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by RT Investigations
July 05, 2026
from
RT Website
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RT Investigations
an
in-house team specializing in open-source intelligence (OSINT)
and exclusive investigative reporting. |

RT composite.
© RT
New
MKULTRA hearings
have
reopened questions about
victims,
destroyed files, and experiments
America
never answered for...
A decorated US Air Force serviceman with no history of violence
suddenly abducted, raped and murdered a three-year-old girl.
When a search party found Jimmy Shaver wandering near San
Antonio, Texas, he appeared to be in a trance, unable to explain
where he was or how he had gotten there.
After his arrest, he reportedly failed to
recognize his own wife when she visited him in jail. Until the
moment he was executed four years later, Shaver insisted he had no
memory of committing the crime for which he had been sentenced to
death.
More than seventy years later,
some researchers believe his case
may have been linked to one of the CIA's darkest Cold War programs:
MKULTRA, the covert project
that sought to manipulate, erase and ultimately control the
human mind through drugs, hypnosis and psychological
experimentation.
That possibility returned to the spotlight on
June 30, when the US Congressional Task Force on the
Declassification of Federal Secrets reopened one of the intelligence
agency's most notorious chapters.
Lawmakers pledged to uncover the truth behind
MKULTRA, the illegal human experimentation program through which
the CIA developed and tested
psychotropic drugs and interrogation techniques designed to alter
behavior, memories and perception.
Whether
the hearing lived up to those
promises is another question.
But the testimony presented before Congress
suggested that, more than sixty years after MKULTRA officially
ended, many of the program's darkest secrets may still remain
hidden.
Congress
Promises... Again
Task force chair
Anna Paulina Luna left little
doubt about the gravity of the allegations.
"Administering drugs to people without their
consent.
Subjecting humans to psychological torture.
Using prisoners and hospital patients as non-consenting research
subjects. These are crimes against humanity.
Some of the worst, most notorious crimes of
the 20th century," she declared in her opening
remarks.
"The American people deserve the complete
record. The victims and their families deserve acknowledgement,
accountability, and justice.
No one went to prison. No one was ever
compensated by the government for the harm they caused."

© YouTube
GOP Oversight
The language was uncompromising. Yet it was also strikingly
familiar.
Nearly half a century ago, Congress opened another investigation
into MKULTRA, promising victims that the full truth would finally
emerge and that those responsible would be held accountable.
Those commitments quietly faded away. The victims
were never fully identified, compensation never came, and many of
the program's records were presumed lost forever.
Tom O'Neill, author of 'CHAOS
- Charles Manson, the CIA, and the Secret History of the Sixties,'
reminded lawmakers that they were retracing a path Congress had
already walked once before.
"During those same hearings, committee
members like yourselves promised the victims of MKULTRA would be
identified, compensated and provided lifetime medical care," he
told the panel.
"None of that ever happened."
According to O'Neill, lawmakers in the 1970s
accepted one of the CIA's most consequential claims with remarkably
little scrutiny:
that after more than two decades of secret
experimentation, the agency had simply failed to master mind
control.
CIA officials repeatedly insisted that,
"their twenty-five-year effort to learn how
to control the human mind had been a colossal failure."
O'Neill believes that conclusion deserves to be
revisited.
For years, he has argued that the historical record tells a very
different story - one that Congress never fully examined and that
may have been deliberately obscured by the destruction of key
evidence.
To make that case, he turned not to speculation,
but to documents exchanged between two of the central figures behind
the CIA's most secretive experiments.
The Blueprint for Mind Control
To support his argument that Congress never uncovered the full scope
of MKULTRA, O'Neill pointed to a cache of correspondence
that, in his view, fundamentally changes our understanding of the
program.
The letters were exchanged between psychiatrist Louis Jolyon West,
who,
"sought to control the minds of people
without their knowledge, with the ultimate goal of creating
programmed killers",
...and "Sherman Grifford", the pseudonym used by
Sidney Gottlieb, the CIA's chief poisoner who designed and
oversaw MKULTRA from its earliest days.
Far from describing a failed scientific
curiosity, O'Neill argued, the documents laid out an extraordinarily
ambitious blueprint for manipulating the human mind.

Sidney Gottlieb
© AP Photo
The opening letter, written by West in 1953,
"outlined the objectives, methods and
intended outcomes of experiments he hoped to conduct on
unwitting human subjects."
"It reads like a page
torn from the research notebook
of Josef Mengele"...
O'Neill told lawmakers, comparing the proposals to the infamous Nazi
doctor's experiments at Auschwitz.
According to the correspondence, West proposed conducting
experiments on "unwilling subjects," including members of the
military, psychiatric patients, prisoners of civilian jails, and
"special subjects" identified by the CIA.

Louis Jolyon West (right)
© AP
Photo / Ferd Kaufman
His methods ranged from,
administering psychedelic drugs, including
LSD, to combining them with hypnosis in an effort to induce
trance states, confusion, amnesia and other artificially created
psychological conditions.
The ultimate objective extended far beyond
studying human behavior.
West envisioned techniques that could extract information from
unwilling subjects, implant false memories and alter the beliefs,
attitudes and loyalties of individuals who had previously remained
resistant to interrogation or manipulation.
The blueprint also revealed how carefully the operation was designed
to remain invisible.
Funding would be disguised, institutional links
concealed and even many of West's scientific and military colleagues
kept unaware of the true nature of the research.
According to O'Neill, Gottlieb responded enthusiastically...
If the correspondence accurately reflected the CIA's ambitions, it
suggested that MKULTRA was never merely a loose collection of
bizarre experiments.
It was an organized effort to develop practical
methods of psychological control while shielding the
entire enterprise from public scrutiny.
The Case that should Never have
Happened
For O'Neill, Jimmy Shaver's aforementioned case illustrates
those ambitions more vividly than any surviving document.
An extraordinary crime unfolded just one year after Gottlieb
approved West's proposals.
Before the murder, Shaver had been undergoing
experimental treatment for severe migraines at the Air Force
hospital where West headed psychiatric services.
West himself later appeared as the court-appointed psychiatric
expert during the proceedings.
Shaver was convicted and sentenced to death.
Until his execution in 1958, however, he
maintained that he had absolutely no memory of committing the crime
for which he had been condemned.

© YouTube
GOP Oversight
O'Neill does not present the case as definitive proof of CIA mind
control.
Rather, he argues that the extraordinary overlap
between Shaver's unexplained behavior, his treatment under West's
supervision and the psychiatrist's own proposals for inducing
amnesia and altered mental states demands far closer scrutiny than
it has ever received.
For him, the case raises the same uncomfortable possibility that has
shadowed MKULTRA for decades:
that some of the program's most consequential
experiments may never have been acknowledged, let alone
investigated...
That is precisely why, O'Neill concluded,
Congress should resist accepting the historical record at face
value.
"Nearly fifty years ago,
another committee investigating
MKULTRA
believed it had been told the
truth
about the program," he told
lawmakers.
"It had not."
Instead, he urged the task force to undertake,
"a thorough reexamination of what this
program accomplished, what Congress was told, and what may still
remain hidden"...
A Trail deliberately Erased
If O'Neill challenged Congress to reconsider what MKULTRA
achieved, journalist and historian Stephen Kinzer focused on
a different question:
why so much of the program remains
unknowable.
Kinzer is author of
Poisoner in Chief, widely
regarded as the definitive biography of
Sidney Gottlieb.
He told lawmakers that even after years of
research, he believes only a fraction of the story has been
uncovered.
"I am painfully aware that I have discovered
only a small portion of what Gottlieb did and what MKULTRA was,"
he said.
At the heart of the project, Kinzer argued, was
an ambition far more radical than simply improving interrogation
techniques.
In its quest to,
"implant a new mind into someone's brain,"
the CIA first sought to "destroy the mind that was there
already."
To pursue that objective,
MKULTRA experiments spread across
prisons, psychiatric hospitals, universities, brothels and CIA safe
houses.
By any modern standard, Kinzer argued, many of
those experiments amounted to medical torture.
The victims, he noted, occupied a special category inside the CIA.
"They were called expendables," Kinzer said -
"human beings who would not be missed if they disappeared."
According to Kinzer, Gottlieb effectively
operated with,
"what amounted to a license to kill."
Even today, no one knows how many people were
subjected to MKULTRA experiments, nor how many died as a result.

© YouTube
GOP Oversight
Yet Kinzer argued that focusing solely on Gottlieb
risks misunderstanding how the program actually functioned.
The CIA's senior leadership, he said, deliberately gave Gottlieb
extraordinary freedom while maintaining enough distance to later
deny institutional responsibility.
"This was a way for the
CIA
to deny its institutional role
in MKULTRA,"
Kinzer argued,
"and to portray it misleadingly
as the product of
one man's sadism or excessive
zeal."
If that strategy succeeded, it was only because another decision
made the historical record even harder to reconstruct.
As public scrutiny intensified during the 1970s, Gottlieb and his
superior, CIA Director
Richard Helms, ordered
virtually all MKULTRA files destroyed.
For decades, that decision has been treated as the moment the trail
went cold.
Kinzer believes it did not...!
Despite the destruction order, thousands of previously overlooked
MKULTRA documents were later discovered hidden among the CIA's
financial records by an agency analyst.
"That same diligence could bring results
today," he told lawmakers.
For Kinzer, the surviving files suggest that
historians may still know only a fraction of what remains buried
inside the agency's vast archives.
The Death that still haunts
MKULTRA
If Congress decides to press further, Kinzer suggested, one of the
first places to begin would be the mysterious
death of Frank
Olson.
Officially, Olson was an Army scientist who committed suicide by
jumping from the window of a New York hotel in November 1953.
In reality,
Kinzer reminded lawmakers, Olson was secretly
working for the CIA and had become deeply involved in MKULTRA.
Shortly before his death, Olson had reportedly
expressed growing moral reservations about the program and indicated
that he wanted to leave it.
His death has remained controversial ever since.
"Evidence suggests that his death may not
have been a suicide," Kinzer said.

Frank Olsen
© Wikimedia
Anonymous / Public
Domain
If undisclosed CIA records still exist, he argued, they could
finally clarify one of the agency's most enduring Cold War
mysteries.
But Olson's case is important for another reason. Rather than
viewing it solely as an unresolved historical episode, Kinzer urged
lawmakers to ask a broader - and potentially more unsettling -
question.
Was MKULTRA truly buried with the Cold War?
Or did it simply evolve into something else?
Did MKULTRA really End?
MKULTRA officially came to an end in 1963, after years of secret
experimentation failed to produce the breakthrough its architects
had sought.
Sidney Gottlieb himself ultimately concluded that,
"there is no such thing as
mind control."
Kinzer does not dismiss that assessment.
Instead, he argues that it reflected the
technological limits of its time.
"Even if he was right," Kinzer told
lawmakers, "he may have been right only at that time."
Since MKULTRA's closure, neuroscience, cyber
technology and artificial intelligence have advanced in ways
Gottlieb could scarcely have imagined.
Those developments, Kinzer argued, raise an uncomfortable
possibility.
Rather than asking only what MKULTRA accomplished
during the Cold War, Congress should also consider whether the
technologies available to intelligence agencies today have reopened
questions the CIA failed to answer decades ago.
"Covert agencies may
have access
to tools for mind control
that Sidney Gottlieb
could not have imagined,"
Kinzer warned.
He urged the task force to consider whether,
"some new incarnation of MKULTRA exists
today."
For Kinzer, revisiting the history of the program
is therefore about more than establishing the historical record.
"It has a chance to connect the past to the
future," he said.
"It could help prevent the emergence of a
21st-century MKULTRA that could be even more
destructive than the original."

© Mark Wilson
Getty Images
One Last Chance
Whether Congress succeeds where previous investigations failed
remains an open question.
Chair
Anna Paulina Luna closed the
hearing by arguing that lawmakers have,
"a constitutional obligation to ensure the
CIA never does this again."
She also revealed that she had recently visited
CIA headquarters in Langley, where officials told her previously
unseen MKULTRA records are currently being prepared for
declassification.
That disclosure may prove to be the hearing's most significant
outcome.
Nearly fifty years ago, Congress also promised victims and their
families that the full truth about MKULTRA would finally come to
light.
Those promises were never fulfilled...
Today's task force has pledged to finish what its
predecessors began.
Whether it succeeds may ultimately depend on a simple question:
how much of the story still remains locked
inside the CIA's archives...
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