Dark History - 12: MKUltra: Mind Control, Drugs and Robocats
Episode Date: September 22, 2021What if we told you the Government thought LSD could be used for mind control? What if we told you they tested this on thousands of people without their knowledge? Or what if we told you the CIA was s...licing open cats and putting microphones in them to create adorable little spies? You’d probably think we’re high. Nope. Just the Government. Well, today Bailey tells the story of a secret Government project called MKUltra, where they did all of this. And more. Episode sponosrs include: Zip Recruiter, Wicked Cloths, Upstart and Calm US! Learn more during the podcast about special offers! For 10% off go to Wickedclothes.com and use promo code DARKHISTORY.
Transcript
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Hi friends, I hope you have a wonderful day today.
My name is Bailey Sarian and this is the Dark History Podcast.
Welcome!
If you're a curious cat like myself then let's go on a journey and let's learn something
new, shall we?
Today's story?
Kind of wild.
But let's start with a question.
What do Charles Manson, Alan Ginsburg, the unibomber,
and my uncle Bob who lives off of the grid,
all have in common.
They all claim that they were test subjects
of the government's secret mind control experiments.
I didn't say it, they did, okay?
Now, if you know me, if you know anything about me,
you know I love a good conspiracy theory.
Like, we never went to the moon.
The earth is flat.
Avril Lavigne died and was replaced by a body double.
Now, do I believe these conspiracy theories?
No.
But I enjoy a good bedtime story with like a side of paranoia.
And why not?
You know, life is short, have some fun.
It's just fun to imagine that this might be true.
You know?
Why not?
So if you're interested in conspiracy theories like myself, then you are probably familiar
with the big old daddy conspiracy himself, MK Ultra.
Well, to make it clear, this is no theory, friends.
What if I told you the government was testing on thousands of unwilling patients all over
the country in the hopes to achieve mind control?
Oh, yes.
Or what if I told you that the CIA was cutting up cats and putting microphones in them to create
a little adorable spies?
It's so cute, but weird.
What if I told you there was a CIA agent
whose job it was to sit on a toilet,
pants down, sip in a martini,
watching people have sex,
all in the name of national security.
Would you believe me?
Well, by the end of this you will.
Now, I know what you're thinking.
This couldn't sound anymore like a conspiracy theory.
Like, okay, Bailey, let me go get my tin foil hot.
But let me tell you listeners and viewers at home.
The CIA's documents on this issue were released
and the story we're telling you today, it really happened.
Okay, like this actually happened here in America,
land of the free, allegedly. Well, not even allegedly,
it really did happen. So let's go on a journey and talk about some juicy government goss
and maybe understand how the hell we got to that point. Shall we? Let me open up my book of secrets
to a blank page with nothing on it. Right here, page one. Let's get into it, shall we? Let's do it. Let's start with
a guy named Frank Olsen. Now, Frank was a little smarty pants. Okay, he was a biological
warfare scientist. And then in 1953, the CIA reached out to him and hopes to work together
and develop some kind of new technology they wanted to use. Frank agrees, and the CIA
tells him that they really want to develop some kind of mind control technology, and Frank
would be the best one to do that. I know, already I can tell I'm losing you, but they really did
hire someone to develop actual mind control technology. I'm not just saying that. At this time,
the CIA was wondering, hey, can we control of an individual to the point
where they will do like whatever we want, and then they won't remember any of it?
And Frank was like, yeah, I'm sure I could like help you out with that.
Let me get started.
Now Frank was passionate about his new project.
He wanted to help the CIA and keep America strong. But as time went on, Frank
was noticing something a little suspicious going on. Day after day, he would come into work
and see that the CIA was maybe abusing their power. There was one instance where Frank witnessed
a few interrogations that were a little inhumane. Then there was another
time when he started to see the test subjects being tortured extensively and brutally. Frank read
over his job description, he's like, um, yeah, I don't see anything in here about like having to
kill test subjects or participating in anything inhumane. So he's feeling like a little guilty.
He was really affected by this.
And he was very upset.
So Frank, he put his foot down and decided to say something.
And he's like, hey, you guys, you guys,
I don't think this is a good idea what you're doing.
So then he gets invited to a men's retreat.
And he's like, oh my God, cool, men's retreat,
bonding with the co-workers, love that. So Frank gets to their retreat and he's like, oh my God, cool men's retreat bonding with the co-workers love that
So Frank gets to their treat and he's handed a drink and you're like here. You're thirsty Frankie
And he's like, oh my God. Yeah, so thirsty, you know, so he's taking a drink as you do
And sometimes goes by and Frank notices that he's feeling a little
He's feeling a little funky, you know? The walls, all of a sudden, just start melting.
The piano in the corner is speaking Mandarin.
He can smell the color purple.
And he's like, you know, something ain't right here.
Something ain't right.
And that's when it was announced to everyone in the room,
like an announcement was made.
Pay attention, everybody.
And they're like, hey, so your drinks were actually laced with LSD. It was their turn to be the test subjects.
They told them after they consumed it. Was it a good time at least? No, no, it wasn't. Frank was
in a new setting surrounded by people. He's not even sure he can trust. Well obviously he can't because he just was given a drug
against his will that he has seen being used to torture people. So with this mindset it led to
Frank having a very bad trip. Oh yeah. Luckily for him he makes it out and once he leaves the
men's retreat he has this feeling of great sadness. Regret, you know, what has he gotten himself into? He doesn't even know anymore.
How could these people he trusted and worked for turn the tables and now treat him like
a test subject? He went to a co-worker and he confided in them about how unhappy he was
in the position and that he didn't like where all this was going. So days go by.
Frank was just feeling worse and worse. He couldn't sleep, he couldn't concentrate,
and he was having trouble spelling words. Now these were things he could easily do before this little
men's retreat. Now was this all because of the LSD he was given? Question mark, you know, it was
suggested to him that he'd be hospitalized, which
Frank agrees to. And the hospital, the hospital that was recommended to him, it was
out of town, and they only checked patients in during the morning. So Frank, his
doctor and a CIA co-worker, who were there to like assist Frank, a make sure he
gets checked into to hotel the night before and then take him to the doctors of a hospital the next day.
So all there, there's the three of them.
They go to the hotel.
The three of them that night have dinner.
And Frank told the CIA agent that he was looking forward to his hospitalization because it
was going to give him time to regroup, read some books that he's been putting off forever,
maybe watch some TV, you know.
So the night comes to an end. Frank goes back to his hotel room, and what happens next my friends?
Well, it's different depending on who you ask. So Frank never made it to the hospital the next day
because he allegedly jumped out of the hotel window and fell to his death, which was unlabeled a suicide.
But here's what many think really happened.
You see, the night before Frank's quote unquote suicide, a phone call was made from his
hotel room.
Now, this phone call was made to somebody within the CIA, and allegedly this caller wanted
to let them know Frank had died. Now, that's very unusual because Frank hadn't died yet.
Unless that person making the call was a wizard or something, you know, it just really doesn't
make any sense.
Another thing that was very unusual was that Frank's son asked for a second autopsy to be
performed, because he too was like feeling a little unsure about this suicide situation.
So when the second autopsy came through,
it found out that Frank had no facial scarring
or cuts associated with jumping out of a window.
In fact, there were signs he had damaged suggesting
he had been hit directly in the head.
Now, I don't know about you,
but when you jump out of a window,
it's gonna look like you jumped out of a window, you know?
Like the type of damage that comes
with jumping out of a window,
it would be way more severe.
And it wasn't just lining up with this head trauma
that he had.
So what does it all mean?
Well, that's the big question.
Because isn't it a little odd
that shortly after
confiding in his co-workers at the CIA about how unhappy he was
and how cruel these experiments were,
he just mysteriously died?
And the wounds didn't line up.
What did Frank see that was so bad that it broke him the way it did?
Did he know something much bigger was going on? Well, let's dive into these experiments and try to figure out what Frank saw.
And the only way we can do so is to dig a little bit deeper into these cruel mind control experiments that were being run and funded by the CIA.
that were being run and funded by the CIA. But first, okay, so picture this.
It's the late 1940s and the Americans are scared
shitless of Russia and Korea.
Now Americans were watching Russia, who at this time,
they were economically strong and also they had a very big
military. They also see their successfully testing nuclear bombs,
so America is thinking to themselves like,
shit, that should have been us.
You know, we should have, we should be making these bombs.
They're feeling threatened.
Like why aren't we number one,
where America were supposed to be number one?
Then there's Korea.
In 1950, America and Korea go to war,
Russia and Korea had similar beliefs in like how to run a country,
and these beliefs did not vibe with America's idea of where we should be at in the world. And since,
you know, we're so competitive with them, everything they did felt like a threat to America.
For some reason, Russia really gets under America's skin. It sounds like a very personal problem, like what to do.
Like what?
Did Russia sleep with America's mom or something?
I mean, that's how it feels.
Lady Liberty is low-key a milk.
So now, American soldiers who were captured by the Koreans, because remember, were in war
with them, they returned to America and they were like, hey, the bad guys really aren't
that bad. They're running a pretty cool show over there. So the CIA is listening to these
guys like, what? This isn't very American of them. You can't think or say that about
our enemies. They must have been brainwashed. Obviously, jump into wild conclusions, but
that's exactly what they were thinking. How dare you feel bad for the bad guys, you're not supposed to have feelings.
Kind of like when you're dating a new guy and he doesn't respond to your text messages
and you're like, oh my god, it's over.
He's probably talking to a bunch of chicks, like this was all a game, everyone was right.
And then you start planning your revenge Instagram hot girl post to make them jealous.
You know, just jump into wild ass conclusions. That's exactly what the CIA was doing and they were planning
their hot girl revenge. And at this moment the CIA decided if they're gonna do
mind control, we're gonna do mind control, but 10 times better. So mind control is
a very broad concept and it can mean so many different things.
And I don't think the CIA knew what they were looking for.
They just wanted to see what was possible, you know.
From their perspective, they could get America's own soldiers to be like killing machines
who would forget their mission as soon as they get captured to keep secret safe from the
enemy, you know. mission as soon as they get captured to keep secrets safe from the enemy. Or like if we
captured an enemy, we could use mind control to make them tell us their secrets. Or what
if they could like put some serum into the city's water supply and make them all turn
on their own government. That'd be cool. So they saw their own soldiers come back from Korea with nothing but nice things to say.
And they were totally convinced that everyone else had mind control abilities.
And we were behind.
We needed to catch up.
When the CIA had stumbled upon LSD, they were sure.
They were sure.
They had found their mind control answer.
Now, when you think of LSD,
I know you're thinking about your uncle Bob,
but watching the great full-dead concert,
Uncle Bob calls it acid, but the scientists,
they call it LSD, it's the same thing.
So if you hear me call it acid, LSD, it's the same thing.
Okay.
Anyway, the CIA was betting on LSD
being the answer to control people's minds.
And they were bitten millions on it.
Now if you're unfamiliar with LSD, it's a synthetic drug that causes shit to just start
melting, okay?
You start losing grip of time and space.
Some people experience like their third eye opening up and like you see crazy pictures
in your mind, crazy shapes and just all the colors that ever existed.
And best of all, you can't really overdose on it.
That's great.
And these effects, they can last anywhere from eight to 10 hours.
Now there are some people who have experienced
negative side effects.
Again, you can't overdose on LSD,
but it can cause psychological damage, okay, and leave you with a distorted
sense of reality, which in some cases, may or can lead to self-harm.
So pros and cons.
LSD was invented by a scientist in Switzerland who discovered it by accident.
Yeah, he just like mixed a few chemicals together and was like, whoops, made LSD.
Now he was trying to make something completely different.
It was basically an early form of like an Epi pen,
just a stimulant that counteracted
a respiratory failure or something.
It doesn't really matter because that's not what he made.
When he touched this new drug, he created,
it was absorbed through his skin.
And he began to feel some very interesting side effects. Okay.
The scientist said that he was experiencing like an extremely stimulated imagination.
Kind of like he was in a dream like state and he was seeing fantastic pictures and extraordinary
shapes. He literally had to stop work in the middle of the day
and go home.
His wife was probably like, babe,
what's wrong with you?
Barely touch your cheese, you know?
And he's like, honestly, babe, babe, I'm tripping balls.
Okay, I don't know who's talking to me.
You look like a tear-dacked old-ass melting.
Like, it's kind of funny.
Now this is a, this is a little bit of a side story
and it's also kind of funny
and so I'm gonna share it anyways.
But three days after his accidental trip, the scientist,
he wanted to do more.
I think he was still like experimenting, you know?
So then he went on to take 250 micrograms of LSD.
Now this trip though, he got really high, okay?
So his assistant's like, hey, let me take you home.
Let me take you home like you're not doing good.
And he's like, okay, but I only have my bicycle.
So he hopped on his bike and he's riding home,
just high as a kite on his bike.
Like frickin' dorset or something.
Oh my God, wait a minute.
Is the Wizard of laws about acid?
I mean, she was sucked into the damn tornado.
She talked to a frigging scarecrow.
Her slippers were a time machine
and a lady from a bubble told her what to do.
The more you think about it, the more I'm certain
she was probably high.
Good for her, good for her.
Live your life girl, work.
Now we're gonna to pause for them.
Okay, so I've gotten off track.
Okay, I'm talking about the wizard boss and I just, so let's go back to the scientist.
He accidentally made LSD. Okay.
He was a true believer if you know what I mean.
And he thought he thought this was cool.
He thought he could make a lot of money off of this new invention.
And he started calling it a new miracle drug that could produce a model psychosis, basically meaning
a way to study crazy people without actually having to be around them. They instead could
create crazy people with this drug for a short period of time, and then use it for their
studies. Word of this new drug got back to the CIA in America,
who again, they were looking for ways
to control people's minds.
Oh, they were interested.
They were very interested.
On top of that, they didn't want Russia
or any other country to get their hands
on this magic drug before they could.
So they decide the CIA to like, hey,
what if we just bought all of the drugs?
I'm not talking most of it. I'm talking about all of it. And that's exactly what they did.
The CIA bought 100 million doses of LSD from the Swiss lab. The man behind this large drug
transaction you ask? Well, his name was Sidney Gottlieb.
I think I said that right.
You were actually introduced to this mastermind earlier in our story, and you didn't even
know it.
Remember that little men's retreat I mentioned earlier, with Frank Olsen?
You know, where he got his drink spiked with LSD?
Well, it was spiked by none other than Sidney himself.
Oh yes. You see, Sidney had some big plans for how
LSD could be used and he was willing to do whatever it took to get what he wanted. Sidney was born
August 3rd, 1918, so he was a Leo, and he would go on to spend a huge chunk of his life looking for
some kind of purpose, you know, as we all do. He jumped around from a religion to religion, just looking for a sense of community or just meaning. Now, said
he was deeply patriotic. He freaking loved America. All right, he was like, fuck yeah, America.
And when World War II came around, he was first in line to sign up for that ride. Now,
unfortunately for him, he had a bit of a birth defect
that made his foot a little funky.
So he couldn't really walk straight
and the army was like, you know,
sorry man, like hard pass.
Now this was disappointing, okay?
Because like what was he supposed to do?
He wants to go to war,
he wants to fight for this country,
he just wants to be there.
So he is just so disappointed.
Well, he ends up going to college and he gets his PhD in chemistry in 1940.
And then in 1953, Sid joined in on the fun over with the CIA,
taking a position as a poison expert.
Now literally months after taking the position, Sid was put in charge of a new project
called MK Ultra. Do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do beneath the MK Ultra umbrella. Now, Seid was excited about this new opportunity.
I mean, he couldn't go fight for America in the war, but he could fight for America within
the CIA.
So this was like his new purpose, his calling, and he was so passionate about it.
So when LSD came onto the market, Sydney jumped at that opportunity and bought all of it
in the name of Liberty, of course.
Now Sydney would be in charge of approving and distributing LSD across the country to
different colleges and hospitals in hopes to find volunteers to test the drug on.
Now, there's a lot of holes in the story at this point.
Honestly, that's because a lot of the documents and records regarding the program, MK Ultram,
they were destroyed later on.
But what we do know is that the experiments were performed all over the country that were
also financed by the CIA.
So just a few miles away from the CIA headquarters is a place called Georgetown University, filled
with many students who I'm sure they could test on. You know? So the CIA tried to establish a secret mind control research center within the university.
All low key, of course. They weren't going to say anything about it, but they were like
thinking about doing it. So during one of these mini projects, the CIA told the test subjects
that they were just trying to make a drug that would help them knock it drunk,
but also give you a permanent high for the rest of your life.
This was their cover, and they're like, hey, college kids, go ahead and booze it up because
we want to help you get back to studying faster.
That's how they're presenting it to them.
So of course, what college student wouldn't jump at this opportunity?
Hello. What college student wouldn't jump at this opportunity? Hello? So many participated in these trials without the full understanding of what it was for,
who it was for, and why they were even doing it in the first place.
The goal of these tests was just to see if it was possible to control their impulses and their thoughts.
So there really wasn't like a conclusive ending.
They just kind of like, again, want to see what would happen.
And all that really did happen was that LSD became a huge hit
in colleges everywhere.
Now, the project, again, it was huge
and involved stuff other than LSD.
I mean, yes, LSD was like the star of the show,
but there were also things like a knockout pill,
which you could just,
it would just make you forget stuff. And this pill could be put in anything. They also
were trying another substance that would basically make you paralyzed in your legs for some
time. Also, substances that would alter people's personalities where they would become dependent
on another person or even lower their ambition and general drive of working
men.
I mean, the list goes on.
But they were trying many different techniques, mixtures, dosages, all in the hopes of mind
control.
The CIA was willing to let anyone try anything if it meant they could have more super secret
agent drugs.
Another example that was financed by the CIA was a project led by a world famous and
well-respected doctor and psychiatrist named Dr. Ewan Cameron.
Now a doctor Cameron, he was very interested in something called depaterning.
It has nothing to do with quilts, but instead he believed it would allow him to erase a person's
mind and replace it with whatever type of behavior
you wanted. For example, maybe you want your mom to stop asking you when you're going to have
kids, you know? So you can like erase the urge from her brain. And instead she asks you like what
you want from your Amazon wish list. Or you want to train someone to kill a world's leader.
You can just erase rationality and replace it with murder.
Easy, this is what science is for.
Dr. Cameron already worked with a wide variety of patients
that suffered from things like postpartum depression
or psychological issues.
So he thinks they are the perfect test dummies
to give LSD to and see like if it could break down
their behavioral patterns.
Like in our lobotomy story, this is just another version of a doctor trying to find another solution to mental illness. And people with mental illness were willing to try anything.
But this time instead of holes in the head, they have LSD. So that's a lot easier.
But now remember, his goal was to break down your behavioral patterns, and the way he did
this was by trying extremely experimental tactics.
One of them being electro-shock therapy.
Were they literally electrocuted your brain?
Yeah.
You're not supposed to do this more than a couple times a week at most.
Okay, and this doctor was doing it to people multiple times a day, which is
hello, very, very dangerous.
He also used something called a sleep room, which I know, you're probably
thinking, Oh, a sleep room, like, that sounds so nice.
Where do I find up?
My version of a sleep room is like just laying in bed, watching
designing women and my jammies and just not thinking about work.
But this was not that.
A sleep room was where they put patients
in a drug-induced coma,
but in a room with no lights and no windows.
So over the speaker,
there would be an endless recording
repeal the same messages over and over and over again,
just speaking to the patient subconscious. Attempting
to reprogram new behaviors deep into the brain.
Yes, bitch. Go your bakes. You'll look amazing. Do it right now. You want bakes. Yeah.
Now the goal, the goal was to eventually be able to control people by implanting new motivations and skills into their brain.
I know, which is actually kind of cool.
Like, I wish they could make me,
you know, just like do really cool shit,
like be smarter or something,
but instead they're ruining people.
Great, okay.
Anyways, I mean, obviously,
we know now that it's ridiculous and it never worked,
but I love the optimism they had, beautiful.
I can't believe they could get funding for this shit.
Trying to get millions of dollars
for mind control experiments is a very big ask.
And where to even start?
So in a couple of cases, this went on for months
with the longest sessions being anywhere between 39
and 65 days.
Yeah, could you imagine being locked in a room being anywhere between 39 and 65 days. Yeah.
Could you imagine being locked in a room with voices
telling you to do shit for 65 days?
No, no, I don't think any of this can.
Um, I mean, I imagine that's maybe what authority is like.
Maybe?
I don't know.
Anyways, one of Dr. Cameron's patients
was a woman named Velma or Lico.
She was a patient of his at the Allen Institute after a friend suggested that she'd go and
like receive some treatment for her postpartum depression.
So she's looking to receive treatment, and she instead was turned into a guinea pig by
Cameron, who injected her with LSD and forced her to participate in one of his sleep room
studies.
Velma and later, in her views, remembers being dosed with LSD, but at the time she had no idea what
it was. After she received treatment, she would say she couldn't do simple things anymore, like
read or write. She also had huge blank spots in her memory where she literally had no idea what
the book like went on for periods
of time.
Honestly, this kind of sounds like an alien abduction story, right?
It's kind of similar, kind of.
But Velma first learned that she was a test subject from the media who reported on what
took place at the Allen Institute.
This had a lasting effect on her, and at one point, she was so devastated from the treatment
and overall power abuse that she was on the brink of walking in a traffic and just ending
it all.
Luckily, she didn't go through with it, but she did battle these thoughts up until her
death in 1990.
Now Dr. Cameron would retire at some point in the 1960s, and the person who replaced him
concluded that nothing was concluded.
The only takeaway they got from the follow-up study was at 60% of Cameron's patients experienced
amnesia for anywhere from six months to 10 years.
That's called blacking out from trauma.
Thanks Dr. Cameron, thanks CIA, you really came through with some groundbreaking information.
Later on when the media questioned the Allen Institute
on like, why in the hell they were running these experiments
in the first place, they were like,
well, really, where are the victims here?
Okay, where are the real victims?
The treatment wasn't that bad,
it was actually much harder on the staff.
I mean, they had to work really long hours
feeding everyone and wiping their ass.
The staff suffered, not the patience.
I freaking roll, yeah, of course.
Once again, another large organization not taking responsibility for their actions.
The Allen Institute's project turned out to be a total flop.
But that didn't mean Sydney from the CIA was going to give up easy.
He still had lots of ideas up his sleeve to achieve the overall goal of mind control.
Now Sydney had another idea in mind, another project, one that he would call midnight climax.
Now this one's fun. I mean, it kind of sounds like the name of an 80s porn. No, maybe it was.
Let me check my phone BRB. Oh, oh, ad break.
Not a porno. And we're back. Operation Midnight Climax. This, too, was a series of experiments
funded and conducted by the CIA, organized by our guy Sydney. Again, with the goal of finding out
if LSD can control people's minds, you get it.
So they would like set up these places called safe houses in New York and San Francisco.
And Sydney couldn't do it all alone, he needed help. That's when he brought in a former narcotics
agent and a big wig CIA, like guy named George Hunter White, and this guy was going to help facilitate
this study.
Now, let me tell you, this study was all sorts of freaky.
The CIA bought a bunch of little apartments, they furnished them, and then they would
set up a two-way mirror in the room, and then they would bring in local sex workers to
help with this project.
They wanted these rooms to look super normal,
but secretly were designed to allow for experimentation
and observation.
So they paid the sex workers to lure John's
into these rooms, then offered them something to drink.
Yeah, he wants something to drink.
And the John's, they had no idea that these drinks were laced with LSD.
Now, this might not make much sense, but the thought process here was that these Johns
may involuntarily reveal secrets when they were intoxicated.
And the victims were sometimes fed subliminal messages in hopes to essentially brainwash them into committing
criminal activity like robbery, assaults, and assassination.
The reason they were doing this with sex workers and Johns was because, you know, since sex
work is technically illegal, they would probably never say anything about it.
And even if they did say something about it, nobody would believe them because they would
just sound crazy to their friends and family.
It was the perfect setup.
Like who would believe the story?
No one.
The part where this gets even more freaky is that behind the two-way mirror, there was someone
watching the whole time.
Yeah, the whole time. Mr. George Hunter White.
He wasn't just watching like your classic voyeur.
This sweaty monster was on the other side of the two-way mirror observing.
Perscience.
He's just over there breathing heavily, he's sipping him artini,
and he's also sitting on a toilet he had installed,
so he didn't have to like get up
and leave the room. He didn't want to miss any of these like salacious moments. That's a true story.
He literally had a toilet installed and he was like sitting on it and stuff like this guy's
full of volume just creep. Again, it was all the name of science, I guess. And of course if a CIA
agent is invited to a pizza party, you know, they're gonna have a few slices of pizza, right?
In other words, what I'm getting at essentially is that they took some of the LSD
and they enjoyed the services of the sex workers, you know, normal pizza party stuff.
Well, this study, it concluded that men will talk after sex with or without drugs,
something I'm sure I could have told them for free.
Literally, no serious results ever came out of this experiment.
It honestly sounded like a personal interest
just funded by the CIA, if you ask me,
but no one's asking me right now.
Okay, so America's tax dollars, yeah,
they were not just used to buy all of the LSD,
but also to pay for a brothel run by the CIA.
So the thing is, no one really knows when MK Ultra came to an end, but officially, quote,
unquote, it ended in 1973.
But it could still be going on now for all we know, and nobody really knows the full
extent of it.
So if your uncle Bob starts rambling about men and suits shoving him into the back of a
truck,
or that the government is watching him or something,
I guess maybe like actually believe him.
MK Ultra actually ended up accomplishing nothing
other than ruining people's lives and wasting tax dollars.
Because remember, their original goal was to master
the art of mind control to create super soldiers and they thought LSD was going to be their answer.
So let's go back to Sydney Gottlieb. After Frank Olson's death, you know the guy from the beginning, he attended his funeral and came extremely, extremely close to admitting just how bad MK Ultra really was. Sid would on to tell Frank's son that maybe they went a little too far and maybe they
did things that they shouldn't have done.
I think that's the closest we will get to him admitting the truth at all, but he kind
of admitted.
You know, Sidney would continue doing the CIA's work and running MK Ultra projects for
years.
In later years, he started this thing,
oh, this one's kind of funny.
It's not funny, but it's kind of funny.
It's kind of funny.
Because in later years, he started this thing
called Operation Acoustic Kitty,
which I just, I want to start a band
just so I can call it Operation Acoustic Kitty.
This is a real thing I swear.
But it was where they basically turned a cat into a robot. So they sowed
They they performed surgery on the cat and they sowed a microphone into the cat's body and hopes to
Spy on people. So they put the microphone in there and then they stitch the cat up cat wakes up
He doesn't even know he's a secret spy, you know, and they send them out there to spy
The only problem was that they forgot to train the cat.
Yeah, literally.
They put this cat in a park to spy on someone
and it just like ran away.
And this is also true.
It ran away and it got hit by a taxi.
I know, it's sad, but honestly, that's kind of funny.
That's kind of funny.
Come on, that's kind of funny.
It's not funny, but it's kind of funny. It's something out of a movie. It's kind of funny. That's kind of funny. Come on, that's kind of funny. It's not funny, but it's kind of funny.
It's something out of a movie.
It's kind of funny.
It's kind of funny.
We can laugh, but it's not funny.
It just got to a point where it seemed like they were just trying whatever the hell they
wanted, honestly.
I mean, who thinks of putting a microphone in a cat?
It's kind of creative.
There was nobody to even check up on Sydney.
The only person who was above him
was like the actual director of the CIA. So Sydney just had a green light for anything. So later in
life, Sydney moved to India and he opened a hospital for those who were struggling with leprosy.
Yeah, super random, you know, I think he just wanted to, which is nice. It was like a part of his
late life attempt to feel like he was maybe doing something good in the world.
Yeah.
So he was honestly aware though,
but he tried to do some good, great,
and then he would eventually retire and then die in 1999.
The CIA on the other hand, they created their own monster.
They jumped to a wild conclusion,
assuming that mind control was the new hot thing,
and they needed to get behind it, and all in the name of protecting the people.
But it backfired, because in the 1960s, the hippie movement was on the rise, and one thing that kept
the hippie movement strong? Baby was drugs. Drugs, you know what I'm saying? The only thing MK Ultra did at the end of the day was introduce LSD to a bunch of college
kids.
They were having a good time, they were telling their friends about it, and it was just
a big party.
I wish I was there, honestly.
So their big secret mind control mission ended up being the spark to a whole free thought
movement.
Whoops.
The worst of these experiments were not even reported for a few
reasons. Number one, the CIA, they have a lot of secret detention centers. I don't have to follow
like any US laws so they can detain enemies and using air quotes and practice like weird shit on
them. It shouldn't be a surprise that that type of stuff doesn't really come out too often.
It shouldn't be a surprise that that type of stuff doesn't really come out too often. Yeah.
Number two, the CIA director was at risk of being fired, which would blow the roof off
the whole M.K.L.
trusting.
So they panicked and they literally destroyed all of the documents.
And the number three, because the majority of the documents were destroyed, nobody really
knows like the full extent as to what was going on
in these experiments or for how long. I mean how many people were affected by this? Just imagine
how many other experiments were run and freaking eaten by the government paper shredders.
Well, in 1974, documents relating to MK Ultra will release to the public, whatever
documents were left, mind you. Now it's weird because you would think you would think it would
be trending hot news, you know, but it wasn't. The story seemed to just kind of get pushed
aside and nobody was really talking about it that much. I think it's because during this time the
Nixon Watergate scandal was going down. Yeah, so maybe that was done on purpose, maybe not.
But many to this day consider MK Ultra just a silly conspiracy theory, even though it's literally not.
It's literally not a conspiracy theory. So when we're
going out to the public, what was really going down these experiments, people, they
freaking wanted answers, okay? There were several lawsuits from victims, some
receding settlements from the CIA, like Frank Olson's family. They got a
settlement and also a public apology from the president himself.
Oh, thanks, you know, whatever.
Velma's family fought hard to go after the government
and hold them accountable for what they did.
But in the end, the government prevented her family
from being compensated in any way
and they succeeded at that.
For what, geez.
And then eventually the Supreme Court ruled
that it was absolutely unacceptable
for the CIA to ever conduct experiments on Americans
without knowledge or consent.
Which hey, that's kind of cool, I guess.
I'm rolling my eyes if you can't see.
I'm rolling my eyes.
I'm rolling my eyes because I believe that's probably not true.
When you look at the bigger scale of things,
nobody was really punished or held accountable
for what took place under MK Ultra.
After all, it's kinda hard to hold someone accountable
when a ton of documents were destroyed
and there's literally no proof of what was done, you know?
But throughout the years, there have been many people
who have come forward saying that they were for sure
drugged at some point in the 50s and their stories take off all the boxes of MK Ultra shit
But since they couldn't prove it
Many were labeled as crazy or or cookie
So I mean that sucks. I'm sure you can think of some people who get labeled crazy
And that sucks. I'm sure you can think of some people who get labeled crazy.
Anyways, in conclusion.
What the hell is going on with the CIA?
They were trying so hard to learn my control, but Steve Jobs came in and accomplished that
in 2007.
It's cute to think that MK Ultra was just a one and done deal.
You know, well, that didn't work.
Oh, well.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no.
I'm sure the CIA has a just and their approach
to the situation as to how they can control our minds.
I'm sure.
But isn't that the point of all this?
The government is kind of inept
in trying to control minds.
They created a culture of free thought.
It's sort of like when you're a kid and you think like adults
just know everything. They have all the answers and then you grow up and you learn well once you
become an adult you're like oh shit we sure do not we sure do not have the answers. You know we
don't know what the hell we're doing we're just like trying to figure it out. Well the government
is kind of the same way just because they're big and have money,
we think they're gonna make some sound decisions,
but they don't.
I don't know what the hell they're doing.
They put microphones and cats for God's sake.
Royal cats?
Jesus.
And in the end, the CIA's egos,
it's too big to lose,
so they probably walked away from MK Ultra thinking they won.
I mean, they got laid and did a bunch of acid.
And that's a win if you ask me.
Anyways, I would love to hear your thoughts.
Do you know more about this?
Let's continue the conversation over on social media using the hashtag dark history.
And don't forget to join me over on my YouTube where you can watch these episodes on Thursday
after the podcast airs and also catch my murder mystery makeup which drops on Mondays.
I hope you have a wonderful rest of your day.
You make good choices and I'll be talking to you next week.
Bye.
Don't get pretty washed.
Dark History is an audio boom original.
This podcast is executive produced by me, Bailey Sarian, Chelsea Durgan from Slash Management,
and Fanny Bodry from Willhouse DNA.
Produced by Lexi Kiven, Dariel Christian, and Spencer Strasmoor.
Research provided by Ramona Kivett, Riders, Jed Bookout, Michael Obersst, and Joey Skavuzo,
and me, Bailey Sarian. Historical consultant, Maya Skullavits,
author of Undoing Drugs, the untold story of harm,
reduction, and the future of addiction.
Martin Naley, author of Asid Dreams, the complete
social history of LSD, the CIA, the 60s, and beyond.
What a great name! And also, I'm your host, hello, hi, how's it going, princess?
Princess of the Dark, Bailey Sarian!