How CIA Brainwashing Became a San Francisco Treat
By Carl Austin
| Image courtesy flickr |
First a little background…
Ever since the waning
days of World War II, the Office of Strategic Services, forerunner of the CIA,
was obsessed with using powerful drugs to bend the minds of men. Late in 1943, a series of field tests were initiated
by George White, a former FBI agent turned OSS operative who administered a dose
of concentrated tetrahydrocannabinol that had been injected into cigarettes to a known member of the New York underworld.
The objective wasn’t to get the mobster high, it was to get him to spill
his guts. The substance did indeed
loosen the mobster’s tongue, only to provide Agent White with all kinds of insights into the inner working of the black market during the latter part of World War II.
| Image courtesy flickr |
Of course, that wasn’t
the end of the experiment. Far from it.
When the OSS morphed into the CIA in 1947, one of the top items on its agenda
was to continue to ferret out and turn enemy infiltrators, which soon morphed
into eliminating the Red Menace of communism.
This paranoid byproduct of the Cold War took flight when western
intelligence analysts noted how Soviet bloc show trials routinely produced
prisoners who stood like zombies only to confess to any crime proffered by the
prosecutor. Even worse was when a flurry
of American POWs who were taken prisoner by the Chinese during the Korean War readily
confessed to perpetrating crimes against humanity that they clearly didn’t
commit.
It wasn’t long after the
war ended when the CIA began quietly recruiting academics and chemists to study
the effects of pharmaceuticals to break down the resistance of prisoners as
well as to try to make unwitting subjects perform tasks against their
will. Hollywood took to calling this
form of brainwashing the Manchurian Candidate.
But the intelligence community knew the process as MKUltra.
Starting in 1953 with a
$300,000 budget provided by then CIA Director Allen Dulles, the program was
tasked with investigating the use of chemical and biological material for
espionage purposes. Among other
institutions recruited to participate in the program were Columbia University
and Mt Sinai Hospital in New York. One
of the substances the Agency was interested in experimenting with was LSD. Subjects exposed to the hallucinogen included
incarcerated prisoners, prostitutes and drug addicts. But they weren’t the only guinea pigs. At the height of the program, the CIA’s lead
chemist Sidney Gottlieb dosed several of his own colleagues without their
knowledge just to see what would happen.
One of them, Dr. Frank Olsen had an adverse reaction to the drug which
not only caused him to have a mental breakdown but soon thereafter was implicated in his death when he fell from a hotel window in Manhattan.
| Image courtesy flickr |
It was largely due to
this highly publicized incident that the CIA decided to move its operation
from the East Coast to the West Coast.
Posing as a journalist, the same George White who gave a mobster marijuana-laced cigarettes, rented out a townhouse at 225 Chestnut Street in San Francisco. He then proceeded to deck it out with
everything from Toulouse-Lautrec posters and kinky photos to a state-of-the-art
surveillance system and two-way mirrors that allowed him to observe and record everything
that went on in the apartment.
Codenamed “Operation
Midnight Climax,” George hired several hookers who were told to work various
North Beach bars in order to lure unsuspecting Johns up to what White called
“the Pad.” There the Johns were plied
with sex, as well as cocktails laced with LSD.
The prostitutes who had been recruited for the operation were paid by
White partly in cash and partly in chits that were a veritable get out of jail
free card. It seems that George’s clout
extended to the SFPD who weren’t exactly kept in the loop by the Agency but
were told not to bust his operation or hassle the girls working for him.
| Image courtesy flickr |
Using sex to recruit
agents in the field was nothing new. The
CIA had been using Honey Traps for years to compromise foreign assets. The difference in San Francisco was not only
the addition of hallucinogenic substances like LSD, but White’s agents were
giving it to unsuspecting Americans as opposed to enemy combatants. By
the time Operation Midnight Climax ended in 1965, White was no longer limiting his
operatives to drugging unsuspecting subjects in the Pad. By this point, his agents were purportedly dosing
people at random in bars and restaurants as well as at a popular beach. They also started dosing their
subjects with other experimental substances. Years later, a CIA asset revealed to author John Marks, “If we were too scared
of a drug to try it ourselves, we’d send it to San Francisco.”
It wasn’t until 1963 that
a CIA auditor stumbled upon the operation and raised a stink. Still, it took another two years before the
operation was shut down and the Pad was closed for good. What’s even worse is that nobody with the
exception of those agents involved in Operation Midnight Climax know the full
extent of the shenanigans that took place at 225 Chestnut Street. That’s because the Agency shredded most of its
MK Ultra records in the mid-1970’s. While
George White played at being a journalist, it wasn’t until 1974 when an actual
journalist from the New York Times blew the lid off the CIA’s illicit domestic
operations. By then it was too late for
many of the unwitting Americans who had been treated like lab rats by the Agency
during this and other wide-ranging facets of MK Ultra.
Far from being
apologetic, it was later reported that CIA agent George White stated, “I toiled
wholeheartedly in the vineyard because it was fun, fun, fun. Where else could a red-blooded American boy
lie, cheat, steal, rape, pillage and kill with the blessing of the All-Mighty?”
You can’t make up shit
like this, folks.
| Image courtesy flickr |
While the majority of
those who were harmed by the MKUltra program received little in the way of acknowledgement
let alone compensation, one victim was vindicated. On July 21, 1975, President Gerald Ford formerly
apologized to the family of Dr. Frank Olsen.
In addition to the meeting in the Oval Office, Olsen’s wife later
received $750,000 to settle her husband’s wrongful death suit. While the government averred that Dr. Olsen had
taken his own life, his family begged to differ. To date, it was the only time the federal
government officially admitted any blame for wrongdoing committed during the MKUltra program. While it was reported that the mind control program was shut down for good in the 70's, nobody really knows for sure what takes place behind closed doors in the black budget world of international intrigue.
If you liked this
webisode and love mysteries, make sure you subscribe to my YouTube channel and
check out my Patreon site. Next week,
I’ll tell you about a little-known incident involving the San Francisco Police
Department, three off-duty cops and a bag of fajitas that nearly brought the
SFPD to its knees. Make sure you’re in the loop.
You have to watch out for our government. I am sure MKUltra was just one of the many nasty ticks they have played on the Amercian people.
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