techniques were used in the THIRD CHANCE
  4823. experiments to exploit the subjects' altered mental state, and to maxiinize the stress situation. Jacobson described these methods in his trip
  4824. report:
  4825. Stressing techniques employed included silent treatment before or after EA 1729 administration, sustained conventional
  4826. interrogation prior to EA 1729 interrogation, deprivation of
  4827. food, drink, sleep or bodily evacuation, sustained isolation
  4828. prior to EA 1729 administration, hot-cold switches in approach, duress "pitches", verbal degradation and bodily discomfort, or dramatized threats to subject's life or mental
  4829. health."'
  4830. Another gross violation of an individual's fundamental rights occurred in September 1962 as part of the Army's DERBY HAT tests
  4831. in the Far East. A suspected Asian espionage agent was given 6
  4832. micrograms of LSD per kilogram of bodyweight. The administration
  4833. of the drug was completed at 1035 that morning:
  4834. At 1120, sweating became evident, his pulse became thready.
  4835. He was placed in a supine position. He began groaning with
  4836. expiration and became semicomatose.112
  4837. .o Ibid., pp. 17-18.
  4838. "' Ibid., p. 13.
  4839.  
  4840. ""DERBY
  4841. p. D10-2.
  4842.  
  4843. HAT" Medical and Pharmacological Report: Case #1,
  4844.  
  4845. 9/20/62,
  4846.  
  4847. 416
  4848. For the next 28 minutes, the subject remained semicomatose.
  4849. At 1148, responses to painful stimuli were slightly improved.
  4850. At 1155, he was helped to a sitting position.
  4851. At 1200, he became shocky again and was returned to supine
  4852. position.
  4853. At 1212, he was more alert and able to sit up with help.
  4854. At 1220, Subject was assisted to the interrogation table.
  4855. At 1230, he began moaning he wanted to die and usually
  4856. ignored questions. Rarely he stated "he didn't know."
  4857. At 1250, his phasic alertness persisted. He frequently refocused his eyes with eyelid assistance. He frequently threw
  4858. his head back with eyes closed.
  4859. At 1330, he was slightly more alert. He was forced-walked for
  4860. 5 minutes. He physically would cooperate until he became
  4861. shocky again (sweating, thready pulse, pale).
  4862. For the next three hours the subject remained in about the same condition. Continued attempts at interrogation yielded no relevant
  4863. answers. Six hours after receiving the drug, the subject began giving
  4864. relevant answers to questions. Eight and one-half hours after the
  4865. initial dosage, the subject was polygraphed. The interrogation continued for seventeen and one-half hours after the drug was administered.
  4866. There was some psychological and medical screening of the individuals tested within the United States, in Europe, and in
  4867. Asia. The proposal for the field experimentation in fact called for
  4868. such examinations. The fact of prescreening did not eliminate the
  4869. risk of injury; .the availability of medical staff did, however, limit
  4870. injury and may well have prevented the death of one or more of the
  4871. subjects. As the medical corps member of the team which surreptitiously administered the LSD noted, "one subject. . . did collapse after
  4872. the interrogation and the presence of the medical officer was not only
  4873. of value to the subject but to the interrogation team who were thus
  4874. assured that an unnecessary untoward result would not occur." "1
  4875. In the October 15, 1959, USAINTC staff study, moral and legal
  4876. ramifications of covert administration of LSD in field conditions were
  4877. considered.
  4878. It was always a tenet of Army Intelligence that the basic
  4879. American principle of the dignity and welfare of the individual will not be violated. . . . A more meticulous regard
  4880. for the prohibition against violence or duress is taken in
  4881. practice when the suspect is a US citizen or ally as against
  4882. an actual or potential enemy, in peace as against war, and in
  4883. respect to the nature of the crime. . . . In intelligence, the
  4884. stakes involved and the interests of national security may
  4885. permit a more tolerant interpretation of moral-ethical values,
  4886. but not. legal
  4887. "n Ibid., p. D10-3.
  4888.  
  4889. limits, through necessity. . . . Any
  4890.  
  4891. ' SPT Trip Report, Operation THIRD CHANCE, 7/25/61, p. 1.
  4892.  
  4893. claim
  4894.  
  4895. 417
  4896. against the US Government for alleged injury due to EA
  4897. 1729 must be legally shown to have been due to the material.
  4898. Proper security and appropriate operational techniques
  4899. can protect the fact of employment of EA 1729.116
  4900. On the basis of this evaluation, the stiidy concluded that in view of
  4901. "the stakes involved and the interests of national security," the proposed phtn for field testing should be approved.
  4902. The surreptitious administration of drugs to unwitting subjects by
  4903. the Army raises serious constitutional and legal issues. The consideration given these issues by the Army was wholly insufficient. The character of the Army's volunteer testing program and the possibility that
  4904. drugs were simply substituted for other forms of violence or duress in
  4905. field interrogations raises serious doubts as to whether national security imperatives were properly interpreted. The "consent" forms
  4906. which each American volunteer signed prior to the administration of
  4907. LSD are a case in point. These forms contained no mention of the
  4908. medical and psychological risks inherent in such testing, nor do they
  4909. mention the nature of the psychotrophic drug to be administered:
  4910. The general nature of the experiments in which I have
  4911. voluteered. have been explained to me from the standpoint
  4912. of jossible hazards to my health. It is my understandingthat
  4913. the experime:dz are so designed, based on the results of
  4914. aniibals and previous human experimentation, that the anticipated results will justify the performance of the experiment. I understand further that experiments will be so conducted as to avoid all unnecessary physical and medical
  4915. suffering and injury, and that I ,uill be at liberty to request
  4916. that the experiments be terminated at any time if in my opinion I have reached the physical or mental state where continuation of the experiments becomes undesirable.
  4917. I recognize that in the pursuit of certain experiments
  4918. transitorydiscomfort may occur. I recognize, also, that under
  4919. these circumstances, I must rely upon the skill and wisdom
  4920. of the physician supervising the experiment to institute whatever medical or surgical measures are indicated. [Emphasis
  4921. added.] i1s
  4922.  
  4923. The exclusion of any specific discussion of the nature of LSD in
  4924. these forms raises serious doubts as to their validity. An "understanding . . . that the anticipated results will justify the performance of
  4925. the experiment" without full knowledge of the nature of the experiment is an incomplete "understanding." Similarly, the nature of the
  4926. experiment limited the ability of both the subject to request its request its termination and the experimenter to implement such a request.
  4927. Finally, the euphemistic characterization of "transitory discomfort"
  4928. and the agreement to "rely on the skill and wisdom of the physician"
  4929. combine to conceal inherent risks in the experimentation and may be
  4930. viewed as disolving the experimenter of personal responsibility for
  4931. damaging aftereffects. In summary, a "volunteer" program in which
  4932. subjects are not fully informed of potential hazards to their persons
  4933. is ''voluinteer" in name only.
  4934. u9USAINTC staff study, "Material Testing Program EA 1729," 10/15/59, p. 26.
  4935. " Sample volunteer consent form.
  4936.  
  4937. 418
  4938. This problem was compounded by the security statements signed
  4939. by each volunteer before he participated in the testing. As part of
  4940. this statement, potential subjects agreed that they would:
  4941. . not divulge or make available any information related
  4942. to U.S. Army Intelligence Center interest or participation in
  4943. the Department of the Army Medical Research Volunteer
  4944. Program to any individual, nation, organization, business,
  4945. association, or other group or entity, not officially authorized
  4946. to receive such information.
  4947. I understand that any action contrary to the provisions of
  4948. this statement will render me liable to punishment under the
  4949. provisions of the Uniform Code of Military Justice.119
  4950. Under these provisions, a volunteer experiencing aftereffects of the test
  4951. might have been unable to seek immediate medical assistance.
  4952. This disregard for the well-being of subjects drug testing is inexcusable. Further, the absence of any comprehensive long-term
  4953. medical assistance for the subjects of these experiments is not only
  4954. unscientific; it is also unprofessional.
  4955.  
  4956. 4. Lack of Normal Authorization and Supervision
  4957.  
  4958. It is apparent from documents supplied to the Committee that the
  4959. Army's testing programs often operated under informal and nonroutine authorization. Potentially dangerous operations such as these
  4960. testing programs are the very projects which ought to be subject to
  4961. the closest internal scrutiny at the highest levels of the military command structure. There are numerous examples of inadequate review,
  4962. partial consideration, and incomplete approval in the administration
  4963. of these programs.
  4964. When the first Army program to use LSD on American soldiers in
  4965. "field stations" -was authorized in May 1955, the Army violated its
  4966. own procedures in obtaining approval. Under Army Chief of Staff
  4967. Memorandum 385, such proposals were to be personally approved by
  4968. the Secretary of the Army. Although the plan was submitted to him
  4969. on April 26, 1956, the Secretary issued no written authorization for
  4970. the project, and there is no evidence that he either reviewed or approved the plan. Less than a month later, 20the Army Chief of Staff
  4971. issued a memorandum authorizing the tests.1
  4972. Subsequent testing of LSD under Material Testing Program EA
  4973. 1729 operated generally under this authorization. When the plans for
  4974. this testing were originally discussed in early 1958 by officials of the
  4975. Army Intelligence Center at Fort Holabird and representatives of
  4976. the Chemical Warfare Center at Edgewood Arsenal, aivinformal proposal was formulated. This proposal was submitted to the Medical
  4977. Research Directorate at Edgewood by the President of the Army Intelligence Board on June 3, 1958. There is no evidence that the plan
  4978. was approved at any level higher than the President of the Intelligence Board or the Commanding General of Edgewood. The approval
  4979. at Edgewood appears to have been issued by the Commander's Adjutant. The Medical Research Laboratories did not submit the plan to
  4980. the Surgeon General for approval (a standard procedure) because
  4981. Sample Volunteer Security Statement.
  4982. Inspector General of the Army Report, "Use of Volunteers in Chemical
  4983. Agent Research," 3/10/76, p. 109.
  4984.  
  4985. 99
  4986. 419
  4987. the new program was ostensibly covered by the authorizations granted
  4988. in May 1956.121
  4989. The two projects involving the operational use of LSD (THIRD
  4990. CHANCE and DERBY HAT) were apparently approved by the
  4991. Army Assistant Chief of Staff for Intelligence (General Willems) on
  4992. December 7, 1960.'22 This verbal approval came in the course of a
  4993. briefing on previous drug programs and on the planned field experimentation. There is no record of written approval being issued by the
  4994. ACSI to authorize these specific projects until January 1961, and
  4995. there is no record of any specific knowledge or approval by the Secretary of the Army.
  4996. On February 4, 1963, Major General C. F. Leonard, Army ACSI,
  4997. forwarded a copy of the THIRD CHANCE Trip Report to Army
  4998. Chief of Staff, General Earl Wheeler. 123 Wheeler had apparently
  4999. requested a copy on February 2. The report was routed through a General Hamlett. While this report included background on the origins
  5000. of the LSD tests, it appears that General 24Wheeler may only have read
  5001. The office 25memorandum
  5002. the conclusion and recommendations.
  5003. accompanying the Trip Report bears Wheeler's initials.1
  5004. 5. Terminationof Te8ting
  5005. On April 10, 1963, a briefing was held in the ACSI's office on the
  5006. results of Projects THIRD CHANCE and DERBY HAT. Both
  5007. SPT's concluded that more field testing was required before LSD
  5008. could be utilized as an integral aid to counterintelligence interrogations. During the presentation of the DERBY HAT results, General
  5009. Leonard (Deputy ACSI) directed that no further field testing be
  5010. undertaken. 1 2 6 After this meeting the ACSI sent a letter to the Commanding General of the Army Combat Developments Command
  5011. (CDC) requesting that he review THIRD CHANCE and DERBY
  5012. HAT and "make a net evaluation concerning the adoption of EA 1729
  5013. for future use as an effective and profitable aid in counterintelligence
  5014. interrogations." 127 On the same day the ACSI requested that the CDC
  5015. Commander revise regulation FM 30-17 to read in part:
  5016. ...
  5017.  
  5018. in no instance will drugs be used as an aid to interro-
  5019.  
  5020. gations in counterintelligence or security operations without
  5021. prior permission of the Department of the Army. Requests
  5022. to use drugs as an investigative aid will be forwarded through
  5023. intelligence channels to the OACSI, DA, for approval....
  5024. Medical research has established that information obtained
  5025. through the use of these drugs is unreliable and invalid....
  5026. It is considered that DA [Army] approval must be a prerequisite for use of such drugs because of the moral, legal,
  5027. problems inherent in their use for intelmedical and political
  5028. 28
  5029. purposes.
  5030. ligence
  5031. "' Ibid., pp. 135, 137, 138.
  5032.  
  5033. Mehovsky Fact Sheet, 12/9/60.
  5034. Memorandum from Leonard to Wheeler, 2/4/63.
  5035. u' SGS memorandum to Wheeler through Hamlett, 2/5/63.
  5036. '2s Ibid.
  5037. 7 M1aj. F. Barnett, memorandum for the record, 8/12/63.
  5038. " Yamaki memorandum for the record, 7/16/63.
  5039. 1"2
  5040.  
  5041. "7
  5042.  
  5043. Ibid.
  5044.  
  5045. 420
  5046. The subsequent adoption of this regulation marked the effective termination of field testing of LSD by the Army.
  5047. The official termination date of these testing programs is rather
  5048. unclear, but a later ACSI memo indicates that it may have occurred
  5049. in September of 1963. On the 19th of that month a meeting was held
  5050. between Dr. Van Sims (Edgewood Arsenal), Major Clovis (Chemical Research Laboratory), and ACSI representatives (General
  5051. Deholm and Colonel Schmidt). "As a result of this conference a determination was made to suspend the program and any further activity
  5052. pending a more profitable and suitable use." 129
  5053.  
  5054. D.
  5055.  
  5056. COOPERATION AND COMPETITION AMONG THE INTELLIGENCE COMMUNITY AGENCIES AND BETWEEN THESE AGENCIES AND OTHER
  5057. INDIVIDUALS AND INSTITUTIONS
  5058.  
  5059. 1. RelationshipsAmong Ageicies Within the Intelligence Community
  5060. Relationships among intelligence community agencies in this area
  5061. varied considerably over time, ranging from full cooperation to intense
  5062. and wasteful competition. The early period was- marked by a high
  5063. degree of cooperation among the agencies of the intelligence community. Although the military dominated research involving chemical
  5064. and biological agents, the information developed was shared with the
  5065. FBI and the CIA. But the spirit of cooperation did not continue. The
  5066. failure by the military to share information apparently breached the
  5067. spirit, if not the letter, of commands from above.
  5068. As noted above, the Army Assistant Chief of Staff for Intelligence
  5069. was briefed on the proposed operational testing of LSD under Project
  5070. THIRD CHANCE, and expressed concern that the project had not
  5071. been coordinated with FBI and CIA. Despite this request, no coordination was achieved between the Army and either of these agencies.
  5072. Had such cooperation been forthcoming, this project may have been
  5073. evaluated in a different light.
  5074. The competition between the agencies in this area reached bizarre
  5075. levels. A military officer told a CIA representative in confidence about
  5076. the military's field testing of LSD in Europe under Project THIRD
  5077. CHANCE, and the CIA promptly attempted to learn surreptitiously
  5078. the nature and extent of the program. At roughly the same time Mr.
  5079. Helms argued to the DDCI that the unwitting testing program should
  5080. be continued, as it contributed to the CIA's capability in the area and
  5081. thus allowed the CIA "to restrain others in the intelligence community
  5082. (such as the Department of Defense) from pursuing operations.' 130
  5083. The MKNAOMI prdgram was also marked by a failure to share
  5084. information. The Army Special Forces (the principal customer of the
  5085. Special Operations Division at Fort Dietrick) and the CIA rather
  5086. than attempting to coordinate their efforts promulgated different requirements which varied only slightly. This apparently resulted in
  5087. some duplication of effort. In order to insure the security of CIA
  5088. operations, the Agency would request materials from SO) for operational use without fully or accurately describing the operational
  5089. requirements. This resulted in limitations on SOD's ability to assist
  5090. the CIA.
  5091. Undated ASCI memoifandui, p. 2.
  5092. 2 Memorandum from the DDP to the DCI, 11/9/64, p. 2.
  5093.  
  5094. 101
  5095. 421
  5096. 0. Relationships Between the Intelligence Community Agencies and
  5097. ForeignLiaisonServices
  5098. The subjects of the CIA's operational testing of chemical and biological agents abroad were generally being held for interrogation by
  5099. foreign intelligence or security organizations. Although information
  5100. about the use of drugs was generally withheld from these organizations, cooperation with them necessarily jeopardized the security of
  5101. CIA interest in these materials. Cooperation also placed the American
  5102. Government in a position of complicity in actions which violated the
  5103. rights of the subjects, and which may have violated the laws of the
  5104. country in which the experiments took place.
  5105. Cooperation between the intelligence agencies and organizations in
  5106. foreign countries was not limited to relationships with the intelligence
  5107. or internal security organizations. Some MKULTRA research was
  5108. conducted abroad. While this is, in itself, not a questionable practice,
  5109. it is important that such research abroad not be undertaken to evade
  5110. American laws. That this was a possibility is suggested by an ARTICHOKE memorandum in which it is noted that working with the
  5111. scientists of a foreign country "might be very advantageous" since
  5112. that government "permitted certain activities which were not permitted by the United States government (i.e., experimeits on anthrax,
  5113. etc.). "131
  5114.  
  5115. 3. The Relationships Between the Intelligence Community Agencies
  5116. and Other Agencies of the U.S. Government
  5117. Certain U.S. government agencies actively assisted the efforts of
  5118. intelligence agencies in this area. One form of assistance was to provide "cover" for research contracts let by intelligence agencies, in
  5119. order to disguise intelligence community interest in chemical and
  5120. biological agents.
  5121. Other forms of assistance raise more serious questions. Although
  5122. the CIA's project involving the surreptitious administration of LSD
  5123. was conducted by Bureau of Narcotics personnel, there was no open
  5124. connection between the Bureau personnel and the Agency. The Bureau
  5125. was serving as a "cut-out" in order to make it difficult to trace Agency
  5126. participation. The cut-out arrangement, however, reduced the CIA's
  5127. ability to control the program. The Agency could not control the
  5128. process by which subjects were selected and cultivated, and could not
  5129. regulate follow-up after the testing. Moreover, as the CIA's Inspector
  5130. General noted: "the handling of test subjects in the last analysis rests
  5131. with the [Bureau of Narcotics] agent working alone. Suppression of
  5132. knowledge of critical results from the top CIA management is an
  5133. inherent risk in these operations." 132 The arrangement also made it
  5134. impossible for the Agency to be certain that the decision to end the
  5135. surreptitious administration of LSD would be honored by the Bureau
  5136. personnel.
  5137. The arrangement with the Bureau of Narcotics was described as
  5138. "informal." 113 The informality of the arrangement compounded the
  5139. problem is aggravated by the fact that the 40 Committee has had vir13
  5140.  
  5141. ARTICHOKE Memorandum, 6/13/52.
  5142.  
  5143. IG Report on M1KULTRA. 1963, p. 14.
  5144. 'xIbid.. This was taken by one Agency official to mean that there would be no
  5145. written contract and no formal mechanism for payment. (Elder, 12/18/75, p. 31.)
  5146.  
  5147. 422
  5148. apparent unwillingness on the part of the Bureau's leadership to ask
  5149. for details, and the CIA's hesitation in volunteering information.
  5150. These problems raise serious questions of command and control within
  5151. the Bureau.
  5152. the Intelligence Community Agencies and
  5153. Other Institutions and Individuals, Public and Private
  5154.  
  5155. 4. Relationships Between
  5156.  
  5157. The Inspector General's 1963- Survey of MKULTRA noted
  5158. that "the research and development" phase was conducted through
  5159. standing arrangements with "specialists in universities, pharmaceutical houses, hospitals, state and federal institutions, and private research organizations" in a manner which concealed "from the institution the interests of the CIA." Only a few "key individuals" in each
  5160. institution were "made witting of Agency sponsorship." The research
  5161. and development phase was succeeded by a phase involving "physicians, toxicologists, and other specialists in mental, narcotics, and
  5162. general hospitals and prisons, who are provided the products and
  5163. findings of the basic research projects and proceed with intensive testing on human subjects." 1
  5164. According to the Inspector General, the MKULTRA testing programs were "conducted under accepted scientific procedures . . .
  5165. where health permits, test subjects are voluntary participants in the
  5166. programs." 135 This was clearly not true in the project involving the
  5167. surreptitious administration of LSD, which was marked by a complete lack of screening, medical supervision, opportunity to observe, or
  5168. medical or psychological follow-up.
  5169. The intelligence agencies allowed individual researchers to design
  5170. their project. Experiments sponsored by these researchers (wiich inchided one where narcotics addicts were sent to Lexington, Kentucky,
  5171. who were rewarded with the drug of their addiction in return for
  5172. participation in experiments with LSD) call into question the decision by the agencies not to fix guidelines for the experiments.
  5173. The MKUTLTRA research and development program raises other
  5174. questions, as well. It is not clear whether individuals in prisons, mental,
  5175. narcotics and general hospitals can provide "informed consent" to
  5176. participation in experiments such as these. There is doubt as to whether
  5177. institutions should be unwitting of the ultimate sponsor of research
  5178. being done in their facilities. The nature of the arrangements also
  5179. made it impossible for the individuals who were not aware of the
  5180. sponsor of the research to exercise any choice about their participation based on the sponsoring organization.
  5181. Although greater precautions are now being taken in research conducted on behalf of the intelligence community agencies, the dilemma
  5182. of classification remains. These agencies obviously wished to conceal
  5183. their interest in certain forms of research in order to avoid stimulating
  5184. interest in the same areas by hostile governments. In some cases today
  5185. contractors or researchers wish to conceal their, connection with these
  5186. agencies. Yet the fact of classification prevents open discussion and
  5187. debate upon which scholarly work depends.
  5188. "m Ibid. p. 9.
  5189. "3'
  5190.  
  5191. Ibid. p. 10.
  5192.  
  5193. 103
  5194. APPENDIX B
  5195. DOCUMENTS
  5196.  
  5197. REFERRING TO DISCOVERY OF ADDITIONAL MKULTRA MATERIAL
  5198. 22 June 1977
  5199.  
  5200. MEMIOR.ANDUN FOR:
  5201.  
  5202. Deputy Director'of Central Intelligence
  5203.  
  5204. THROUGH
  5205.  
  5206. :
  5207.  
  5208. Deputy Director for Science and Technology
  5209.  
  5210. SUBJECT
  5211.  
  5212. :
  5213.  
  5214. Request for Guidance on Handling
  5215. Recently Located MKULTRA Material
  5216.  
  5217. 1. (U/AIUO) This memorandum is to advise you that
  5218. additional MKULTRA documents have been discovered and to
  5219. obtain your approval for follow-on actions required.
  5220. Paragraph 7 contains a recommended course of action.
  5221. As a result of John Harks FOXA re(U/AIUO)
  5222. 2.
  5223. quest (F-76-374),
  5224. all of the MIKULTRA material in OTS
  5225. possession was reviewed for possible release to him.
  5226. Following that review, the OTS material in the Retired
  5227. It was during that latter
  5228. Records Center was searched.
  5229. search that the subproject files were located among the.
  5230. retired records of the OTS Budget and Fiscal Section.
  5231. These files were not discovered earlier as the earlier
  5232. searches were limited to the examination of the-active
  5233. and retired records of those branches considered mo!t
  5234. likely to have generated or have had access tp NKULTRA
  5235. Chmistry,
  5236. Those branches included:
  5237. documents.
  5238. Biological, Behavioral Activities, and Contracts ManageBecause Dr. Gottlieb retrieved and destroyed all
  5239. ment.
  5240. the MKULTRA documents he was able to locate, it is not
  5241. surprising that the earlier search for MIKULTRA documents,
  5242. directed at areas where they were most likely to be found,
  5243. The purpose of establishing the MKULTRA
  5244. was unsuccessful.
  5245. mechanism was to limit knowledge of the sensitive work
  5246. being performed to those with an absolute nO'd to know.
  5247. If those precepts had been followed, the recently found
  5248. B&F files should have contained only financial and
  5249. (In retrospect, I realize that
  5250. administrative documents.
  5251. -I"7
  5252.  
  5253. Dqcfaxl d by
  5254. dale
  5255. -__
  5256.  
  5257. .
  5258.  
  5259. 2
  5260.  
  5261. 9
  5262.  
  5263. qL
  5264.  
  5265. 104
  5266. u
  5267.  
  5268. E
  5269.  
  5270. Request for Guidance on Handling Rece-.
  5271. Located MULTRA Material
  5272.  
  5273. T:
  5274.  
  5275. a serious error was made in not havina B&F files
  5276. .- other
  5277. seemingly innocuous files searched earlier)
  5278. .Amost of the individual subproject folders contai: rciect
  5279. proposals and mer.oranda for the record, which i:
  5280. -.-- a
  5281. degrees, give a reasonably comalete picture o
  5282. t
  5283. e-:
  5284. of research funded through
  5285. 4.UTRA.
  5286. For your a:.:
  5287. the original memorandum setting u- KULTRA, signel
  5288. Mr.-Dulies, is also anon; these docunents.
  5289. A cc:
  5290. me7oranu. is attached.
  5291. 3.
  5292. .U!ATU0) At this
  5293. writin;, it does in:.a
  5294. that there is anything in these newly located fiet
  5295. would indicate the
  5296. actiiies
  5297. WIKULTRA
  5298. were
  5299. More
  5300. -t"i
  5301. or iord cn:troversial than indicated ov the Senate
  5302. (Church)
  5303. eo...tee Report.
  5304. If an
  5305. i
  5306. the re-er
  5307. i
  5308. true, i.e., m-os or the
  5309. K-n1r
  5310. ? subarciects--------.---Thus, the overview of MSUJLTPA is essentially Un !-c.
  5311. With twz exceptions, the present find fills c:!nin
  5312. :
  5313. -
  5314.  
  5315. One of these .cxcpt os is
  5316. :
  5317. c..:- concerns an activit- tht
  5318. .:
  5319. -epore
  5320. c--Ilier.
  5321. That rro-iect deals w
  5322. t.
  5323. a knockd:::drug which was concoeitant wi~t,
  5324. anz- a
  5325. o, cancer research at a maior universr.v
  5326. It - -----.
  5327.  
  5328. .'A
  5329.  
  5330. rer
  5331.  
  5332. that an oaiective reading of that nroiect
  5333.  
  5334. =nznstrate
  5335.  
  5336. iwould
  5337.  
  5338. the search for knockout materials and anesthet-cs
  5339. compatibl' actiities.
  5340. However, the re~searct
  5341. :
  5342. stated
  5343. tht
  5344. "ch-emical agents.. .will be Suibjected,
  5345. screenin...
  5346. advanced cancer varients".
  5347. o
  5348. T
  5349.  
  5350. .
  5351.  
  5352. t
  5353.  
  5354. 5.
  5355.  
  5356. CT7'
  5357.  
  5358. (Cl
  5359.  
  5360. Subroiect Number 35 contains full
  5361. of $35,000 to the G
  5362.  
  5363. e.tr ibution
  5364.  
  5365. :-e
  5366. -
  5367.  
  5368. tils
  5369. -
  5370.  
  5371. r
  5372.  
  5373. Building(Fund.
  5374. The Agenv was :.
  5375. research proEra:s. manv of h
  5376.  
  5377. were
  5378.  
  5379. involvecin: drue
  5380. being cod:-.cted h
  5381. were i1dequatetC.
  5382. in
  5383.  
  5384. ----
  5385.  
  5386. order
  5387.  
  5388. to xaciiitzat
  5389.  
  5390. azilries
  5391.  
  5392. .
  5393. the
  5394.  
  5395. once-i:
  5396.  
  5397. research prozrr-;
  5398. it was decided to expedite the
  5399. -iln
  5400. progra ::
  5401. ce :-ribut:inz to it throu:a
  5402. 'ch"-'c
  5403. ::
  5404. was
  5405. also bcinc used to fund soece of the research prrjezts.
  5406.  
  5407. 105
  5408. Suj.ECT:
  5409.  
  5410. Requcst
  5411. Lcted
  5412.  
  5413. for Guidance on Handling Recently
  5414. .-IEULTRA Material
  5415.  
  5416. it was
  5417. The contribti-n could be controversial in tothat
  5418. be a private
  5419. made throu -h a mechanism making it appear
  5420. 0 &
  5421. ?rivate donations qualified for, andtZ
  5422. donation.
  5423. - received, an equal amount of Federal matching
  5424. tter from the Office of General Counsel dated
  5425. A
  5426. funds.
  5427. 21 Febuary 215 attesting to the legality of this funding
  5428. the Eil.
  5429.  
  5430. is in
  5431.  
  5432. The Legislative Counsel hap been C
  5433. (N 'AU9)
  5434. -76.
  5435. made aware c: the existence of these additional NKULTRA
  5436. documents which are still under review and saniti:ation.
  5437. to
  5438. The MARKS case is in litigationand we are committed
  5439. a-:rksof the existence of these files shortly,
  5440. advise Mr.
  5441. and to deliver the releasable material tc his attorneys
  5442. A Aetter from the Information and Privacy
  5443. by 31 July.
  5444. Staff to ::r. Ma k-:s' attorneys informing them of the.
  5445. existence -: this material is in the cocrcination process
  5446. and is scheiylei to be mailed on 24 June.
  5447. There are now two actions that should
  5448. (. T'.150)
  5449. be taken:
  5450.  
  5451. Mr.
  5452.  
  5453. a.
  5454. .
  5455. -existince.of
  5456.  
  5457. inforr;
  5458. It
  5459.  
  5460. is
  5461.  
  5462. sanitized material to
  5463. Release aorropriately
  5464. tt orneys as required by FOIA litigation.
  5465.  
  5466. ;
  5467. ::r-S'
  5468.  
  5469. the Senate Select Committee of the
  5470. the recently lochted records prior to
  5471. Mr. Marks' attorneys.
  5472.  
  5473. nform
  5474.  
  5475. reco=mended that you approve of both of these actions.
  5476.  
  5477. If additional details on the contents
  5478. (U/AIUC)
  5479. S.
  5480. of this material are desired; the 015 officers most familiar
  5481. witl it are prepared to brief you at your conkenience.
  5482.  
  5483. David S. Brandwcin
  5484. Director
  5485. .
  5486.  
  5487. Office of Technical
  5488.  
  5489. Service
  5490.  
  5491. The Didctor of Central Intelligence
  5492.  
  5493. The Honorable Daniel K. Inouye, Chairman
  5494. Select Committee on Intelligence
  5495. United States Senate
  5496. Washington, D.C. 20510
  5497. Dear Mr. Chairman:
  5498. During the course of 1975 when the Senate Committee, chaired
  5499. by Senator Church, was investigating intelligence activities, the
  5500. CIA was asked to produce documentation on a program of experimentation
  5501. with the effect of drugs. Under this project conducted from 1953
  5502. to 1964 and known as "MK-ULTRA," tests were conducted on American
  5503. citizens in some.cates without their knowledge. The CIA, after
  5504. searching for such documentation, reported that most of the documents
  5505. on this matter have been destroyed. I find it my duty to report
  5506. to you now that our continuing search for drug related, as well as
  5507. other documents, has uncovered certain papers which bear on this
  5508. matter. Let me hasten to add that I am persuaded that there was no
  5509. previous attempt to conceal this material in the original 1975
  5510. exploration-r The material recently discovered was in the retired
  5511. archives filed under financial accounts and only uncovered by using
  5512. extraordinary and extensive search efforts. In this connection,
  5513. incidentally, I have personally commended the employee whose diligence
  5514. produced this find.
  5515. Because the new material now on hand is primarily of a financial
  5516. nature, it does not present a complete picture of the field of drug
  5517. experimentation activity but it does provide more detail than was
  5518. previously available to us. For example, the following types of
  5519. activities were undertaken:
  5520. a. Possible additional cases of drugs being tested on
  5521. American citizens, without their knowledge.
  5522. b. Research was undertaken on surreptitious methods of
  5523. administering drugs.
  5524. c. Some of. the persons chosen for experimentation were
  5525. drug addicts or alcoholics.
  5526. d. Research into the development of a knockout or "K"
  5527. drug was performed in conjunction with being done to
  5528. develop pain killers for advanced cancer patients, and tests
  5529. on such patients were carried out.
  5530.  
  5531. 2
  5532. e. There is a possibility of an improper payment to a
  5533. private institution.
  5534. The drug related activities described in this newly located material
  5535. began almost 25 years ago. I assure you they were discontinued over
  5536. 10 years ago and do not take place today.
  5537. In keeping with the President's commitment to disclose any errors
  5538. of the Intelligence Community which are uncovered, I-would like to
  5539. volunteer to testify before your Committee on the full details of this
  5540. unfortunate series of events. I-am in the process of reading the
  5541. fairly voluminous material involved and do want to be certain that
  5542. I have a complete picture when I talk with the Committee. I will be
  5543. in touch with you next week to discuss when hearings might be
  5544. scheduled at the earliest opportunity.
  5545. I regret having to bring this issue to your attention, but I know
  5546. that it is essential to your oversight procedures that you be kept fully
  5547. informed in a timely manner.
  5548. Your
  5549.  
  5550. STANSFIELD TURNER
  5551.  
  5552. 109
  5553. APPENDIX C
  5554. DOCUMENTS REFERRING TO SUBPROJECTS
  5555. date
  5556.  
  5557. 1 May 1953
  5558.  
  5559. MEMORADI
  5560.  
  5561. FMRTE RECORD
  5562. Project MULTRA,
  5563.  
  5564. SUBJECT:
  5565.  
  5566. 1.
  5567.  
  5568. Subproject 2
  5569.  
  5570. Subproject 2 is being set up to provide a secure and
  5571. in rega
  5572. d
  5573. in r
  5574.  
  5575. efficient means to exploit
  5576. to the MKOLTRAprogrem.
  5577. 4::;
  5578.  
  5579. ---
  5580.  
  5581. W
  5582.  
  5583. 2.
  5584. g
  5585. a practicing
  5586. psychiatrist
  5587. in
  5588. and a faculty member of the
  5589. His ast
  5590. -- -4
  5591. ---t
  5592. positions have ineluded Chief Neuropsychiatrist a
  5593. Chief o the Psychiatric Section at
  5594. and OSS experience during World War II.
  5595. He has been of
  5596. value in the general MRULTRAfield as an overall advisor and
  5597. consultant, he has been of value in contacting individuals in the
  5598. area and in setting up projects there, and he has
  5599. done work himself which has contributed to the MKLTRtA field. His
  5600. professional activities and known connections with the
  5601. --
  5602.  
  5603. 3..
  5604.  
  5605. Subproject 2 would include:
  5606.  
  5607. a.
  5608. Miscellaneous research and testing services in the
  5609. general field of MKULTRA.
  5610. b. Services as a contact and cut-out for projects in the
  5611. MKULTRAfield, primarily those located in t
  5612. area.
  5613. c. Monitoring of selected projects in the MKTRA field,
  5614. when located in the central
  5615. area.
  5616. d. .Services as a general consultant and advisor in
  5617. MKULTRAfield.
  5618.  
  5619. the
  5620.  
  5621. 4. The total cost of this project is not to exceed $4,65o.co
  5622. for a period of one year.
  5623. 5.
  5624.  
  5625. -
  5626.  
  5627. -
  5628.  
  5629. ..
  5630.  
  5631. is cleared through TOP SECRET on a contact
  5632.  
  5633. basis.
  5634.  
  5635. Chemical Division/TSS
  5636. _date
  5637.  
  5638. 96-408
  5639.  
  5640. "
  5641.  
  5642. *
  5643.  
  5644. 0 - 77 - 8
  5645.  
  5646. APPROVzD:
  5647.  
  5648. .
  5649.  
  5650. 3
  5651.  
  5652. APPROVEDl:
  5653.  
  5654. ,"Chief, C eia.Dvs~
  5655.  
  5656. PROGAM APPROVED
  5657. AND MCcaThNmED:
  5658.  
  5659. APPROVED FM~
  5660. CN3LmATION OF FUNDS:
  5661.  
  5662. -
  5663.  
  5664. Date
  5665. Attacoent:
  5666.  
  5667. Origi-a2
  5668.  
  5669. Onip.:
  5670.  
  5671. Reeih. Director
  5672.  
  5673. 5
  5674.  
  5675. 111
  5676.  
  5677. PROPOSAL.
  5678.  
  5679. To study the possible synergistic action of drugs
  5680.  
  5681. Objective:
  5682.  
  5683. which ay be appropriate for use in abolishing consciousness.
  5684.  
  5685. Situation:
  5686.  
  5687. There is reason to believe that two or more drugs,
  5688.  
  5689. used in combination, are more effective than single drugs.
  5690.  
  5691. a-mbined
  5692.  
  5693. The
  5694.  
  5695. effect of some drugs, such as combinations of
  5696.  
  5697. barbiturates,. areeknown.
  5698. of synergism is not known.
  5699.  
  5700. With other combinations, -the degree
  5701. If considerable synergism is found
  5702.  
  5703. to exist, two possibilities must be considered:
  5704.  
  5705. (1) that a
  5706.  
  5707. particularly useful combination may be found, and (2) that a
  5708. particular combination may be hazardous because of its effect
  5709. on respiration or some other vital function.
  5710.  
  5711. To minimize
  5712.  
  5713. hazards,. animal experiments should precede human experiments.
  5714.  
  5715. Pronosal:
  5716.  
  5717. Allocation of $1000 for animal experiments, to be
  5718.  
  5719. drawn on as needed.
  5720. at
  5721.  
  5722. -
  5723.  
  5724. That experiments be conducted informally
  5725.  
  5726. without a specific grant, and with appropriate cover.
  5727.  
  5728. PROPOSAL
  5729. Objective:
  5730.  
  5731. To study methods for the administration of drugs
  5732.  
  5733. vithout the knowledge of the patient. Preparation of a manual.
  5734.  
  5735. Method:
  5736.  
  5737. A survey of methods which have been used by criminals
  5738.  
  5739. for surreptitious administration of drugs.
  5740.  
  5741. Analysis of the
  5742.  
  5743. psychodynamics of situations of this nature.
  5744.  
  5745. Proposa:
  5746.  
  5747. That $1000 be allocated for this purpose, funds to
  5748.  
  5749. be requested as needed.
  5750.  
  5751. &
  5752.  
  5753. 113
  5754. 3.2 Lugo"tJ,55
  5755.  
  5756. -J.UN -In'
  5757.  
  5758. date
  5759.  
  5760. FOR:
  5761.  
  5762. MID21mIID
  5763.  
  5764. S
  5765.  
  5766. RECEI
  5767.  
  5768. s Project IEOLIRA, Subroject M
  5769.  
  5770. SUBJC
  5771.  
  5772. 1. Subproject 2* is being initiated to
  5773. secure and aficient mean of exploi
  5774. with regard to the NKUIMs program.
  5775.  
  5776. a
  5777.  
  5778. -
  5779.  
  5780. practicing psychiatrist in
  5781. mber of
  5782. He has been of value in the
  5783. serving as an advisor and
  5784. s p
  5785. IS
  5786. cunultant, contacting individuals in the
  5787. area, and carrying, out his own research program.
  5788. ia
  5789.  
  5790. 2.
  5791.  
  5792. p and a faculty
  5793.  
  5794. 3. Subproject 2i would include the followings
  5795. W
  5796. (a) Miacallaneom research and testing eelicea
  5797. in the general field af.)EOLA.
  5798. (b)
  5799. in
  5800.  
  5801. Services as a contact and cutout for projects
  5802. located in
  5803. fiethose
  5804.  
  5805. (a)
  5806.  
  5807. Monitoring of selected projects in the
  5808.  
  5809. EDI2 field when located in the central
  5810.  
  5811. (d) Services as a general consultant and advisor
  5812. in the EUILTR field.
  5813. (a) He would act as medical advisor and oonsultant
  5814. etablishas gg
  5815. Uvil be reimbursed for his services
  5816. C.4 w
  5817. and expenses upon receipt of an invoice at irregular
  5818. intervals. When travel expenses are incurred through
  5819. use of a camon carrier, they will be dougmated and
  5820. reimbursed in the usual manner; that is, consistant with
  5821. standard Government allowances.
  5822.  
  5823. -
  5824.  
  5825. G~;e
  5826.  
  5827. ~'~-j
  5828. -
  5829.  
  5830. III.
  5831.  
  5832. U~I I.
  5833.  
  5834. -ar.'
  5835. -
  5836.  
  5837. -
  5838.  
  5839. C-
  5840.  
  5841. 114
  5842. 2
  5843.  
  5844. 3
  5845.  
  5846. Octoo
  5847.  
  5848. MEMORANDUM FOR TEB RECORD
  5849. Project MLTRA, Subproject 16
  5850.  
  5851. SUBJECT:
  5852.  
  5853. 1.- Subproject 16 is a continuation of Subproject 3, which
  5854. involved the establishment and maintenance of facilities for the
  5855. realistic testing ff certain research and development items of
  5856. interest to CD/TSS and APD/TSS. The facilities were set up under
  5857. Subproject 3, and Subproject 16 is intended to provide for the
  5858. continued maintenance of the facilities.
  5859. 2. Subproject 3 was originally intended to provide funds for the
  5860. maintenance of the facilities for one year; but it turns out that the
  5861. costs of alterations, equipment, and initial supplies were underestimated in Subproject 3; hence the necessity to establish Subproject
  5862. 16 at this time.
  5863.  
  5864. 3. Subproject 16 vill be cdnducted by
  5865. a
  5866. 21O
  5867. Certain support activities will be provided by CD/TSS
  5868. and APD/TSS.
  5869.  
  5870. 4.
  5871.  
  5872. The estimated cost for a period of one year is $7,740.00.
  5873.  
  5874. C cvChemical Division, TSS
  5875. PROGRAM APPROVED
  5876. AND RECOMNDED:
  5877.  
  5878. APPROVED FOR OBLIGATION
  5879. OF FUNDS:
  5880.  
  5881. RDe:dch-irec
  5882. Date:
  5883. Original Only,
  5884.  
  5885. Date:
  5886.  
  5887. /~
  5888.  
  5889. c-
  5890.  
  5891. t
  5892.  
  5893. or
  5894.  
  5895. s
  5896.  
  5897. 'p
  5898.  
  5899. 115
  5900.  
  5901. r
  5902.  
  5903. opezied-
  5904.  
  5905. - ac
  5906.  
  5907. urel
  5908.  
  5909. t
  5910.  
  5911. avesaio'hi
  5912.  
  5913. ular
  5914.  
  5915. chech
  5916.  
  5917. n
  5918.  
  5919. o
  5920.  
  5921. adened anc
  5922.  
  5923. fritlibut
  5924.  
  5925. - -:i
  5926.  
  5927. f:.SafetY
  5928.  
  5929. aak
  5930.  
  5931. -ng
  5932. orsideath
  5933.  
  5934. difficultIcaoe
  5935.  
  5936. tv-
  5937.  
  5938. thea
  5939.  
  5940. joint crount b
  5941. ce
  5942.  
  5943. aV
  5944.  
  5945. n
  5946.  
  5947. n thW
  5948.  
  5949. a .
  5950.  
  5951. ou could reco.r;
  5952.  
  5953. the
  5954.  
  5955. okysuies
  5956.  
  5957. acc
  5958. h
  5959. cc e to-reeeat from - san-ofr bay
  5960. a
  5961. fd
  5962. zthaMnacs
  5963. t ardto
  5964. plaath
  5965. neylen8cdea'th-aruaouerIcommunctedt.,
  5966. excoln
  5967. I ahig
  5968. ud inetn
  5969. o
  5970. eitggl gotda
  5971. mttase
  5972. evths a beiered
  5973. to provide
  5974. wXinth-fulds
  5975. Il an eal
  5976. dif
  5977. futie
  5978. co o
  5979. sn
  5980. oiia
  5981.  
  5982. also founditad
  5983. taso pletad fr
  5984. hiabrilt
  5985. tati
  5986. alad
  5987. iith
  5988. e
  5989. and beinrcedr:tatel
  5990. is opee
  5991. lno kinde ac
  5992. -c statio y .;
  5993. yoir fand plesedtCasherfo' r hd
  5994. c
  5995. edhs
  5996.  
  5997. ie
  5998.  
  5999. dea,
  6000.  
  6001. rteon hae Aemetan
  6002. thastoi reeiane
  6003. nosaniend
  6004. re -ou ilfedme-a
  6005. h
  6006. ceighJ
  6007. thyou
  6008. thbiasis inetl to-aai.ie
  6009. 4
  6010.  
  6011. de .oalAnd nov thathe
  6012. accotmo is -ang
  6013. yo70-U have funs depositedvria 'Casher'
  6014. chscizc
  6015.  
  6016. rcoeda
  6017. elaqane
  6018. -vrote a rerence Tcn
  6019. for nt(9i
  6020. ofc
  6021. t
  6022. ne
  6023. I s
  6024. ote
  6025. a
  6026. suggevs you
  6027. cas B1
  6028.  
  6029. a ugGest
  6030. o....sr 'say
  6031.  
  6032. 6i odered cok
  6033. a
  6034. '&reon enbave asrdedstationerybe6
  6035. I osied .his migt acliltate paymnt_ otoil,
  6036.  
  6037. t
  6038.  
  6039. ,b
  6040.  
  6041. A n.-',Wat vith, susicious- banks; landla'da,
  6042. tlt
  6043. -coanes., etc , you is 11U understandtIthst crenLg the Jsn-1;.tArde pfimsonlity in th fo' ofjr2
  6044. is taking altl
  6045. doing:
  6046.  
  6047. Se
  6048.  
  6049. you
  6050.  
  6051. nday, the 8th
  6052.  
  6053. mi
  6054. .---
  6055.  
  6056. 116
  6057. LMORANDIS1 FOR TMR
  6058. m
  6059.  
  6060. SULicT:
  6061.  
  6062. ECORD
  6063.  
  6064. Project ICULilRA, SubproJect 23
  6065.  
  6066. The scope of this project is inteleV/to encompass all
  6067. 1.
  6068. those activities now engaged in by the
  6069. in its own facilities under the direction of CD/TISS. CO
  6070. At the present time the varicus projects at this facility (
  6071. are being concluded and it is deemed desirable
  6072. and
  6073. -&VV
  6074. from the standpoint of security and efficiency to replace these projects with a single project more general in its appoa
  6075. icates the
  6076. The attached pioosal from Dr.
  6077. 2.
  6078. extent of the. investigations that his facilities will aollo him to
  6079. carry out on the .aterials developed in the three projects referred
  6080. to in paragraph 1, as vell as certain other materials of interest to
  6081. also serves as a general consultant to this
  6082. Dr. ?.
  6083. Cd/TS
  6084. rovides cover and cut-out facilities to the AGenoy.
  6085. divsion
  6086. 3.
  6087.  
  6088. The total cost of this project for a period of one year will
  6089.  
  6090. not exceed : 2,70O.0(.
  6091.  
  6092. -a been granted a Top Secret Clearance by
  6093. Dr.
  6094. !.
  6095. the Agency and is fully capable of protectinZ the security of the
  6096. Goerment'3 interest in such matters as this.
  6097.  
  6098. lca
  6099.  
  6100. iisin, TS3
  6101.  
  6102. APPROVED:
  6103.  
  6104. FPC='! U'DOED
  6105.  
  6106. A:1.:'
  6107.  
  6108. I-:
  6109.  
  6110. J
  6111.  
  6112. We, h:al
  6113.  
  6114. APPROVED ?M2 0L
  6115.  
  6116. O-FC-S
  6117.  
  6118. -3
  6119.  
  6120. Diin P .C
  6121.  
  6122. dS
  6123.  
  6124. 117
  6125. The present ± vdstigation is concerned with chemLcal agent. which
  6126. are effective in modifying the behavior and function of the central nervous ystem.
  6127. 1 - It is proposed to study a variety of knoun drugs in this pharmacological class
  6128. that are in present day use and to synthesize n chemical agents or to modify
  6129. existing ones as occasicn may demand.
  6130. 2 - The various chemical agents investigated or synthesized vill be tested on
  6131. Their pharmacological
  6132. animals to determine their acute and chronic toicity.
  6133. effects ill be studied by a variety of assay technics, such as blood pressure
  6134. deterdnations, bronchial dilatation recordings, endocrine effects, etc. Caplate aninsl facilities vill be maintained for this purpose and pathologic
  6135. study ill be carried out an the affected organs when the animals are sacrificed.
  6136. 3 - Preliminary clinical investigation vill be carried out an the more promising
  6137. checal agents, and appropriate laboratory procedures ill be performed, such
  6138. as blood counts, urinalysis, etc. to determine the effectiveness and the side
  6139. reactions of the drugs under investigation.
  6140. 4 - Adequate reports will be submitted of the findings at quarterly interval.
  6141. 5 - Proposed budget:
  6142. Personnel
  6143. Synthetic ox panic chemdst
  6144. Research medical associate
  6145. Pharmacological assistant
  6146. Cemical assistant
  6147. Histology technician
  6148. CLinical technician
  6149. Cheical consultant
  6150.  
  6151. $7,500.00
  6152. 6,500.00
  6153. ,500.00
  6154. 4,000.00
  6155. 2,400.00
  6156. 3,600.00
  6157. $30,700.00
  6158.  
  6159. Total salaries for peronal
  6160. Other Epemditures
  6161. Animals, animal maintenance & facilities
  6162. Cheical & laboratory supplies , expendable
  6163. Miscellaneous permanent equipment
  6164. Travel, medical meetings, etc.
  6165. Total other expenditures
  6166. TOTAL
  6167.  
  6168. 4,000.00
  6169. 4,000.00
  6170. 2,000.002.000.00
  6171. 12,000.00
  6172. $ 42,700.00
  6173.  
  6174. 8 October 195T
  6175.  
  6176. MEMORANDM FOR TE RECORD
  6177. SUBJECT:
  6178.  
  6179. Increase in the Scope of Subproject 23, Project MKULTRA
  6180.  
  6181. 1. Due to e/considerable increase in the scope of the work undert the direction of TSS/CD under Subproject 23,
  6182. a
  6183. taken by
  6184. Project MKTRA, the $42,700.00 sum originally obligated for this work
  6185. is insufficient to cover the year's costs. It is therefore proposed to
  6186. add $15,000.00 to that already obligated under this Subproject.
  6187. 2. The total coat of this Subproject for the period 28 January 1954
  6188. to 28 January 1955 will thus amount to $57,700.00.
  6189. 3. The increase in scope responsible for this proposal consists of
  6190. the development and partial financing of two new sources of biologically
  6191. active compounds of interest in the progrsm TSS/CD is carrying out.
  6192.  
  6193. Chemical Division, TSS
  6194. APPROVED FOR OIGATION
  6195. 0 FONDS:
  6196.  
  6197. Research Director
  6198.  
  6199. APPROVED:
  6200.  
  6201. Chief, Chamical Division, TSS
  6202.  
  6203. Date:
  6204. original Only.
  6205.  
  6206. 3-J
  6207.  
  6208. LA4
  6209.  
  6210. ~
  6211.  
  6212. -
  6213.  
  6214. 7~'
  6215.  
  6216. 119
  6217.  
  6218. 25 AuguSt 1955
  6219.  
  6220. MERANDUM FOR:
  6221. SUBJECT:
  6222.  
  6223. THE RECORD
  6224. Authorization for Payment of Certain Expenses Under
  6225. Project MKULRA, Subproject 23
  6226. -
  6227.  
  6228. 1. In order to carry on the work of the above Subproject, it
  6229. was necessary to test the effects of certain chemical substances
  6230. vhen administered to human beings. Certain of the anticipated
  6231. effects involved mental functions which precluded the use of mental
  6232. defectives for this particular study.
  6233. .
  6234.  
  6235. a
  6236.  
  6237. -*
  6238.  
  6239. 2. In view of these circumstances the project engineer. with
  6240. verbal approval from his chief, authorized the contractor to pay the
  6241. hospitals expenses of certain persons suffering from incurable cancer
  6242. for the privilege of studying the effects of these chemicals during
  6243. their terminal illnesses. The total funds expended in this fashion
  6244. amounted to $658.05 and full value was received.
  6245. 3. It is requested that the Chief, TSS indicate his knowledge
  6246. and approval of this particular expenditure for audit purposes.
  6247.  
  6248. TSS/Chemical Division
  6249. APPRCVED:
  6250.  
  6251. APPROVED:
  6252.  
  6253. .ie f,
  6254. Distribution:
  6255. Orig.
  6256.  
  6257. - TSS/CD
  6258.  
  6259. fS
  6260.  
  6261. 4hief, TSS'Chemical Division
  6262.  
  6263. 120
  6264. 21 December 1954
  6265.  
  6266. M4MRADUM FOR:
  6267.  
  6268. Director of Central Intelligence
  6269.  
  6270. SUBJECT
  6271.  
  6272. Project INULTRA,
  6273.  
  6274. Subproject 35
  6275.  
  6276. 1. While the Director's statutory authority to expend funds
  6277. for confidential purposes is not limited by law, we believe that
  6278. of the
  6279. a gift of Government funds as such would exceed the intent
  6280. made
  6281. Congress in granting that power. Hoever, where a gift is
  6282. for the express purpose of producing something of value to this
  6283. is a reasonAgency which cannot ctherwise be obtained and there
  6284. able expectation that the value may be received, the gift may in
  6285. effect be an expenditure for proper official purposes.
  6286. In Subproject 35, it is stated that.the donation in
  6287. 2.
  6288. question would achieve certain ends desired by TSS. There seems
  6289. to be no question that those ends would be advantageous, so the
  6290. main questions appear to be whether they could not be attained
  6291. by more direct, normal methods, and, if not, whether the return
  6292. is necessary and reasonable in relation to the donation.
  6293.  
  6294. 3. We are in no position to review the requirements of TSS
  6295. or to appraise the advantages that would result from this project.
  6296. We do not comment, therefore, on the value received if'the
  6297. project results in the benefits foreseen. We feel we should
  6298. corment on factors affecting the probability of achieving those
  6299. or no control. Once
  6300. In a legal sense, there is little
  6301. ends.
  6302. the funds are donated, the individual, his foundation, or the
  6303. us the
  6304. hospital could conceivably refuse to work for us or allow
  6305. use of the facilities.
  6306. 4. Practically, the control seems to be established as well
  6307. as circumstances permit. Certainly, as long as the individual is
  6308. alive and in his present position, we have every reason to expect
  6309. his complete cooperation in the future as in the past, unless
  6310. Even in the
  6311. through scoe act or fault of our own he is alienated.
  6312. event of his death or incapacity, there appears to be a reasonable
  6313. DCopy#d1d to:of1cop
  6314. by authority If: !87475
  6315. *~ao:.~ns1977
  6316. .a 7;
  6317.  
  6318. La134
  6319.  
  6320. A
  6321. -
  6322.  
  6323. Copy #1
  6324.  
  6325. ofil copy
  6326.  
  6327. 121
  6328. cherce c
  6329. ontir..
  6330. the ro,:ect.
  6331. if these probabilities appear
  6332. zurficient to chtain an adequate return for the expenditure, there
  6333. can be no legal objection to this aspect of the project.
  6334.  
  6335. 5. It should be noted that there are two Circumstances which
  6336. require consideration in a final determination. As stated in
  6337. Section V, our contribution, by appearing to be from a private
  6338. source, would increase the matching Government contribution by a
  6339. similar amount which would not be the case if it were known that
  6340. this was in fact a Government contributicn also. Secondly, it is
  6341. the stated policy of the hospital tb charge the Government end
  6342. commercial organizations 80 per cent overhead on research contracts,
  6343. whereas nonprofit foxundations pay only direct costs but no overhead.
  6344. Because of the ostensible source, our projects will not be charged
  6345. overhead. This could be construed -as mbrally wrongful to the
  6346. hospital,- .as normally we would pay the 80 Per cent overhead
  6347. charge for projects performed directly for us, but I believe
  6348. this can be offset, at least to the amount of our donation, and
  6349. perhaps by the further a:ount by which the other Government contributions are increased by our dcnation. In any case, if the
  6350. project is a proper one and must be performed in this manner,
  6351. security dictates these circu'stances and they, therefore, do
  6352. not present a legal obstacle as such.
  6353.  
  6354. 6. We raised the question whether funds for the hospital
  6355. construction could not be obtained from other normal charitable
  6356. sources. It appeared that there was a sting possibtility that
  6357. the individual concerned could raise adequate funds from private
  6358. resources, but it was the position of TSS that if this were the
  6359. case we would not obtain the-commitment from the individual and
  6360. the degree of control which this project is desiGned to achieve.
  6361.  
  6362. IAWHRENCE R. HOUSTON
  6363. General Counsel
  6364.  
  6365. -!:'ar~oed
  6366. to:
  6367. thsrit of : 187475
  6368. 7!- 2q77
  6369.  
  6370. Dorngraded to:
  6371. by authority -: 27-173
  6372. Iatc: JUIDo
  6373. 1177
  6374. 22 IITDE:Z; CL E713:7
  6375. Copy # 1 of 1 copy
  6376.  
  6377. 122
  6378.  
  6379. 8 April 1955
  6380.  
  6381. U!VJMMIIIM FOR~:
  6382.  
  6383. Chief, DD)/P/T-zc3
  6384.  
  6385. SUBJECTAiendmmenTto Sub~r-T ject 35 of Frcject ZZT 2TRA
  6386.  
  6387. We have noted ycur menorandiun of 6 April 1955 to the
  6388. Directorreneti-
  6389.  
  6390. an increase of YIT50,OCQ for the TZS
  6391.  
  6392. MID budget for this Froject.
  6393.  
  6394. l'Thie, request does not affect
  6395.  
  6396. in any .- ray the comments in my mrecrzndauo of 21 Dacember 1954.
  6397.  
  6398. Docnaradad to:
  6399. b,.authority of: 187475
  6400. c'z:J1=0 1977
  6401. :I2 I!TDET; CL B3Y187475
  6402.  
  6403. Coy#1ofIcp
  6404.  
  6405. N
  6406.  
  6407. 123
  6408.  
  6409. 5 May 1955
  6410.  
  6411. A "-ticn of the 1Rosech and D9-7elo-,--nt P cgrmn of
  6412. TSS/ChanicaJ. Di-Aion~r 13 dsvoted tothe diacovery of the
  6413. follrwuing =atearl"s and mnethods:
  6414. 1. Sub ctances which will promote illogicei. thinking
  6415. and inpuJluivenes3 to the point wliare the rcxipient would be
  6416. discredited in public.
  6417. Substances which increase the efficiency of Tetation and perception.
  6418.  
  6419. -2.
  6420.  
  6421. 3. natarials vihich will prevGent or cournteract tho
  6422. intcccting offact ,of alcohol.
  6423.  
  6424. 4. Miterials which will renote the intoxicatiz-Z offee of alcohol.
  6425. 5. Yaterials ich will proiuce the stgns and ytn
  6426. of recognized diaoas in a reversible uW so that thay x=.V
  6427. be used for imallngering, ae.
  6428. 6. Mter-4als which will render the indaotion of hypnosis
  6429. eaasr or otherwise nnYce its u.,efii1.ness.
  6430. 7. Sabstancoe which will enhance tho ability of i-&-i.iduals to withztahd priva.tionx, torturea and coercion during
  6431. b--ain-qiaahingu.
  6432. intarrc~ati=n and socal
  6433. 8. Materials and phyzical methods which will produce
  6434. amnesia for event3 precedirg and daring their use.
  6435. 9.
  6436.  
  6437. Physical mnethods of proeucing cho&': and ecsAision
  6438. iod capable of sur.Ptit-JoUa
  6439.  
  6440. over c =-ended periodze of ti--s
  6441. use,
  6442.  
  6443. 10. Substances which prod-ace physical dinablement such
  6444. as paralysis of the legs,. acute anemia, ae.
  6445.  
  6446. e:t
  6447.  
  6448. Ul* SUbstances 'Uhich will problace
  6449. cubsequent let-down.
  6450.  
  6451. ureu' euphoria with no
  6452.  
  6453. 12. Substan'ces which alter proOnallity structure in such
  6454. a way that the toander~cy of the recipiCst to become depecndent
  6455. uecm another person is enhanced..
  6456. 13- A matori2J. w"Mch w-4ll cau.3e rantaj~ confusion of such
  6457. typsz that the i c~iv-dual iz.rits
  6458. influc viii fin i
  6459. diffiC lt to maintain. a fanbrication
  6460. cne
  6461. ueationing.
  6462. 14. Substances which will 1--4ar tho aenbiticu and
  6463. general 1w0-kng efficonoy of men whan adminintered in
  6464. undetactable awmuto.
  6465. 15. Sutances which loreote weaess or distortion
  6466. ofth CYezh Or herig 'culties, pro,)era-bly without
  6467. rper=a-Snt cf'iCct3.
  6468. 16. A kmcciccut P4ill which can surreptitiously be
  6469. administered in cL-'C ' food, ciga~rettes, as an aercsol,
  6470. etc., which will be s,-3e to use, provide a nx-ini of
  6471. =c
  6472. n,d be suitablz fcr u-se by agent types on an
  6473. ad boo basis.
  6474. 17. A Matzrial which can be Surroptiticusly
  6475. tered by the alove routes end which
  6476. in very sa-ll adminisa---,=to
  6477. will zake it jz-,,ooible for a man to perform any phy7sical
  6478. activity w~hatever.
  6479. 1he davelopmsnt of naterils of this ty6 foi- z h
  6480. st?.ndcrd prnctica of such ethical dn4 hou:=s as
  6481. 14MIt is a rc latit-oI7 roatine procedure to devaIDD a e-rug
  6482. to the Point Of hun-= t--ztin-g. O.cnrltha
  6483. d.Ug hcunes deopend
  6484. up~on the czrvicos of private phycicians for the final ci~a
  6485. tasti.-g. 'L-3 physicians arc willing- to assuno the re-oriiity.
  6486. Of such tests in.crdcr to edvem-ce the science of medicine. it
  6487. is dific*lt and sometirnss irmpossible fOr TW3/CD to offor auch
  6488. an inidu-c=,:nt with rospect to Its products. In practice, it hMs
  6489. bzen possible to usa outzide occeed contracto~rs for the precBmino-y
  6490. rhco o this uscrk
  6491. 11owavor, that part whX.fh involves human
  6492. tooting at effotive dose levels presents esc'urity problems which
  6493. cannot bac handlsd by the ordinr-sy ccntractor.
  6494.  
  6495. 125
  6496.  
  6497. oj2S~ffara a unique opporThe propozed facility
  6498. barUXO -sdi~ cZ '-ach clinical1 tosting, in r&d±for thaeaar
  6499. to the marzq z:±mntagos cutlined in tho project proposal.
  6500. scurity p-.cb3.cna3 manticned above Pra slimimatad b7 the fact
  6501. ths rozenaibi-~t- for the tostin.7 will rest cczmoiotoly
  6502. I
  6503. I--Ia
  6504. the rpbFoicim and the hospital.
  6505. to
  6506. por~zx.,
  6507. I ill T.1c :M/
  6508. cliozelr to -mseow gua-that a'l- tosts aore
  6509. sc; 2zvi33 the -!ork!:
  6510. conduct-ad according to the recogni4zed practices cind c:.dy azieqiate eafoguzrd3.
  6511. tit'y
  6512. tion
  6513. The
  6514. that
  6515. Wpon
  6516.  
  6517. .No.
  6518.  
  6519. 96-408 0 - 77 - 9
  6520.  
  6521. 126
  6522. 10 May 1955
  6523. SUBPROJECT 35 OF PROJECT MKULTRA
  6524.  
  6525. 1. Subproject 35 as approved by the DGI on 15 January 1955 contemplated a
  6526. to financial contribution of $125, 000 to the :
  6527. 000
  6528. participate in the construction of a new.repearch wing to cost $3, 0
  6529. exclusive of furnishings and equipment. Agency funds will be transmitted
  6530. acut-out which through the
  6531. e s~p=ace inthe new researca wing being made
  6532. will result in oe-sixth oc
  6533. available for Agency-sponsored research involving covert biological and
  6534. chemical techniques of warfare.
  6535.  
  6536. -
  6537.  
  6538. am with CIA
  6539. 2. At that time (15 January 1955)
  6540. encouragement indicated a willingness to contribute $500, 000 to the construction fund. The building fund was to have been raised as follows:
  6541. $1,000,000 - Contributed by
  6542. of which
  6543. 250, 000 - Donation from
  6544. $125, 000 to be supplied by CIA
  6545. 1,250,000 - Matching funds under Public Law 2Z1 equal
  6546. to the amount of the two above contributions
  6547. :-B
  6548. 500,000-
  6549.  
  6550. 1
  6551. -
  6552.  
  6553. $3, 000, 000 - TOTAL
  6554. will not be
  6555. Since it now appears that the expected contribution by
  6556. 3.
  6557. forthcoming, permission is requested to increase the Agency's contribution
  6558. by $250, 000 which will result in a financial situation as follows:
  6559. $1, 000, 000 - Contributed by
  6560. including .
  6561. 500,000 - Donation from
  6562. $375,000 supplied by CIA
  6563. 1,500,000 - Matching funds under Public Law 221 equal
  6564. to the amount of the two above contributions
  6565.  
  6566. $3, 000, 000 - TOTAL
  6567.  
  6568. 1
  6569.  
  6570. -
  6571.  
  6572. 4. The Agency's contribution would thus total $375,000.
  6573. This investment,
  6574. together with the equal sum resulting from matched funds, is fully justified
  6575. C.
  6576. in the opinion of TSS for reasons which will be explained by
  6577. Chief, TSS, and Dr. Sidney Gottlieb, Chief, TSS/Chemical Division.
  6578. The scope of subproject 35 has not changed since the Director originally
  6579. approved a request by TSS for permission to spend $125, 000 of available
  6580.  
  6581. B
  6582.  
  6583. 1
  6584.  
  6585. rocedures established
  6586. rads for tihs purpose through the controls and
  6587. %!.':LTRA. At the time subproject 35 was set up within the scope of
  6588. cover arrangements
  6589. tC- :.,S M, D pro:;ram, security considerations and
  6590. werc c.ircesily.reviewed, and the Office of General Counsel assisted in legal
  6591. With the exception of funding arrangements, no changes in
  6592. :irogram have since been made.
  6593. f-
  6594.  
  6595. steteri:mations.
  6596.  
  6597. previously approved sum o $125, 000 are available
  6598. .Funds to cover
  6599. budget for FY 55 and have b en set aside. The TSS
  6600. wt -in the TSS
  6601. r the supplemental sum of
  6602. ,ud ct, however, lacks funds with which to co
  6603. udget be increased by this
  6604. $250, 000, and it is requested that the TSS
  6605. amount. Supplementary funds available for subproject 35 can definitely be
  6606. obligated by the end of FY 55.
  6607.  
  6608. L :Llhouty of: 167-175
  6609. .: !:o1977
  6610. i.
  6611.  
  6612. 12 ..
  6613.  
  6614. I:-:
  6615.  
  6616. CL By 1874175
  6617.  
  6618. -2-
  6619.  
  6620. 128
  6621.  
  6622. AMENDMENT TO SUBPROJECT 35,
  6623.  
  6624. PROJECT MKULTRA
  6625.  
  6626. For the Purpose of Establishing a Cover Organization for Highly Sensitive
  6627. Warfare
  6628. Projects in the Field of Biological, Chemical and Radiological
  6629.  
  6630. I.
  6631.  
  6632. Background of Subproject 35.
  6633.  
  6634. In January 1955 approval was given by the DCI to Subproject 35 of Project
  6635. The documents which lead to this approval (including comments
  6636. MAKULTRA.
  6637. of the OGC) are attached herewith as Tabs 2, A and 3.
  6638. which
  6639. Project MKULTRA is the framework of procedures and controls under
  6640. research projects in certain highly sensitive fields are carried out by TSS.
  6641. A description of the background of Project MKULTRA may be found on
  6642. page 1 of Tab A.
  6643. Subproject 35 establishes cover 'under which the Chemical Division of
  6644. DD/P/TSS would conduct certain sensitive projects in the fields of biological
  6645. and chemical warfare and consists of a proposed arrangement whereby the
  6646. Agency covertly contributes funds to assist th
  6647. in the construction of a new research wing. Contribution of these
  6648. - B
  6649. funds is to be made through the
  6650. would remain 4 s cut-out so that the
  6651. unwitting of Agency participation in the building program. Projects would
  6652. of the
  6653. later be carried out by the Chemical Division using the facilities
  6654. new research wing, and Agency employees would be able to participate
  6655. aware
  6656. in the work without the University or the Hospital authorities being
  6657. of Agency interest. Subproject 35 contemplated the contribution of Agency
  6658. funds to assist in the construction of facilities. Future research work
  6659. as cut-out and would be would be carried out through the.
  6660. separately funded under existing procedures and controls.
  6661. and the background of h are described on page 2 of Tab A. On the
  6662. 1
  6663. same page there will be found a further description of the
  6664.  
  6665. II.
  6666.  
  6667. Building Fund.
  6668.  
  6669. The University will require $3, 000, 000 for the six-story addition to the
  6670. are
  6671. hospital exclusive of the cost of land, heating and power supply which
  6672. being provided by the University. Under Public Law 221, Subappropriation
  6673.  
  6674. 177
  6675. 01.'riys:
  6676.  
  6677. B
  6678.  
  6679. 663, dated 26 August 1954, funds are available to match funds raised for
  6680. this purpose by the University.
  6681. When Subproject 35 was first prepared, it was hoped and expected that the
  6682. funds required would be provided as follows: The University has allocated
  6683. $1, 000, 000 to this project and will assume upkeep and staffing obligations.
  6684. agreed that if the Agency would provide S
  6685. - B
  6686. with a grant of $125, 000, the Fund would match this amount and
  6687. make a total donation of $250, 000 to the University Building Fund. At that
  6688. time, discussions with Ago 0indicated that
  6689. would contribute $500, 000
  6690. to the building project on the basis that radi ogical research would be
  6691. conducted in the new wing and that the constr
  6692. ion of the new facilities
  6693. was of interest to that Agency. In summary, th financial situation was
  6694. to have been as follows:
  6695. $1, 000, 000 250, 000 - Donation from
  6696. (of which $125, 000 was supplied by CIA)
  6697. 1, 250, 000 - Matched Funds under Public Law 221
  6698. 500,000 -
  6699.  
  6700. $3, 000, 000 - TOTAL
  6701.  
  6702. 3
  6703.  
  6704. Q
  6705.  
  6706. It was recogpized that the Federal contribution
  6707. 1,250, 000 under Public
  6708. Law 221 would be seemingly inflated by reas
  6709. of the inclusion of the CIA
  6710. contribution in that of
  6711. It was felt that the value to
  6712. the Agency was such that this inflation of the Federal contribution was more
  6713. than justified by the importance of the over-all project and that furthermore,
  6714. the inclusion of the CIA contribution in that of _____
  6715. was the
  6716. best means of maintaining security.
  6717.  
  6718. III
  6719.  
  6720. /3
  6721.  
  6722. The original informal commitment ont
  6723. pa
  6724. f
  6725. w
  6726. was first obtained
  6727. through verbal discussions with
  6728. wl'ch were fcllowed
  6729. up by an exchange of corresponden e between the DCI and 40
  6730. 1
  6731. Unfortunately at that time
  6732. was fully occupied with the controversy concerning the
  6733. and continued contact with
  6734. subordinates resulted in a ecision that
  6735. could not or
  6736. wvould not contribute to the Building und, but would be w. ing to support
  6737. an annual research program amount
  6738. to $50, 000 to $75, 0
  6739. It is not
  6740.  
  6741. Copy # I of I copy
  6742.  
  6743. C.
  6744.  
  6745. C
  6746.  
  6747. 130
  6748.  
  6749. o
  6750. or known whether this change in policy was suggested tp
  6751. whether it originated with him. Be that as it may, when the change in
  6752. policy became apparent, it was evident that additional funds would be required to complete the hospital construction.
  6753. IV.
  6754.  
  6755. C_
  6756.  
  6757. Suggcsted Funding.
  6758.  
  6759. It is now suggested that the $3, 000, 000 required for the hospital wing be
  6760. provided as follows:
  6761. $1,000,000
  6762.  
  6763. -
  6764.  
  6765. 500, 000 -Dnonfro
  6766. l'including
  6767. $375, 000 supplied by CIA)
  6768. 1,500,000 - Matched Funds from Public Law 221
  6769. $3, 000, 000 - TOTAL
  6770.  
  6771. -
  6772.  
  6773. ould thus consist of the original
  6774. The donation from
  6775. $125, 000 to be. supplied by CIA plus the sum of $125, 000 to be provided by
  6776. the Fund and a supplemental CIA contribution of $250, 000. Originally
  6777. Subproject 35 requested permission to make a contribution of $125, 000 to
  6778. the building fund and approval was given. This approval is enclosed
  6779. herewith as Tab 2. The purpose of this amendment to Subproject 35 is to
  6780. request permission to contribute an additional $250, 000 to the building
  6781. 3
  6782. it should be noted that construction fund through
  6783. the total Government contribution to the hospital fund still remains
  6784. unchanged at $1, 875, 000. The increase in the size of the contribution
  6785. by the Fund is not out of keeping with other operations of 6
  6786. and will - 13
  6787. not arouse undue comment because of its magnitude. The originally approved
  6788. contribution has not as yet been transmitted to
  6789. and neither the
  6790. -4
  6791. until
  6792. -original contribution nor the supplement would be paid to 'd
  6793. funds adequate to complete the project are made available. This condition
  6794. was specified by the DCI in approving the original contribution.
  6795. V.
  6796.  
  6797. Source of CIA Funds.
  6798.  
  6799. Funds to cover the initially approved sum of $125, 000 are available and have
  6800. been segregated for this purpose within the TSS FY 1955 Budget for Research
  6801. and Development. Insufficient funds remain in the TSS budget to cover the
  6802. supplementary sum of $230, 000, and it is therefore requested that the TSS
  6803. . budget be increased by this amount and that the increase be made available
  6804. to Subproject 35 of Project MKULTRA.
  6805.  
  6806. Copy # 1 of 1 copy
  6807.  
  6808. -3-
  6809.  
  6810. 131.
  6811.  
  6812. VI.
  6813.  
  6814. Comments by the Office of General Counsel.
  6815.  
  6816. Tab 3 is a memorandum from the General Counsel to the DCI dated 21
  6817. December 1954, commenting on Subproject 35, and stating in part that
  6818. there are no fundamental legal objections if the probable benefits are conThe amendment to the Subproject
  6819. sidered a fair return for this expenditure.
  6820. contemplates only an increase in funds and in no way changes any other
  6821. aspect of the project. The project has been referred back to the OGC even
  6822. though no change in its structure is contemplated, and Tab 4 contains his
  6823. comments.
  6824. VII.
  6825.  
  6826. Justification.
  6827.  
  6828. The advantages and benefits accruing to the Agency outlined in Tab A are
  6829. felt by TSS to provide adequata and complete justification for the expenditure
  6830. of the additional sum herein requested which brings the total CIA contribution to $375, 000. The most important of these advantages and benefits
  6831. may be summarized as follows: (Fuller explanations may be found in Tab A).
  6832. a. One-sixth of the total space in the new hospital wing will be
  6833. available to the Chemical Division of TSS, thereby providing laboratory and office space, technical assistants; equipment and experimental animals.
  6834. b. Agency sponsorship of sensitive research projects will be
  6835. completely deniable.
  6836. c. Full professional cover will be.provided for up to three biochemical employees of the Chemical Division.
  6837. d. Human patients and volunteers for experimental use will be
  6838. available under controlled clinical conditions within the full
  6839. supervision of
  6840. .
  6841. Subproject 35.was originally conceived in October and November of 1954,
  6842. and the dnsuing six months have indicated that inc reasing emphasis and
  6843. importance are being placed on the Chemical Division's work in this field.
  6844. The facilities of the hospital and the ability to conduct controlled experiments under safe clinical conditions using materials with which any Agency
  6845. connection must be completely deniable will augment and complement other
  6846. programs recently taken over by TSS, such as
  6847. 4
  6848. 18747115
  6849.  
  6850. rc,.-
  6851.  
  6852. I'll
  6853.  
  6854. of'7
  6855.  
  6856. 7
  6857.  
  6858. 1775copy
  6859.  
  6860. 77
  6861.  
  6862. 4 1
  6863.  
  6864. of I COPY
  6865.  
  6866. 132
  6867.  
  6868. It was originally thought that at least 18 months wouLd elapse after the
  6869. building funds had been raised before the facilities would be finished and
  6870. could be occupied by TSS, This lengthy delay has now been overcome.
  6871. IMVJWhas raised the $500, 000 which his Fund will ostensibly contribute,
  6872. he will then be allowed to use existing space in the present hospital in
  6873. order that he may build up the organization which will later occupy the new
  6874. of this
  6875. wing. This means that TSS will be able to begin to take advantage
  6876. cover situation within a matter of months instead of waiting for a year and
  6877. a half.
  6878. VIII.
  6879.  
  6880. Security.
  6881.  
  6882. Security matters. and details are being co-ordinated with the TSS Liaison
  6883. and Security Officer. Security of transmittal of the funds and cover arrangements are described in Tab A and remain unchanged.
  6884. IX.
  6885.  
  6886. 4 E
  6887.  
  6888. Agreement with
  6889.  
  6890. as
  6891.  
  6892. is described in Tab A, and the extent
  6893. The agreement with
  6894. of his co-operation and the control over his actions remain unchanged.
  6895. X.
  6896.  
  6897. Resultant Financial Saving.
  6898.  
  6899. The total contribution of $375, 000 by CIA will, result in an additional
  6900. It is felt that
  6901. $375, 000 in matching funds provided under Public Law 221.
  6902. the expenditure of these total funds is justified by the importance of the
  6903. programs which will be pursued at the new facility. Even though the CIA
  6904. contribution is increased under this amended project, the total of Federal
  6905. The use of this facility will allow work to
  6906. funds remains unchanged.
  6907. proceed under conditions of cover and security which would be impossible
  6908. to obtain elsewhere without an expenditure of equivalent or greater funds.
  6909. In addition, by funding individual projects for this facility through the
  6910. charge will be incurred for overhead expense. If
  6911. .no
  6912. openly sponsored by the iare
  6913. I
  6914. 1'ml'111
  6915. research projects
  6916. U1. S. Government, it is customary to pay an overhead rate equivalent
  6917. - 5
  6918. to 80% of salaries. However; if a non-profit fund, such as
  6919. sponsors research, the funds granted for the work are customarily
  6920. overhead.
  6921. used only to pay for salaries, equipment and supplies, but not
  6922. The Agency thus buys considerably more research.through
  6923. han would be the case if no cut-out were used.
  6924. 40
  6925.  
  6926. 13-
  6927.  
  6928. 9
  6929.  
  6930. Copy # 1 of I copy
  6931.  
  6932. 133
  6933.  
  6934. Subon*~tA
  6935. Ll-rezlh l-te fle
  6936. project 35, with 0-=c*znt
  6937. ov, the- 1-:!"
  6938. aspects. * T.hle- there is no le::al cont.rol -i
  6939. thrnre ccrt2tin incidenta1 conzidera.ticnz,
  6940. Lcb
  6941. tihere is rno ~ 'nft1leg'al obji-cnf
  6942. ProbabL b -ne2it-, -- re cozi-"rd a far
  6943. ____
  6944.  
  6945. for thia expenditure.
  6946.  
  6947. ___________
  6948.  
  6949. (DATE)
  6950. I~FORM NO.
  6951.  
  6952. 10.101 JAN 1952
  6953.  
  6954. 4
  6955.  
  6956. 134
  6957. Tab A
  6958.  
  6959. SUBPROJECT 35 - PROJECT MKULTRA
  6960. For the purpose of establishing a cover organization for highly
  6961. sensitive projects in the field of covert Biological, Chemical
  6962. and Radiological Warfare
  6963.  
  6964. I.
  6965.  
  6966. Background of Project MKULTRA.
  6967.  
  6968. In 1953 the DCI approved Project MKULTRA which established procedures
  6969. and controls under which research projects in certain highly sensitive
  6970. fields could be carried out by TSS without the necessity of signing the
  6971. usual contracts. The approved procedures apply
  6972. over-all Research and Development budget, and no additional funds
  6973. are required. Controls established in the Project Review Committee
  6974. approval of the Research and Development program (other than the
  6975. signing of a contract) remain unchanged, and special provisions for
  6976. audit are included. All files are retained by TSS.
  6977. Thesd procedures and cbntrols were approved since it is highly undesirable from a policy and security point of view that contracts be
  6978. signed indicating Agency or Government interest in this field of endeavor. In a great many instances the work must be conducted by individuals who are not and should not be aware of Agency interest. In
  6979. other cases the individuals involved are unwilling to have their names
  6980. on a contract which remains out of their control in our files. Experience
  6981. has shown that qualified, competent individuals in the field of physiological, psychiatric and other biological sciences are very reluctant
  6982. to enter into.signed agreements of any sort which would connect them
  6983. .with this activity since such connection might seriously jeopardize
  6984. their professional reputations.
  6985. When Project:MKULTRA was approved, it was not contemplated that
  6986. it would be used for the establishment of cover. Over forty individual
  6987. research and development projects have been established under this
  6988. framework and have been carried out extremely successfully, both
  6989. from technical and administrative points of view. The experience
  6990. gained in handling these projects has emphasized that establishment
  6991. of better cover both for the projects and for associated Agency scientists
  6992. is of utmost importance. Subproject 35 would establish such cover.
  6993.  
  6994. Dornareded to:
  6995. b z-. 1:
  6996. ty- or
  6997.  
  6998. Aba
  6999. C?75
  7000. *
  7001. 10-77
  7002.  
  7003. -
  7004.  
  7005. x.t~ortty Of: 107475
  7006. jv~ 1977
  7007. !i2'T;
  7008.  
  7009. ME BY 18S7475
  7010.  
  7011. 135
  7012.  
  7013. Background of the
  7014.  
  7015. II.
  7016.  
  7017. IJ
  7018.  
  7019. was incorporated in
  7020. It has a Board of Directors of six
  7021. who acts as Executive
  7022. members, one of whom i
  7023. it has solicited funds from various Director of the Fund.
  7024. individuals to finance a program of basic research in the chemotherapy
  7025. of cancer, asthma, hypertension, psychosomatic. disorders and other
  7026. ha-co-operated.with. the__..
  7027. chrbnic diseases. Since 1951 Q
  7028. Chemical Division of TSS and acted smoothly and efficiently, both as
  7029. a cut-out for dealing with contractors in the fields of covert chemical
  7030. and biological warfare, and as a prime contractor for certain areas of
  7031. biological research. Projects presently being handled for the Agency
  7032. by the Fund are administered under the controls and procedures
  7033. previously approved for MKULTRA.
  7034.  
  7035. Th
  7036.  
  7037. C
  7038.  
  7039. III.
  7040.  
  7041. Background of
  7042.  
  7043. is internationally known as a
  7044. - C
  7045. in the field of41gliPresearch and is
  7046. nas eenassociated in
  7047. In thbepast
  7048. '3
  7049. a research capacity with both the
  7050. served as av
  7051. it
  7052. Du-ing the war l
  7053. l
  7054. 1MARISg
  7055. in the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery in the Navy. Since then he-has
  7056. maintained a consulting relationship to the Navy medical research prois TOP SECRET cleared and witting of Agency - C.
  7057. :
  7058. gram.
  7059. sponsorship of-the programs carried out by the Fund as are two other
  7060. members of the Fund's Board of Directors.
  7061.  
  7062. c
  7063.  
  7064. Fund.
  7065.  
  7066. IV.
  7067.  
  7068. -
  7069.  
  7070. eactively engaged in aT campaign to raise funds
  7071. or toe purpose of erecting a new clinical research wing on the existing
  7072. The research wing will cmsist of a building six stories high, 320 feet long and 50 feet wide. Two-thirds
  7073. of the space wvill be research laboratories and offices while 100
  7074. particiresearch beds will occupy the remainder.
  7075. pation in the fund-raising campaign outlined below will result in his
  7076. having control of one-sixth of the total space in addition to the baseto:-..r!d
  7077. i
  7078.  
  7079. S.:J::-:
  7080.  
  7081. ).
  7082.  
  7083. of: 187C75op
  7084. 1S77
  7085.  
  7086. .
  7087.  
  7088. Copy #
  7089.  
  7090. of 2 copies
  7091.  
  7092. I?
  7093. r
  7094.  
  7095. 136
  7096.  
  7097. ment and general out-patient facilities. In this effort,
  7098. has secured the enthusiastic support of tlbe medical faculty an the
  7099. officers of the University who have carried the preliminary arrangements
  7100. forward to the maximum extent of their resources.
  7101. V.
  7102.  
  7103. Financial Situation.
  7104.  
  7105. The University will require about $3, 000, 000 for the
  7106. story addition.
  7107. This sum is exclusive of the cost of land and the heating and power supply
  7108. which are already available -t the site7 At the present ti me under Public
  7109. Law 2Z1, funds are available to match funds raised by the University.
  7110. The University has allocated $1, 000, 000 to this project and will assume
  7111. upkeep and staffing obligations.
  7112. has-agreed that if CIA will
  7113. a grant of $125, 000,
  7114. will provide
  7115. match this amount ann mae
  7116. oltal donation of $250, 000 to the University
  7117. Building Fund. This Agency's contribution will be made under the condition that it will be refunded if construction does not take.place.
  7118. TSS has discussed this situation with
  7119. ______M
  7120. and has encouraged.
  7121. to donate
  7122. 500,000 to the building project on the basis that 1 !
  7123. will be conducted in the new wing,
  7124. though aware of our
  7125. interest in the building, is unwitting of our specific fields of researchy.
  7126. -and individual projects. In summary, the financial situation would be as
  7127. follows:
  7128.  
  7129. -
  7130.  
  7131. -
  7132.  
  7133. C
  7134.  
  7135. .
  7136.  
  7137. C
  7138.  
  7139. 13
  7140. 1
  7141.  
  7142. .
  7143.  
  7144. $1,000,000 250,000 - Donation from
  7145. ($125, 000 supplied by CIA)
  7146. 1,250,000 - Matched funds.from Public Law ZZ
  7147. 500,000-
  7148.  
  7149. mam
  7150.  
  7151. erne
  7152.  
  7153. -3
  7154.  
  7155. .
  7156.  
  7157. $3, 000, 000 - TOTAL
  7158. Although it is recognized that the Federal contribution of $1, 250, 000 under
  7159. P. L. 221 is seemingl inflated by reason of the inclusion of the CIA contribution in that. of
  7160. actually the value.to the CIA is
  7161. $250, 000 and not just $125, 000, the amount of CIA's contribution; furthermore the inclusion of the CIA co ntribution in that of
  7162. 4Nis
  7163. the best method of maintaining security..
  7164. -
  7165.  
  7166. lrozn['nded to.
  7167.  
  7168. t' athority
  7169.  
  7170. (:,0:
  7171.  
  7172. Juns
  7173.  
  7174. -- J--e-
  7175.  
  7176. of': 187475
  7177. 1977
  7178.  
  7179. .
  7180.  
  7181. Copy #
  7182.  
  7183. of 2 copies
  7184.  
  7185. /S
  7186.  
  7187. 137
  7188.  
  7189. VI.
  7190.  
  7191. Difficulties Faced by TSS.
  7192.  
  7193. reIt has been generally recognized for some time that the external
  7194. search activities of the Chemical Division of TSS in the field of covert
  7195. biological, chemical and radiological warfare are sorely in need of
  7196. proper cover. Although Project MKULTRA provides excellent administrative and financial cover for projects, it does not afford cover for
  7197. scientific or technical personnel. MKULTRA has been used for
  7198. as a cut-out and for working
  7199. dealing through
  7200. directly with individuals or-private companies. The use of
  7201. in the future will be increasingly limited-due to
  7202. (a)'
  7203.  
  7204. (b)
  7205.  
  7206. (c)
  7207.  
  7208. The increasing number of people who, albeit
  7209. properly cleared, are aware of the Agency
  7210. 8
  7211. connection with
  7212. that the Agency M
  7213. The feeling by
  7214. employees contacting him (Drs. Gottlieb,
  7215. etc.) have no cover of any sort and consequently expose him to unnecessary and
  7216. highly undesirable personal risk; and
  7217.  
  7218. C
  7219.  
  7220. C
  7221.  
  7222. The widespread intra-Agency awareness of
  7223. the nature of the relationship between the
  7224. Fund and the Agency.
  7225.  
  7226. Another serious problem faced by TSS/CD as a result of lack of suitable cover is the difficulty in planning careers for technical and
  7227. scientific personnel in the biological field. A long-range career
  7228. concept of activities in this field inevitably includes proper cover for
  7229. the individual concerned. The availability of research facilities
  7230. ill offer an excellent opportunity OI
  7231. at
  7232. is willing - C
  7233. to solve many of the above problems, and
  7234. Up
  7235. and able to make any reasonable arrangements to suit our needs.
  7236. . - C
  7237. to three Chemical Division employees can be integrated into
  7238. program for work in the new hospital wing on the
  7239. Agency's research projects. Although career planning was not a
  7240. consideration when planning the procedures and controls established
  7241. by Project MKULTRA, nevertheless this particular subproject, in
  7242. addition to its primary objective, will be of very great secondary help
  7243. 7 n uthority of: 187475
  7244. ILTD^T; CL B1 18747.
  7245.  
  7246. -.
  7247. -4-
  7248.  
  7249. Copy 9
  7250.  
  7251. of 2 copies
  7252.  
  7253. 138
  7254.  
  7255. in simplifying and eliminating many of the very awkward and dangerous
  7256. conditions facing certain Chemical Division employees.
  7257. and Benefits Accruing to TSS.
  7258.  
  7259. VII. 'Advantages
  7260.  
  7261. The contemplated arrangements will.jesult in many advantages and
  7262. benefits, including the following:
  7263. (a)
  7264.  
  7265. One-sixth of the total space in the new research
  7266. and - C
  7267. is to be available to
  7268. in turn, will be available to the Chemical
  7269. Division of TSS. This will provide laboratory
  7270. and office space, technical assistants, equipment and experimental animals for use of Chemical
  7271. Division personnel in connection with specific
  7272. future projects.
  7273.  
  7274. .wing
  7275.  
  7276. (b)
  7277.  
  7278. The cost of Chemical Division projects which are
  7279. to be carried out under this cover will be covered
  7280. by funds made available through Project MKULTRA,
  7281. and projects will be subject to the procedures
  7282. The
  7283. and, controls established for.MKULTRA.
  7284. funds will be passed through
  7285. s has been done in the past. %iIll
  7286. in turn will either pay expenses directly or
  7287. transfer the money to the University for this
  7288. purpose. Each project will be individually
  7289. funded based on its particular budget, and there
  7290. will be no other continuing or recurring charges
  7291. for items such as space, facilities, etc.
  7292.  
  7293. (c)
  7294.  
  7295. The Agency's sponsorship of sensitive research
  7296. projects would be completely deniable since no
  7297. connection would exist between the University
  7298. and the Agency.
  7299.  
  7300. (d)
  7301.  
  7302. Excellent professional cover would be provided
  7303. for up to three bio-chemical employees of the
  7304. Chemical Division of TSS. This would allow open
  7305. attendance at scientific meetings.. the advancement
  7306. of personal. standing in the scientific world, and
  7307. as such, would constitute a major efficiency and
  7308.  
  7309. rdod to
  7310. Drc
  7311. L*
  7312. t- :rthrity
  7313. cf: 137175
  7314. C :: Je
  7315. 1977
  7316. Copy #_/
  7317. C-5
  7318.  
  7319. of 2 copies
  7320.  
  7321. 139
  7322. morale booster.
  7323. (e)
  7324.  
  7325. Human patients and volunteers for experimental
  7326. use will be available under excellent clinical
  7327. conditions with the full supervision of
  7328.  
  7329. (f)
  7330.  
  7331. There would be available the equivalent of a
  7332. hospital safehouse.
  7333.  
  7334. (g)
  7335.  
  7336. It is expected that the output of useful results
  7337. of the Chemical Division in the bio-chemical
  7338. field will be greatly improved through the more
  7339. efficient use of technical personnel who would
  7340. be able to spend more of their time on actual
  7341. laboratory work.
  7342.  
  7343. -
  7344.  
  7345. (h)
  7346.  
  7347. VIII.
  7348.  
  7349. (i)
  7350.  
  7351. Excellent facilities would be provided for
  7352. recruiting new scientific personnel since
  7353. members of the Chemical Division working under
  7354. this cover will be in daily contact with members
  7355. of the Graduate School of the University.
  7356.  
  7357. (J)
  7358.  
  7359. The regular University library and reprint
  7360. seryice will be available as a source of.
  7361. technical information.
  7362.  
  7363. Funding.
  7364.  
  7365. if
  7366. It is proposed that $125, 000 be granted to
  7367. approval is granted, TSS will arrange for payment to be made under
  7368. the procedures and controls of MKULTRA. These funds would come
  7369. out of the presently approved TSS Research and Development budget
  7370. for FY 1955 and no new funds are involved. The funds would be
  7371. In turn
  7372. transferred as a grant to
  7373. will match these funds with an equal amount and donate a total -of $250, 000 to the University as outlined in paragraph V. The sum of
  7374. $125, 000 would be entirely in the nature of a grant and would in due
  7375.  
  7376. uIn
  7377.  
  7378. b"
  7379.  
  7380. fl' rrdod to:
  7381. :.iaor ty 0-: 187475
  7382. 1977-6
  7383.  
  7384. Copy #
  7385.  
  7386. C27Li.
  7387. L BY 137-175
  7388. --
  7389.  
  7390. 6-
  7391.  
  7392. /
  7393.  
  7394. of 2 copies
  7395.  
  7396. 140
  7397.  
  7398. course be merged with the entire $3, 000, 000 raised for the construction of the wing. The Agency would retain no residual interest in the
  7399. building or title to any equipment or facilities purchased with this
  7400. money.
  7401. This single grant will constitute the Agency'.s entire participation in
  7402. the new hospital wing, and there will be no recurring obligations in
  7403. the form of annual support of the hospital or additional grants. Trans8,
  7404. will be made
  7405. mission of Agency funds to
  7406. through previously established cover.channels set up by thea
  7407. for similar transmittals in the past. The donation on 4M books will be shown as having been received from
  7408.  
  7409. -
  7410.  
  7411. 43
  7412.  
  7413. In the future when TSS sponsors sensitive research projects which are
  7414. each project
  7415. to be carried out in
  7416. as it has
  7417. will be individually financed through
  7418. been in the past in accordance with previously established procedures
  7419. and controls using allotted portions of the annual Research and Development budget. The University will be totally unwittingof Agency
  7420. sponsorship, and the projects to every outward appearance will be
  7421. sponsored by
  7422. M
  7423. .
  7424. C
  7425. will continue in
  7426. death,
  7427. In the event of
  7428. being and any activities under this project will be continued through
  7429. will be unaffected by his death.
  7430. fl~and
  7431. IX.
  7432.  
  7433. Ca
  7434.  
  7435. Memorandum of Agreement.
  7436.  
  7437. A memorandum of agreement will be signed with
  7438. outlining to the greatest extent possible the arrangements under which
  7439. the hospital space under his control will be made available to Chemical
  7440. Division personnel and the manner in which cover will be provided and
  7441. other benefits obtained. No contract will be signed since
  7442. would be unable to reflect any of the Agency's contractual terms in his
  7443. makes the
  7444. arrangements with the University when
  7445. donation in question. The memorandum of agreement will be retained
  7446. in TSS.
  7447.  
  7448. X.
  7449.  
  7450. -
  7451.  
  7452. Security.
  7453.  
  7454. All security matters and details are being cojordinated with the TSS/
  7455. Liaison and Security Office..
  7456. fl ::iid toa:
  7457. Z4:7
  7458. t
  7459. of: 137475
  7460. J,:zo 1077
  7461. Copy Nf A of Z copies
  7462.  
  7463. C
  7464.  
  7465. -
  7466.  
  7467. C
  7468.  
  7469. 141
  7470.  
  7471. Resultant Financial Saving.
  7472.  
  7473. XI.
  7474.  
  7475. The $125, 000 to be contributed by CIA plus the $125, 000 in matching funds
  7476. provided under P. L. 221 to the Building Fund will be more than offset
  7477. in a few years by the savings which will result from use of this non-profit
  7478. or other educafund. If a research project at
  7479. tional non-profit institution is sponsored by the 1J. S. Government, it
  7480. is customary for the Government to pay for salaries, equipment,
  7481. .
  7482. supplies, .etc. and for overhead as well. In the case of .
  7483. the overhead amossnts to 80% of salaries. However, if a nonat
  7484. sponsors research a
  7485. profit foundation such as
  7486. non-profit institution, the funds granted for the work are customarily
  7487. used to pay for salaries, equipment and supplies but not for overhead.
  7488. The Government dollar thus buys considerably more research through
  7489. than would be the case if no cut-out were used.
  7490. XII.
  7491.  
  7492. Legal Matters.
  7493.  
  7494. of the Office
  7495. This matter has been discussed with
  7496. of General Counsel, and he is fully aware of all details surrounding this
  7497. grant.
  7498.  
  7499. rofd to:
  7500. Ofthrt..
  7501. 187475
  7502. JUZs 19~77
  7503.  
  7504. Copy #
  7505.  
  7506. copy A
  7507.  
  7508. 96-408
  7509.  
  7510. 0 - 77 - 10
  7511.  
  7512. of 2 copies
  7513.  
  7514. 142
  7515. 9 AprilIVwr
  7516. MEMORANDUM FOR: THE RECORD
  7517. SUBJECT
  7518.  
  7519. Trip Report, Visit to .
  7520. 7 April 1963
  7521.  
  7522. 1. The purpose of this triP was to make arrangements for
  7523. pro jec.
  7524. iad
  7525. been given ample previous
  7526. closing out the
  7527. notice that such was likely to be the iaent of the visit. anI he propared himself accordingly.
  7528. that it would not be
  7529. inp
  7530. Z. It was explained to
  7531. possible to carry over funds beyond the end of the current fiscal
  7532. year. Therefore all work would have to be completed and all payments made prior to 30 June. This deadline appeared acceptable to
  7533. him, and it was agreed that I would make my final visit there to
  7534. did not
  7535. receive reports and attend to final details on 16 Juno. Q
  7536. have a current financial report, but he estimated that funds currently
  7537. on hand would be about sufficient for remaining expenditures. Be
  7538. agreed to send the Society within the next 10 days a more exact statement of current balance and estimated remaining expenditures. I
  7539. tried to impress on him strongly that transfer of additional funds and/
  7540. or return of unexpeaded funds must be completed well bfore the end
  7541. of the fiscal year.
  7542. 3. Of the 30 cases called for in the original doeign 13 have
  7543. been completed (but only 4 have been transcribed from the tapes). In
  7544. addition there are 8 cases in proLreos (of which two are already in
  7545. interview and 6 are worked up to the point of having the lists of questions
  7546. prepared). It was agreed that to meet the deadline we would have to
  7547. limit the design to these 26 cases.
  7548. is so Involved in the administrative
  7549. 4. It is apparent that'
  7550. problems of the project that he is not paying any attention to the results.
  7551. Since to date only 4 cases have been transcribed there is no way of telling
  7552. what is coming out of it. I assume there were no dramatic reactions, because the interviewers would have let him know about them had they emerzed.
  7553. It is possiblo, however, that our own analysis cf the data may dredge up
  7554. something of value, although I am dubious on this point.
  7555. gave me his usual long involved talk on the difficulties
  7556. 5.
  7557. he had encountered which account for the delays. He also talked at some
  7558.  
  7559. 143
  7560. length about his -- "pcrimear.*
  7561. are mildly h.aur-raiamng. Fial
  7562.  
  7563. -th bypnoul.. gos_ aspecta of wactb
  7564. ho made quite a pitchL for contining
  7565. Comec duch project as this ncott year,
  7566. withL roalisac. aputum~ deadlines."
  7567.  
  7568. I told him we would diacues posiilitic
  7569. i~ter the present project was
  7570. compicted and we badl . cha~lco to closely examine the take.
  7571.  
  7572. Distribution:
  7573.  
  7574. 144
  7575.  
  7576. July 18, 1958
  7577.  
  7578. Dear Mr. 11
  7579.  
  7580. oi-N
  7581.  
  7582. The experiment designed lo test the effectiveness of
  7583. certain medication in causing individuals to release guarded information has been completed in accordance with the original experimental design, with the exception that 25 instead of 30 cases
  7584. were used. This matter was discussed in more detail in my letter
  7585. oT July 15. Abstracts on all 25 cases, transcriptions of the interviews, Wechsler-Bellevue Intelligence Tests given at the hospital and previously given at this clinic, post-experimental .
  7586. rankings and evaluation sheets, and a schedule covering the drug
  7587. administration have all been submitted to you under separate
  7588. cover.
  7589. Enclosed is a financial statement which reprk sents the
  7590. final accounting of the funds allocated by you for use in this
  7591. project. If, for your purpose, you require a more detailed summary of what specific professional services were performed or
  7592. more detail with reference to travel expenses or any other item,
  7593. kindly let me know.
  7594.  
  7595. You will note, in this connecion, that Dr.Wvas
  7596. This
  7597. compensated in an amount exceeding thatpa. to Dr.
  7598. ng
  7599. che
  7600. sient much tie
  7601. was occasioned by the fact that Dr."
  7602. and
  7603. the files and records at the
  7604. e stable for our purPrison selecting cases that m g
  7605. O
  7606. pose. It was from the cases selected by him that the subjects
  7607. chosen.
  7608. finally
  7609. were
  7610. used in the experiment
  7611. I have been instructed to write a check to the Society
  7612. for the balance in the account as o3 today. I would like to
  7613.  
  7614. Mr.
  7615.  
  7616. Page Two
  7617.  
  7618. delay this matter for a few days. Several checks have been written during recent days, and I would like to be sure they cleared
  7619. You will
  7620. .before closing out the account.
  7621. the bank i
  7622. receive a check in the amount of $1356.26 early next week.
  7623. If there is any additional information required, I will
  7624. be happy to cooperate.
  7625.  
  7626. Enc.
  7627.  
  7628. 146
  7629. ty
  7630.  
  7631. Ca:
  7632.  
  7633. est:.-4-ty oC-:
  7634. :
  7635. 1977
  7636.  
  7637. .18747S
  7638.  
  7639. /Y
  7640.  
  7641. FJLEldUWU
  7642.  
  7643. Z : CLEY 187475
  7644.  
  7645. PhiN
  7646.  
  7647. 1."CArI1
  7648.  
  7649. which in
  7650.  
  7651. locatedcat
  7652. ,
  7653.  
  7654. icated
  7655.  
  7656. 13
  7657.  
  7658. -
  7659.  
  7660. .'he rescarch Project will be carried cut at, he
  7661.  
  7662. The
  7663.  
  7664. Rn
  7665.  
  7666. (
  7667. 4
  7668.  
  7669. .
  7670.  
  7671. has one thousand, one hundred and thirty-five (1,135) bods.
  7672.  
  7673. ospi
  7674.  
  7675. At the present tine thoro ere one hundred and forty-two (142) napsychotics classiied es cri-0.nal-seael psychopaths.
  7676.  
  7677. ThOro are four
  7678.  
  7679. full-tire psychiatristo and varying nuabcro of endical interns; two
  7680. psycholo-iztrl four soc.al workers; nurses and attendants.
  7681. intendent of the Hecepital is
  7682. of the resesrch t.a-.
  7683.  
  7684. za
  7685.  
  7686. :
  7687.  
  7688. super-
  7689.  
  7690. The
  7691.  
  7692. wittin
  7693.  
  7694. renber
  7695.  
  7696. -- tIrmecutive Secretary of the Stata "Icpartennt of
  7697.  
  7698. fental
  7699.  
  7700. Health and
  7701.  
  7702. any re 'earch project is nornrally approved by the Co-ordi.nator of
  7703. of the State Denrtent of
  7704. this e-proval.
  7705.  
  7706. possile for the rusoarcl teaa to
  7707.  
  7708. dco
  7709. sleep
  7710.  
  7711. sronrch
  7712.  
  7713. will secure
  7714.  
  7715. aental Health.
  7716.  
  7717. or-fl.1:in
  7718.  
  7719. space evilazle erA it is
  7720. at the Hospital while eerryisz
  7721.  
  7722. out their investigation.
  7723.  
  7724. The subjccts will be selected from the on
  7725. (162)
  7726.  
  7727. crinisal-cortal psychopaths on
  7728.  
  7729. idiom
  7730.  
  7731. hund-d and forty-two
  7732.  
  7733. there is an edaquate previous
  7734.  
  7735. investi, ation including police roports, physical, nsycdantric
  7736. prycholcic eacdrntions -nd
  7737. Do-znwded to:
  7738.  
  7739. t"
  7740.  
  7741. f'.tcrity
  7742.  
  7743. ofa:
  7744.  
  7745. 187475
  7746.  
  7747. Ct': J1:ie 1877
  7748. J.
  7749.  
  7750. 15/.
  7751.  
  7752. I;
  7753.  
  7754. CL I:
  7755.  
  7756. 107475
  7757.  
  7758. accial
  7759.  
  7760. C
  7761.  
  7762. -
  7763.  
  7764. of
  7765.  
  7766. - The in-titution cos urder the directie
  7767.  
  7768. hin-eorca.
  7769.  
  7770. The a,
  7771.  
  7772. ad
  7773.  
  7774. range of the
  7775.  
  7776. -
  7777.  
  7778. C
  7779. C.
  7780.  
  7781. 147
  7782. rubjects
  7783.  
  7784. varies from t::.0-ty' 'as saOvety years
  7785.  
  7786. and ther
  7787.  
  7788. a
  7789.  
  7790. otion oi intallizcnce levels and social tnck70onde.
  7791.  
  7792. Th
  7793.  
  7794. following ran are sugzostod for the research toam:
  7795.  
  7796. C
  7797. ,
  7798.  
  7799. experience in er
  7800.  
  7801. a pzychologist who has had etonsive
  7802. aJ,
  7803.  
  7804. dning crii
  7805.  
  7806. F}as
  7807.  
  7808. iriten extonsively
  7809.  
  7810. on psychopathic sexual deviations; is an authority on poly-
  7811.  
  7812. Croph and
  7813.  
  7814. *flf
  7815.  
  7816. intorro:ation rethods.
  7817.  
  7818. -
  7819.  
  7820. -C
  7821.  
  7822. for ren thirty years, a psychiatrist to has
  7823.  
  7824. spent his life in the trrotrnt of the criminal inrano ='d
  7825.  
  7826. r=intins
  7827.  
  7828. for the cr
  7829.  
  7830. the crLy institution
  7831.  
  7832. -
  7833.  
  7834. and treatant for the cririnal-sxaal psychopath.
  7835. a prycliatrist who has a large private
  7836. practico.
  7837.  
  7838. At the pocent timra he is exclusiva3y devoting
  7839.  
  7840. his tine to psychcanlycis.
  7841. exirdnir
  7842.  
  7843. crinzCals.
  7844.  
  7845. As a
  7846.  
  7847. Ho has had extensive axnericnco
  7848.  
  7849. Navy
  7850.  
  7851. extensive cxerience in
  7852.  
  7853. psychiatrist to has had
  7854.  
  7855. WIC
  7856.  
  7857. in the field of eastern cultures, Oriental
  7858. psychiatry, brairwashing, etc.
  7859. rogation
  7860.  
  7861. with
  7862.  
  7863. and h.,pnoanlyis.
  7864. d to: flNI-2t7.1Lhrity C: 137475
  7865. date: JOn: 1977
  7866. -
  7867.  
  7868. :2
  7869.  
  7870. CL fY 1S7475
  7871.  
  7872. He hao also done drug inter-
  7873.  
  7874. crimntls and has engagod in narconalysis
  7875.  
  7876. C-
  7877.  
  7878. S?475--
  7879.  
  7880. *
  7881.  
  7882. utfIf
  7883.  
  7884. .
  7885.  
  7886. trit ::o is en tho-C
  7887.  
  7888. y
  7889.  
  7890. of
  7891. end rnitoains a private practice in the field
  7892. has had
  7893.  
  7894. or psychi try.
  7895.  
  7896. wide
  7897.  
  7898. experience in -
  7899.  
  7900. wOnvty-
  7901.  
  7902. r~t rT--.lja3
  7903. jo~zi
  7904. bor.n-a
  7905. back
  7906. CL4
  7907. goiQg
  7908. dolug doaL-Z
  7909. th
  7910. crirlialas
  7911.  
  7912. C
  7913.  
  7914. venJL-Lp
  7915. Years,
  7916.  
  7917. including dr-g interc;,ation.
  7918.  
  7919. c Tf
  7920.  
  7921. aphys3ician for the post twenty-five
  7922.  
  7923. - C
  7924. -'3
  7925.  
  7926. yors, has been
  7927. had cxtcnsive expOr-
  7928.  
  7929. eal)iZ
  7930.  
  7931. once
  7932.  
  7933. in
  7934.  
  7935. wiTh all sorts of crizinls
  7936.  
  7937. rca interrogation.
  7938.  
  7939. -
  7940.  
  7941. C
  7942.  
  7943. d ha s onaged
  7944.  
  7945. LOcidos his city position, he also
  7946.  
  7947. raintains a private practico in the field of general.
  7948. l
  7949.  
  7950. edicine.
  7951. -has O
  7952.  
  7953. his staff
  7954.  
  7955. abo is
  7956.  
  7957. co-sted
  7958.  
  7959. cmn of tbo perchiatrists from
  7960.  
  7961. -
  7962.  
  7963. 1in the treat-
  7964.  
  7965. interested .xd has used drags
  7966.  
  7967. rent of patients and has also used hypnozio nith mretal
  7968. patients.
  7969.  
  7970. The roesrch aseiotants have not been
  7971.  
  7972. as yet but rijht well include payoloeliste
  7973. attachud to
  7974.  
  7975. *
  7976.  
  7977. Three tear
  7978. On, teen
  7979.  
  7980. workin:
  7981.  
  7982. now
  7983.  
  7984. Ze cecrutary ill
  7985.  
  7986. prG:;ont secrntery 'to will do all the
  7987.  
  7988. be
  7989.  
  7990. ocry
  7991.  
  7992. celected
  7993.  
  7994. or raies
  7995.  
  7996. tene: rephic
  7997.  
  7998. of two csnior proonaitonal zata each will be
  7999. with
  8000.  
  8001. the
  8002.  
  8003. eaces-
  8004.  
  8005. work in ad .ition to her presnt duties.
  8006.  
  8007. selected grcup of ptiea
  8008.  
  8009. Ltorro;ation, h.:mnolu tx.d hypror3i :nan
  8010.  
  8011. colected.
  8012.  
  8013. will una stra iht
  8014.  
  8015. ad h!.pnoin
  8016.  
  8017. and a
  8018.  
  8019. -
  8020.  
  8021. -C
  8022.  
  8023. H
  8024.  
  8025. f
  8026.  
  8027. 149
  8028.  
  8029. tetrhr;eocrnnabbol
  8030. roup o
  8031.  
  8032. nctata
  8033.  
  8034. Cerivatibv.
  8035.  
  8036. AnoLher tez.n working on
  8037.  
  8038. and a trtrz.Cdrocenlnabinol acctato derivative and intorrogation.
  8039. the third tean with anther Croup of
  8040. cation
  8041.  
  8042. another
  8043.  
  8044. cbjcctr wUill uze str4-ht interrogation, IZD uitlh interrogation
  8045.  
  8046. and
  8047.  
  8048. c
  8049.  
  8050. U
  8051.  
  8052. use straif
  8053.  
  8054. Later.-
  8055.  
  8056. t interro-
  8057.  
  8058. a cotirnation of LSJ and a tctrhydrocnmabinol acetate
  8059.  
  8060. derivative.
  8061. A reing of all the
  8062.  
  8063. roers
  8064.  
  8065. of the research prooect will be briefed
  8066.  
  8067. on the druZs to be u:ied and all of t'i
  8068. ledge
  8069.  
  8070. gained
  8071.  
  8072. pharnacoloeicfl and rndical =oW-
  8073.  
  8074. so far in the use of theco drugs.
  8075.  
  8076. Ina:Loctirc Lroups of abects for experintation, the ffllowing
  8077. objectives will be sought:
  8078. 1)
  8079.  
  8080. Cubjects will be selected .fio have denied allegations
  8081. of vYrious 1-inda that can bo chocked or strongly ren:d
  8082. on the basis of previously established records.
  8083.  
  8084. 2)
  8085.  
  8086. As far as possible, the actual 'research ran rd-dnistering
  8087. drus wrill not be awaro of the drug he is ad-dnistering
  8088. cnd pinocobs
  8089.  
  8090. 3)
  8091.  
  8092. will
  8093.  
  8094. be intermrsed with drug adiistration.
  8095.  
  8096. Procautions will be taken to neutralizo age, intelliguces physical condition, social bckground and any
  8097. other controllable factor in ecelecting 5roups.
  8098.  
  8099. Ad-
  8100.  
  8101. idnietration of drugs will be done both openly and
  8102. eurreptitiously.
  8103. 4)
  8104.  
  8105. ocund recording will be
  8106.  
  8107. iasdoof the interroation
  8108.  
  8109. -nd wrt %ton reports will beLobtded in othter care:.
  8110. *.
  8111.  
  8112. r..)
  8113. * it*?tt.
  8114. fl 7of
  8115. :.:
  8116. 1
  8117.  
  8118. 1 7 i75
  8119.  
  8120. I
  8121.  
  8122. J.C1077
  8123.  
  8124. r-;U
  8125.  
  8126. i:-0z~ CLrcce
  8127.  
  8128. In j
  8129.  
  8130. of interro_-,tion with dru;: anti otbor tciniquiea -. i:fl
  8131. bo c-hecited
  8132.  
  8133. aaln~bct-~i rccords r-nd qiw~ita.tivo and
  8134.  
  8135. cramlt~tti-m rcnorba vwIll 1, cvalua~ed.
  8136.  
  8137. Accurate aad
  8138.  
  8139. J-I~=roportz S.ill bo kcpt -- iur.-ms will be =1)-.
  8140. mgtted on tho bazij of ;Ltorin pro~reso and corp2leta
  8141.  
  8142. C'-tin' rmthods of
  8143.  
  8144. 151
  8145.  
  8146. DRAPT/a"o
  8147.  
  8148. 30 January 1961
  8149.  
  8150. V2240RANDUM.! FOR THE RECORD
  8151. SUBJECT:
  8152. 1.
  8153.  
  8154. Project MKULTRA, Subproject
  8155.  
  8156. 2
  8157.  
  8158. Subproject 42 is to be continued for the same purposes as
  8159.  
  8160. when originallyestablished: to support
  8161.  
  8162. covert
  8163.  
  8164. and realistic field trials of certain research and development items
  8165. of interest to TSD, and to maintain the physical facilities required for
  8166. these trials.
  8167. 2.
  8168.  
  8169. In the past year a number of covert and realistic field
  8170.  
  8171. ,trials have been successfully carried out.
  8172.  
  8173. The
  8174.  
  8175. seults of these
  8176.  
  8177. experiments have provided factual data essential to establishing
  8178. protocols for a number of contemplated operations.
  8179.  
  8180. A continuation
  8181.  
  8182. of covert and realistic field trials are necessitated by the production
  8183. of new materials in TSD programs, particularly in areas requiring
  8184. detailed knowledge of the effectiveness pnd efficiency of deliverjI
  8185. systems. Additional trials are also necessitated by the need for
  8186. better controlled "field-type" experiments.
  8187.  
  8188. 3.
  8189.  
  8190. The estimated cost of the ,project is
  8191.  
  8192. of six months.
  8193. .
  8194.  
  8195. $5,000.00
  8196.  
  8197. for a period
  8198.  
  8199. Charges should be made against Allotment 1125-1390-3902.
  8200.  
  8201. Accounting for funds and equipment under this subproject has
  8202.  
  8203. been established on a detailed basis with the auditor and will continue
  8204. as in the past.
  8205.  
  8206. 152
  8207.  
  8208. 5.
  8209.  
  8210. is
  8211.  
  8212. approved for TOP SECRET by the Agency and
  8213.  
  8214. operates under cover for purposes of this subproject.
  8215.  
  8216. TSD/Research Branch
  8217. APPROVED FOR OBLIGATION OF FUNDS:
  8218.  
  8219. Date:
  8220.  
  8221. Distribution:
  8222. Original only.
  8223.  
  8224. 153
  8225.  
  8226. EMORANDUM
  8227. FOR THE RECORD
  8228.  
  8229. SUBJECT:
  8230.  
  8231. Project MKULTRA, Subproject 42
  8232.  
  8233. 1. Subproject 42 is bein
  8234. continued support of the
  8235.  
  8236. e tab *shed to provide for the
  8237.  
  8238. acilities, and as such,
  8239.  
  8240. is a continuation of Suboroect 16
  8241. Under Subproject 42, it
  8242. is intended that the
  8243. jacilities be moved from
  8244.  
  8245. .6'
  8246.  
  8247. to
  8248.  
  8249. These facilities,
  8250.  
  8251. in the new location, will continue to provide a means for the
  8252. realistic testing of certain R and D items of interest to
  8253. CD/TSS and APD/TSS.
  8254. 2. Subproject 42 will be conducted by Mr.
  8255. a seaman. Certain support activities will be prcvided by
  8256.  
  8257. CD/ISS and APD/TSS.
  8258. 3. The estimated cost for a period of one year is
  8259. $8,300,00, starting 1 March 1955.
  8260.  
  8261. 1:2EY G(ArL=-B
  8262.  
  8263. Chief
  8264. TSS/Chemical Division
  8265.  
  8266. APROVED FCR OBLIGATICN
  8267. OF FUNDS:
  8268.  
  8269. APPROVED FOR ADDITIONAL
  8270. OBLnsaTWSor
  8271. OF UD (ft28.
  8272.  
  8273. 3
  8274.  
  8275. I
  8276. KtesearCf
  8277.  
  8278. Date:
  8279. Original Only.,
  8280.  
  8281. Ulrector
  8282.  
  8283. esearh D
  8284.  
  8285. 4
  8286.  
  8287. Date:
  8288.  
  8289. ect
  8290.  
  8291. MRANDUM FOR:
  8292. :
  8293.  
  8294. SUBJECT
  8295. 1.
  8296.  
  8297. THE RECORD
  8298. Project-MKULTRA,
  8299.  
  8300. Stlbproject 45.
  8301.  
  8302. The scope of this project is intended to encompass
  8303.  
  8304. all those activities nov engaged in by the
  8305.  
  8306. a in its own facilities under the
  8307. direction of TSS, Chemical Division. These activities will
  8308. take the form of three lines of biochemical investigation;
  8309. namely, the curare-like effect of certain thiols, the preparation of hydrogenated quinolines and indole alkaloids, and the
  8310. continued study of diphenolic compounds. In addition to the
  8311. above investigations, the present biological testing and assaying techniquesi will be elaborated and broadened to include
  8312. cardiovascular and anticarcinogenic effects of compounds resulting from the above programs.
  8313. dicates
  8314. 2. The attached proposal from
  8315. the extent of the investigations that his facilities will allow
  8316. him to carry out on the materials deieloped in the three lines
  8317. of research referred to in paragraph 1 as well as certain other
  8318. also serves
  8319. materials of interest to TSS/CD.
  8320. as a general consfdtant to this Division and provides cover and
  8321. cut-out facilities to the Agency.
  8322. 3. The total cost of this project for a period of one year
  8323. will not exceed $100,000.00. At the present time, the sum of
  8324. $40,000.00 is being committed, the balance of the total to-be
  8325. com 5 ted at a later date.
  8326. as been granted a TOP SECRET clearance
  8327. 4.
  8328. .
  8329. by the Agency, and is fully capable of protecting the security
  8330. of the Government's interest in this matter.
  8331.  
  8332. .
  8333.  
  8334. TSS, Chemical Division
  8335. APPROVED FOR OBLIGATION
  8336. OF FUNDS:
  8337.  
  8338. APPROVED:
  8339.  
  8340. Sawibf TS/CemialDiviso
  8341. APPROVED FOR AIDITIONAL APIROPRIATIC
  8342. Attachments:
  8343. Proposal
  8344. Original Only. 4
  8345.  
  8346. Research Director
  8347. Nate:
  8348.  
  8349. (
  8350.  
  8351. -
  8352.  
  8353. i
  8354.  
  8355. 155
  8356.  
  8357. Manuman
  8358. re'
  8359.  
  8360. rsCOR
  8361.  
  8362. -s
  8363.  
  8364. UMFORt. THE RECafLD
  8365.  
  8366. 1MMA
  8367.  
  8368. Projwitt-KILRA, Subproject 45
  8369.  
  8370. SUBJECT:
  8371.  
  8372. 1. The scope of this project is intended to encompass all those
  8373. -4
  8374. Munder the direction of TSS/CD. These activities tae the form
  8375. of three lines of biochemical investigation, namely, the Curare-like
  8376. effect of certain thiols, the preparation of bydrogenated quinolines
  8377. and indole alkaloids and a program of investigation of toxic cerebral
  8378. states. -.This last investigation will include. bio-assay and chemicalanalysis of various body fluids of animals in which cerebral toxemias
  8379. have been produced. It is the aim of this program to endeavor to
  8380. understand the mechanism of such states as toxic delirium, tiremic
  8381. coma, and cerebral toxicity from'po soning. In order to continue the
  8382. and to make available a
  8383. established "cover" activities of t
  8384. and-&
  8385. Pool of subjects for testing purposes, the
  8386. effects of compounds resulting from the above program will
  8387. pool of
  8388. be evaluated.
  8389. 2
  8390. iadicates the
  8391. . The attached proposal from
  8392. extent of the investigations that his facilities will allow him to
  8393. carry out on the materials developed in the three lines of research
  8394. referred to in paragraph one, a well as certain other materials of
  8395. so serves as a general consultant
  8396. interest to TSS/CD.
  8397. to this Division and provides cover and cut-out facilities to the
  8398.  
  8399. Agency.
  8400.  
  8401. 3. The total cost of this project for a period of one year will
  8402. not exceed $100,000. Charges should be made against Allotment
  8403. 6-2502-10-001.
  8404. .
  8405.  
  8406. 4.
  8407.  
  8408. has been requested to subinit a summary account-
  8409.  
  8410. annual audit report be made available for
  8411. ing or a copy of th
  8412. the sponsor's inspection. Also, it has been requested that any unexpended funds shall be returned to the Agency.
  8413. Title to any permanent equipment purchased by funds granted
  8414. hall be retained by the
  8415. lieu of higher overhead rates.
  8416. * other than its activities as a cut-out
  8417.  
  8418. Deog
  8419.  
  8420. b
  8421.  
  8422. to:
  8423. 187479
  8424. . ority of475
  8425.  
  8426. E2 I!
  8427.  
  8428. ~
  8429.  
  8430. CL BY 167475
  8431.  
  8432. -17 - - - - --
  8433.  
  8434. -
  8435.  
  8436. 2-
  8437.  
  8438. 6. It was mutually agreed that documentation and accounting for
  8439. travel expenses which are normally reimbursable by the
  8440. 4W shall conform wiGtKe acpted practices of th
  8441.  
  8442. (4)
  8443. Y
  8444.  
  8445. eed to comply with the requirements of
  8446. . .
  8447. the Memorandum of Agreement.
  8448.  
  8449. c
  8450. CAPfROVED
  8451.  
  8452. APPROM FOR OBLIGATION
  8453. OF FUINDS:
  8454.  
  8455. Research Director
  8456. Date
  8457.  
  8458. ___
  8459.  
  8460. Attachment:
  8461. Proposal
  8462. Distribution:
  8463. Original Only
  8464.  
  8465. Do- .d to:
  8466. EC
  8467. t:Jun
  8468.  
  8469. L S7 187475
  8470. 7
  8471.  
  8472. 2 .r;CL By 287475
  8473.  
  8474. ___
  8475.  
  8476. Chief , T 8/Chemical Division
  8477.  
  8478. 157
  8479. 1960
  8480.  
  8481. pertod
  8482.  
  8483. The researci to be undertaken durtng the twelve month
  8484. devoted
  8485. for shtch ftnanctal support to requested wt1l be
  8486.  
  8487. -
  8488.  
  8489. mechantam
  8490. to the conttnued analysts of the neural and endoortne
  8491. The screentngof stress and the. hemtcal agents that tnfluence tt.
  8492. of phases of
  8493. procedures are based largely upon a further analysts
  8494. stress and the tnfluences of thts phystologto behavtor complex
  8495. accompanyupon both body and sktn temperatures as detatled tn the
  8496. Eng report.
  8497.  
  8498. at the
  8499.  
  8500. The chemtcal synthests of new compounds trtll be constr.ued
  8501. under the superttston of
  8502. and at the
  8503.  
  8504. under the supervtston
  8505.  
  8506. 4
  8507.  
  8508. These chemtoal agents wtll be screened for
  8509. reactton
  8510. thetr capactty to provoke stress or t.o suppress the stress
  8511. pharmatn Lts acute or chronto phases. Antmal testtng wtill tnclude
  8512. o .--
  8513.  
  8514. .
  8515.  
  8516. these compounds as
  8517. cologto screentng and proper toxtctty studtes..of
  8518. heretofore.
  8519. a
  8520. Chemtcal agents that have been. found acttve and wtthtn
  8521. on
  8522. suttable toxtotty range wtll be subjected to cltntcal screentng
  8523. carrted out on
  8524. approprtate pattents, the tntttal screentng betng
  8525. to chemtcal
  8526. devoted
  8527. advanced cancer pattents. The amount of money
  8528. Chemtcal compounds
  8529. synthests, however, has bean firther reduced.
  8530. synthesteed tn t?
  8531. those
  8532. as
  8533. avatlable from btologto sources as well
  8534. that are acttve tn
  8535. project wll be screened, parttoularly those
  8536. etther ratstng or lowertng body temperature.
  8537. As heretofore any agents whtch prove to be of tnterest
  8538. th nn transvlant
  8539. n
  8540. -..
  8541. .. n*,<'
  8542. -..
  8543.  
  8544. 96-408 0 - 77 - 11
  8545.  
  8546. 158'
  8547.  
  8548. GantmaZ tumors ndnana nce
  8549.  
  8550. patiienta.Th6S
  8551.  
  8552. - ' :areo/
  8553.  
  8554. project zutll be od-nstdPred-a by-.product of thte major objeottve,- 7
  8555. whtch wtll be dtrected to the problem of stress.
  8556.  
  8557. ANNGNOTICE
  8558. SEIMTECEIGENCE
  8559. I.iTRD NVOLVED
  8560.  
  8561. 159.
  8562. MEMORANDUM FOR: THtfEconn
  8563. SUBJECT
  8564.  
  8565. 1.
  8566.  
  8567. Continuation of M.ULTRA. Subproject
  8568.  
  8569. .
  8570.  
  8571. No.
  8572.  
  8573. tis
  8574.  
  8575. The scope of this subpro'ect includes all those activities
  8576.  
  8577. now engaged in byy
  8578. cutout
  8579. under the direction of TSSftD-with the exception of those
  8580. functions specifically mentioned in connection with other MKULTRA
  8581. subprojecf
  8582.  
  8583. In general, the research effort under this subproject
  8584.  
  8585. will continue along the lines.laid down in previous years.
  8586.  
  8587. These
  8588.  
  8589. involve the synthesis and pharmacological and clinical evaluation
  8590. of compounds of those chemical families known to have hpplication
  8591. in the psychichemical and "K" fields.
  8592.  
  8593. During the past year important
  8594.  
  8595. compounds
  8596. progress-has been made in the area related to stressor
  8597. and the relationship of these materials to the physiological pathways
  8598. through which both stress and the reaction to it are mediated in
  8599. human beings. (As is indicated in the attached proposal, the work
  8600. of the past year has progressed to the point where more definitive
  8601. experiments on the stress reaction can be carried out.
  8602.  
  8603. Primarily
  8604.  
  8605. this was brought about by the characterization of several new
  8606. .u
  8607. 0
  8608. P o
  8609.  
  8610. and the applicamaterials which produce stress reaction in humans
  8611. the
  8612. tion of some new clinical methods of measuring the extent of
  8613. disturbance produced.
  8614.  
  8615. During the next year proportionally more
  8616.  
  8617. of new
  8618. effort will be expended on the problem of the development
  8619.  
  8620. -
  8621.  
  8622. 160
  8623.  
  8624. is desirable in this direction and because a new approach to the
  8625. problem has been worked out.
  8626.  
  8627. a.
  8628.  
  8629. also serves as a general consultant to
  8630.  
  8631. the Agency, provides services of a sensitive nature on an ad hoc
  8632. basis, and serves as a cut-out in procurement problems.
  8633. 3.
  8634.  
  8635. The total cost of this project for a period of one year
  8636.  
  8637. will not exceed $71, 500. 00.
  8638.  
  8639. Charges should be made against
  8640.  
  8641. Allotment 0525-1009-4902.
  8642. has been requested to submit a summary
  8643.  
  8644. 4.
  8645.  
  8646. accounting or a copy of the Fund's annual audit report for the
  8647. sponsor's insection.
  8648.  
  8649. Also, it has been requested that any unexpended
  8650.  
  8651. funds shall be returned to the Agency.
  8652. 5.
  8653.  
  8654. Title to any permanent equipment purchased by funds
  8655. shall be retained b
  8656.  
  8657. granted
  8658.  
  8659. , in lieu of higher overhead rates.
  8660. 6.
  8661.  
  8662. It was mutually agreed that documentation and accounting
  8663.  
  8664. for travel expenses which are normally reimbursable byIP.
  8665. -
  8666.  
  8667. Fund.
  8668.  
  8669. tosraded ts: CCORNIUML
  8670. autority off: 187475
  8671. ca
  8672. datc: June 1977
  8673. E2 I""DT: CL BY 187475
  8674.  
  8675. Mshall conform with the accepted practices of the
  8676.  
  8677. 161
  8678. MMORANDM FOR:
  8679.  
  8680. TE
  8681.  
  8682. SUBJECT
  8683.  
  8684. Subpxoect ro.
  8685. Continuation of MKOLTRA,
  8686.  
  8687. 1.
  8688.  
  8689. MOD
  8690.  
  8691. 45
  8692.  
  8693. The scope of this subproject includes all those activities
  8694.  
  8695. nov/ngaged in by
  8696. ~
  8697.  
  8698. under the direction of TSD/EB vith zbh exception of-those cutoutfunctions specifically mentioned in connection with other
  8699. subprojects.
  8700.  
  8701. IMLTRA
  8702.  
  8703. In general, the research effort under this subproject
  8704.  
  8705. will continue along the lines laid down in previous years.
  8706.  
  8707. These
  8708.  
  8709. involve the synthesis and pharmacological and clinical evaluation of
  8710. compounds of those chemical families known to have application in the
  8711. psychochemical and "K"fields.
  8712.  
  8713. During the coming year it is planned
  8714.  
  8715. to concentrate more directly on the more practical aspects of the
  8716. "knockout" problem.
  8717.  
  8718. Enough new potent substances have become available
  8719.  
  8720. lately to make such a change in-emphasis -vorthihila. In connection
  8721. with this change it
  8722. w
  8723.  
  8724. aMENM
  8725.  
  8726. should be noted that certain findings made in
  8727.  
  8728. project at U
  8729.  
  8730. vhich cannot 3e further exploited at
  8731.  
  8732. that facility vill be pursued at
  8733. reason it
  8734.  
  8735. in the future.
  8736.  
  8737. may be necessary to supplement the f
  8738.  
  8739. For this
  8740.  
  8741. andigl
  8742. of this subproject
  8743.  
  8744. from time to time during the year due to increases of scope.
  8745. 2.
  8746.  
  8747. also serves as a general consultant to the
  8748.  
  8749. Agency, provides services of a sensitive nature on an ad hoc basis,
  8750. and serves as a cutout in-procurement problems.
  8751.  
  8752. .E2
  8753.  
  8754. I'?=;
  8755.  
  8756. CL BY 187475
  8757.  
  8758. 162
  8759. 3.
  8760.  
  8761. *In
  8762.  
  8763. total
  8764.  
  8765. ot
  8766.  
  8767. not exceed $40,000.00.
  8768.  
  8769. of this proJ.t
  8770.  
  8771. for a pefi
  8772.  
  8773. of
  8774.  
  8775. ne ye-
  8776.  
  8777. .1l
  8778.  
  8779. Charges should be made against Allotment
  8780.  
  8781. 2125-1390-3902.
  8782. *
  8783.  
  8784. O.
  8785.  
  8786. bas been requested to submit a summary
  8787.  
  8788. accounting or a copy of the Fund's annual audit report for the
  8789. sponsor's. inspection.
  8790.  
  8791. Also, it has been requested that any unexpended
  8792.  
  8793. funds shall be returned to the Agency.
  8794. 5.
  8795.  
  8796. Title to any permanent equipment purchased by funds granted
  8797.  
  8798. 6
  8799.  
  8800. M shall be retained by
  8801. in lieu of higher overhead rates.
  8802. 6.
  8803.  
  8804. It vas mutually agreed that documentation and accounting for
  8805.  
  8806. travel expenses which are normally reimbursable by
  8807. shall conform with the accepted practices of the Fund.
  8808.  
  8809. Chief
  8810.  
  8811. TSD/Research Branch
  8812. APPROVED FOR OBLIGATION O FUNDS:
  8813.  
  8814. Research Director
  8815. De
  8816. Attachment:
  8817. Distribution:
  8818.  
  8819. Proposal and Budget
  8820. Original only
  8821.  
  8822. 163
  8823.  
  8824. MEMORANDUM FOR
  8825.  
  8826. SUBJECT
  8827.  
  8828. o
  8829.  
  8830. THE RECORD
  8831.  
  8832. :MKULTRA, Subproject 149
  8833.  
  8834. 1.
  8835.  
  8836. Lt
  8837.  
  8838. 4
  8839.  
  8840. This subproject is being established for the purpose
  8841.  
  8842. of supporting realistic tests of certain development items and
  8843. delivery systems of interest. to TSD/BB.
  8844. 2.
  8845.  
  8846. During the course of development it is sometimes
  8847.  
  8848. found that certain very necessary experiments or tests are not
  8849. suited to ordinary laboratory facilities.
  8850.  
  8851. At the same time,
  8852.  
  8853. it would be difficult if not imp&ssible to conduct such tests
  8854. as operatiqnal field tests.
  8855.  
  8856. This project is designed .to pro-
  8857.  
  8858. vide a capability and facilities to fill this intermediate
  8859. requirement.
  8860. 3.
  8861.  
  8862. The activities under this subproject will be con-
  8863.  
  8864. ducted by Mr.
  8865. export business,
  8866.  
  8867. ,
  8868.  
  8869. in
  8870.  
  8871. an individual in the import and
  8872. Mr.
  8873.  
  8874. e
  8875.  
  8876. holds a TOP
  8877.  
  8878. SECRET Treasury Department cleafice and a SECRET Agency
  8879. He is completely witting of the aims and goals of
  8880.  
  8881. approval.
  8882.  
  8883. his activities.
  8884. . 4.
  8885.  
  8886. possesses unique facilities and personal
  8887.  
  8888. Mr.
  8889.  
  8890. abilities which makes him invaluable in this kind of testing
  8891. operation.
  8892.  
  8893. Mr.
  8894.  
  8895. because of Iis peculiar
  8896.  
  8897. lants..and
  8898.  
  8899. -
  8900.  
  8901. capabilities as well, as his excellent connections with all of
  8902. the local law enforceient agencies, will provide a unique and
  8903. essential capability.
  8904. sident of the
  8905.  
  8906. is no longer re-C.
  8907.  
  8908. Because Mr.
  8909. area,
  8910.  
  8911. it
  8912.  
  8913. is
  8914.  
  8915. necessary that a
  8916.  
  8917. suitable replacement be provided in order that a capability
  8918. for continuance of our activities be maintained.
  8919. 5.
  8920.  
  8921. The estimated cost of the project is $10,000.00 for
  8922.  
  8923. a period of one year.
  8924.  
  8925. Charges should be made against Allotment
  8926.  
  8927. Number 4125-1390-3902.
  8928.  
  8929. Reimbursement will be made for services
  8930.  
  8931. rendered.
  8932. 6.
  8933.  
  8934. Accounting for funds advanced and any equipment under
  8935.  
  8936. this- subproject will be in accordance with account ng proce
  8937. ures established by
  8938. 7.
  8939.  
  8940. A memorandum of agreement along lines estab
  8941.  
  8942. shed by
  8943.  
  8944. previous audit recommendations in like situations will be
  8945. executed.
  8946.  
  8947. TSD/Biological Branch
  8948.  
  8949. Distribution:
  8950. Original only
  8951.  
  8952. 165
  8953. SUBJECT:
  8954. 1.
  8955. 2.
  8956.  
  8957. 3.
  8958.  
  8959. of
  8960. This is a request for financial support for research on the mechanism
  8961. brain concussion for the period 1 Feb 1956 to 1 Feb 1957.
  8962. The resonance-cavitation theory upon which this research is to be based,
  8963. has been presented in the proposal, submitted to th
  8964. dated 27 March 1954.
  8965. program
  8966. The program as originally submAtted estimated the duration of the
  8967. to be from three to five years requesting a total of $72,109 for the initial
  8968. year.
  8969.  
  8970. 4. At
  8971. ,
  8972.  
  8973. Request for Support of Research on the Mechanism of Brain Concussion
  8974.  
  8975. the request of the
  8976.  
  8977. to $24,925, was then awarded to the
  8978. to support this program from 1 Feb 1955
  8979.  
  8980. 5. .amounting
  8981. t
  8982. 6.
  8983.  
  8984. a reduced budget was submitted.
  8985.  
  8986. Feb 1950.
  8987.  
  8988. as
  8989. The progress made to date under the above contract can be summarized
  8990. follows:
  8991. A. RESEARCH FACILITIES
  8992. The following research facilities have been established for the
  8993. investigation of the very diverse aspects of the problems being
  8994. studied:
  8995. Atotal of 250 square feet of laboratory and office space
  8996. equipped with much of the diversified machinery and apparatus
  8997. necessary for research in this field.
  8998. b. Blast Range
  8999. located
  9000. A blast range has been established at
  9001. This
  9002. ry.
  9003. f the malaors
  9004. approximately
  9005. is closed to the public.
  9006. area is owned rby theMand
  9007. Three blast test-series have been run to date.
  9008. Arrangments have been made with the
  9009. hmncadavers.
  9010.  
  9011. WARNING
  9012. ELLIGENtCE
  9013. ;ES' AND METHODS IN1VOLVED
  9014.  
  9015. for use of their
  9016. A test area has been assigned for this
  9017.  
  9018. 166
  9019.  
  9020. B.
  9021.  
  9022. PERSONNEL
  9023.  
  9024. - -
  9025.  
  9026. Both full-time technical personnel and part-time professional
  9027. research personnel have been acquired and indoctrinated relative
  9028. to their specific function.
  9029. C. TECHNICAL PROGRESS
  9030. Following is the technical progress made uxder the current
  9031. contract:
  9032. a.
  9033.  
  9034. Specialized instrumentation and numerous testing techniques
  9035. have been developed to obtain-the desired dynamic data.
  9036.  
  9037. b.
  9038.  
  9039. Considerable data has now been obtained supporting the
  9040. resonance-cavitation theory of brain concussion.
  9041.  
  9042. c.
  9043.  
  9044. Preliminary acceleration threshold data has been obtained
  9045. for a fluid-filled glass simulated skull.
  9046.  
  9047. d.
  9048.  
  9049. Data kas been obtained on the nature and the magnitude of
  9050. pressure fluctuations within a glass simulated skull subject
  9051. to either impact or sound waves propagated in air.
  9052.  
  9053. e.
  9054.  
  9055. Initial studies have been made on the simulated glass skull
  9056. attempting to establish the cavitation patterns for various
  9057. types of impact.
  9058.  
  9059. 7.
  9060.  
  9061. The proposed method and program plan remain the same as stated in the
  9062. original proposal, except for the temporary- deletion of the immersion
  9063. blast study.
  9064.  
  9065. 8.
  9066.  
  9067. The current level of activity on this ptoject can be indicated by the
  9068. most recent billing to the
  9069. for the month of November, which amounted
  9070. to $4,034.61.
  9071.  
  9072. 9.
  9073.  
  9074. In the interest of efficiency and economy it is requested that at least
  9075. this level of activity be maintained for the coming year.
  9076.  
  9077. WARNING Nfl
  9078. SELLIGENCE
  9079. AND METHODS INVOLVED
  9080.  
  9081. 167
  9082.  
  9083. 1.1
  9084.  
  9085. Trotter.
  9086.  
  9087. W. defies
  9088.  
  9089. brain concussion as,
  9090.  
  9091. 'an essentially
  9092.  
  9093. due to head injury which is of instantanious
  9094. transient state
  9095. onset, manifests widespread symptoms of purely paralytic
  9096. kind, does not as such comprise any evidence of structural
  9097. cerebral injury, and is always followed by amnesia for the
  9098. actual moment of the accident."
  9099.  
  9100. 10.2
  9101.  
  9102. The implication of the underlined portion of the above statement
  9103. is that if a technique were devised to induce brain concussion
  9104. without giving either advance warning or causing external physical
  9105. trauma, the person upon recovery would be unable to recall what
  9106. had happened to him.
  9107. Under these conditions the same technique
  9108. of producing the concussion could be re-used many times without
  9109. disclosure of its nature.
  9110.  
  9111. 10.3
  9112.  
  9113. First, considering the possibilities of direct impact to the
  9114. head or body, it should be..possible-from the findings of this
  9115. research program to determine the following:
  9116. a. Optimum design of impacting devices.
  9117. b. Optimum points of impact on skull or body
  9118. for the specific effects desired..
  9119. c. Intensity of the blow for the effect desired.
  9120.  
  9121. 10.4
  9122.  
  9123. In regard to the potential impacting devices, there are certain
  9124. design requsitesothat are apparent at this time:
  9125. a. The impact should be delivered without
  9126. advance warning.
  9127. b.. The area of impact and force distribution
  9128. should be such that surface trauma does
  9129. not occur.
  9130. c. The intensity of the impacting force and
  9131. its duration should be such as to obtain
  9132. the desired effect.
  9133. d. The device should be as small and as silent
  9134. as possible.
  9135.  
  9136. 10.5
  9137.  
  9138. The specific impacting devices might take the form of any of
  9139. the following:
  9140. a. A pancake type black-jack giving a high peak
  9141. impact force with a low unit surface pressure.
  9142. b. Concealed or camouflaged spring-loaded impacting
  9143. devices that trigger upon contact with the head.
  9144.  
  9145. (Original and sole copy
  9146.  
  9147. :agg)
  9148.  
  9149. 168
  9150. -
  9151.  
  9152. .*.
  9153.  
  9154. -
  9155.  
  9156. .-
  9157.  
  9158. a.
  9159.  
  9160. A prcjecttle
  9161.  
  9162. u sing a sall
  9163.  
  9164. type
  9165.  
  9166. mpeter
  9167.  
  9168. shot fllb
  9169.  
  9170. oan
  9171.  
  9172. eack
  9173.  
  9174. as
  9175. fo
  9176.  
  9177. asr.
  9178. ear
  9179. proJectle.
  9180.  
  9181. an,
  9182.  
  9183. a
  9184.  
  9185. d. An explosive pad detonated in contact with the
  9186. head or the body.
  9187. 10.6
  9188.  
  9189. Let us now consider the possibilities of exciting the resonance
  9190. There is coaisiderable evidence
  9191. cavitation directly without impact.
  9192. that resonance cavitation can be induced directljr in the following
  9193. ways:
  9194. a. A blast wave propagated in air. (Blast Concussion)
  9195. b. Physical excitation with a mechanical driver
  9196. or horn, tuned to the resonant frequency of
  9197. the head.
  9198.  
  9199. 10.7
  9200.  
  9201. A single blast pressure wave propagated in air must have considerable
  9202. intensity in order to produce brain concussion, however, there is
  9203. considerable evidence (Carver & Dinsley) that modification of the
  9204. pressure wave can produce profound effects.
  9205.  
  9206. 10.8
  9207.  
  9208. Excitation of the resonance cavitation by using a tuned driver
  9209. at this time appears to be well within the relm of possibility.
  9210. The neurotic-like manifestations normally associated with blast
  9211. concussion could possibly be induced by this method. Use of
  9212. this methodtiowever, would require actual physical contact with
  9213. the drivers.
  9214.  
  9215. 10.9
  9216.  
  9217. Excitation of the resonance cavitation by tuned sound waves also
  9218. appears to be a reasonable possibility. Concentration of the soundfield at some remote point could be effected with accoustical lenses
  9219. and reflectors. The blast duration would be in the order of a
  9220. tenth of a second. Masking of a noise of this duration should not
  9221. be too dificult.
  9222.  
  9223. 11.0
  9224.  
  9225. It would possibly.be advantageous to establish the effectivness
  9226. of both of the above methods as a tool in brain-wash therapy.
  9227. A full knowledge of the method and the rpsulting sequela should be
  9228. of aid to any person forced to submit to such treatment.
  9229.  
  9230. 12.0
  9231.  
  9232. Possibly the most significant potential aspect of this study would
  9233. be in the development of practical means of giving a person immunity,
  9234. One technique that appears
  9235. even though temporary, to brain concussion.
  9236. to have potentialities involves the introduction of a small quantity
  9237. This gas bubble
  9238. of gas, approximately 1 cc, into the spinal cord.
  9239. would then normally migrate to the ventricles located at the centrun
  9240. of the brain. The ability of this bubble to expand under dynamic
  9241. loading would be most effective in preventing resonance cavitation
  9242. from occuring.
  9243.  
  9244. (Original and sole copy
  9245.  
  9246. :agg)
  9247.  
  9248. %6-4C8 13.,(
  9249.  
  9250. MATERIAL FOR THE RECORD
  9251. MKSEARCH. OFTEN/CHICKWIT
  9252. MKSEARCH was the name given to the continuation of the MKULTRA program. Funding commenced in FY 1966, and ended in FY 1972. Its purpose was to
  9253. develop, test, and evaluate capabilities in the covert use of biological, chemical,
  9254. and radioactive material systems and techniques for producing predictable human
  9255. behavioral and/or physiological changes in support of highly sensitive operational
  9256. requirements.
  9257. OFTEN/CHICKWIT
  9258. In 1967 the Office of Research and Development (ORD) and the Edgewood
  9259. Arsenal Research Laboratories undertook a program for doing research on the
  9260. identification and characterization of drugs that could influence human behavior.
  9261. Edgewood had the facilities for the full range of laboratory and clinical testing.
  9262. A phased program was envisioned that would consist of acquisition of drugs and
  9263. chemical compounds believed to have effects on the behavior of humans, and
  9264. testing and evaluating these materials through laboratory procedures and toxicological studies. Compounds believed promising as a result of tests on animals
  9265. were then to be evaluated clinically with human subjects at Edgewood. Substances
  9266. of potential use would then be analyzed structurally as a basis for identifying and
  9267. synthesizing possible new derivatives of greater utility.
  9268. The program was divided into two projects. Project OFTEN was to deal with
  9269. testing the toxicological, transmisivity and behavioral effects of drugs in animals
  9270. and, ultimately, humans. Project CHICKWIT was concerned-with acquiring information on new drug developments in Europe and the Orient, and with acquiring
  9271. samples.
  9272. There is a discrepancy between the testimony of DOD and CIA regarding the
  9273. testing at Edgewood Arsenal in June 1973. While there is agreement that human
  9274. testing occurred at that place and time, there is disagreement as to who was
  9275. responsible for financing and sponsorship. (See hearings before the Subcommittee
  9276. on Health and Scientific Research of the Senate Human Resources Committee,
  9277. September 21, 1977.)
  9278. (169)
  9279.  
  9280. THE DIRECTOR OF CENTRAL. INTELLIGENCE
  9281. WASHINGTON, D. C. 20505
  9282.  
  9283. Office of Legislative Counsel
  9284.  
  9285. 23 December
  9286.  
  9287. 1977
  9288.  
  9289. Honorable Daniel K. Inouye, Chairman
  9290. Select Committee on Intelligence
  9291. United States Senate
  9292. Washington, D.C.
  9293. 20510
  9294. Dear Mr. Chairman:
  9295. During Admiral Turner's 3 August 1977 testimony
  9296. before your Committee and the Senate Human Resources
  9297. Subcommittee on Health and Scientific Research, you asked
  9298. whether any Agency employees had been terminated because of
  9299. their participation in MKULTRA Subproject 3. Admiral
  9300. Turner indicated he did not believe any employee had
  9301. been terminated, but would have Agency records searched
  9302. on this question. Our records have been searched and the
  9303. results confirm the Director's testimony that no such
  9304. actions were taken.
  9305. Sincerel
  9306.  
  9307. Ge
  9308. Car
  9309. egislatve Counsel
  9310.  
  9311. 171
  9312.  
  9313. QKHILLTOP DEFINITION
  9314. QKHILLTOP was a cryptonym assigned in 1954 to a project to study Chinese
  9315. Communist brainwashing techniques and' to develop interrogation techniques.
  9316. Most of the early studies are believed to have been conducted by the Cornell
  9317. University Medical School Huipan Ecology Study Programs. The effort was
  9318. absorbed into the MKULTRA program and the QKHILLTOP cryptonym became
  9319. obsolete. The Society for the investigation of Human Ecology, later the Human
  9320. Ecology Fund, was an outgrowth of the QKHILLTOP.
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