In the early hours of 28 November 1953,
Armand Pastore, the night manager of the
Statler Hotel, New York, was startled to hear a
crash of breaking glass and then a sickening
thump on the pavement outside his hotel. He
rushed out to find a middle-aged man lying
semi-conscious on the ground.
Pastore looked up to see light shining from a
shattered window of a room on the hotel's
thirteenth floor. He knelt down alongside the
man, cradled his head in his arms and leaned
closer as the man made an effort to speak, then
died. He had obviously jumped out of the
window, just another suicide in a city where
the plunge from skyscraper to pavement was a
shocking but not unusual event.
Suicide was certainly the finding at the
inquest Dr Frank Olson, a United States
Army scientist, for reasons no one could
fathom, had taken his own life. And that was
what the record showed for the next
twenty-two years.
Then in 1975 the Rockefeller Commission, set
up by President Ford to examine the extent of
the CIA's illegal domestic operations, revealed
that an unnamed army scientist had died after
CIA experts, experimenting with mind-bending
drugs, had secretly slipped him a dose of
potent LSD. During the ensuing uproar, the
scientist was identified as Frank Olson.
The US government moved immediately to
show how sorry it was for what had happened.
Congress passed a private humanitarian relief
bill which authorised a payment of $750,000 to
the widow, Mrs Olson, and her three children.
Mrs Olson and her son Eric were invited to the
White House where President Ford publicly
apologised to them. And the then CIA director,
William Colby, held a lunch for Mrs Olson and
Eric in his office at the CIA, apologised and
gave them the CIA file on the case.
According to the file, Olson had suffered a
"chemically-induced psychotic flashback" a
week after he had been slipped the dose of
LSD. So a CIA doctor, Richard Lashbrook,
had been deputed to look after Olson until he
was normal again. Lashbrook had been sharing
the hotel room with Olson and was asleep in a
bed next to him when, he said, he was awoken
by the sound of breaking glass and realised that
Olson had crashed through the window.
Eric, who is now 54,was never very convinced
by this version of events but kept quiet so as
not to distress his mother. Then when she died
in 1994 he decided to test the official story of
his father's death. Experts told him that in
order to achieve the momentum needed to
vault over a central heating radiator under the
window, burst through the closed blinds and
smash through the hotel's heavy glass panes,
Olson would have had to struck the window
travelling at more than 30 km per hour. A trained athlete takes about fifty metres to
accelerate to that speed. But the hotel room
was only 5.5 metres long.
Next there was Dr. Lashbrook's strange
behaviour when the hotel manager Pastore
arrived in the room to tell him that his
colleague was dead on the pavement below.
Lashbrook went to the telephone, rang a
number and simply said, "Olson's gone". Then
he hung up and retired to the bathroom where
he sat on the lavatory with his head in his
hands.
Eric Olson, a Maryland clinical psychologist,
began to spend every spare moment trying to
get at the true story of what had happened to
his father. Today he is convinced he is on the
brink of doing so. But the story is so strange,
so reminiscent of the TV series "The X-Files,"
that despite compelling evidence, it is uncertain
that anyone will believe it.
THE TERMS of the $750,000 government
settlement for Olson's death prevented his
family from pursuing the matter in the civil
courts. But if Eric Olson could convince the
authorities that his father's death was a
criminal matter, then he might eventually get at
the truth. Four years ago he had his first
breakthrough when he won a court order to
exhume his father's body.
"When he was buried the coffin had been
sealed. They said he had been so badly
mutilated in the fall that it wouldn't be right for
the family to see him. But when we opened the
casket a lifetime later, I knew Daddy at once.
He had been embalmed and his face was
unmarked and untroubled. He hadn't been hurt
the way they said he had."
A new autopsy confirmed Eric Olson's
impression and entirely contradicted the
findings of the first inquest. Carried out by a
team led by James Starrs, Professor of Law
and Forensic Science at The National Law
Centre, George Washington University, it could
find no sign of the cuts and abrasions that the
first autopsy said had been caused by crashing
through the window glass.
On the other hand, there was a haematoma,
unrecorded at the first post mortem
examination, on the left hand side of Olson's
skull. This had been caused by a heavy blow,
James Starrs decided, probably from a
hammer, before the fall from the window.
Starrs and his team concluded that the
evidence from their examination was "rankly
and starkly suggestive of homicide."
Although the team did not say so because it
could be only supposition someone had
struck Olson on the head with a hammer,
smashed open the window, probably with the
same hammer, and had then thrown Olson out.
But the new autopsy findings were certainly
enough for a New York public prosecutor,
Stephen Saracco, to win the right for a grand
jury to begin hearing the evidence he had
uncovered. If the jury, too, found the evidence
of murder compelling, then Saracco requested
that it should hand down indictments for
murder and conspiracy to murder.
Saracco, an ambitious, aggressive lawyer with
no fear about taking on the American
establishment, says that the men he wants
named in the indictments will include some of
America's most respected CIA veterans and, if
the grand jury agrees to his request to widen
his investigations, former officers of the British
Secret Intelligence and Security Services as
well.
Already there are indications that the
international intelligence community is running
scared. The CIA and the Department of Justice
have resisted Saracco 's attempts to subpoena
Dr. Lashbrook, who now lives in California, to
question him, among other things, about
Olson's last hours, the telephone call that
Lashbrook made immediately after Olson's
death and the work that Lashbrook and Olson
had been engaged in together.
Early in July, after months of negotiation, the
two government departments gave in and
agreed that the grand jury should hear
Saracco's team examine Lashbrook at Venture
County Courthouse during the week beginning
24 August. Saracco has already offered
Lashbrook immunity from prosecution in
return for his testimony. He was too late,
however, to do the same for William Colby,
the CIA chief who apologised for Olson's
death.
On 27 April 1996, after Saracco won the right
to a grand jury hearing, Colby who realised
that he would be forced to give evidence,
vanished from his country retreat about forty
miles south of Washington. It looked as if he
had left in a hurry: the lights and the radio were
still on, his computer was still running, and a
half finished glass of wine was on the table.
The next day his empty canoe was found
swamped on a sand bar. Five days later divers
found a body identified as Colby's. He had
apparently been the victim of a boating
accident.
If so, it would appear that Maryland waters are
particularly unkind to retired members of the
CIA. In 1978 another CIA officer, John
Paisley, also vanished there in another boating
accident. A week after Paisley's abandoned
boat was located, a body with a gunshot
wound to the head was found. But the
condition of the body meant that precise
identification was impossible making the area
a conspiracy blackspot.
Suppose the grand jury does in the end find
that the evidence that Olson was murdered and
that the perpetrators were other CIA officers,
there will still remain a major barrier to an
eventual conviction what was the motive?
What was so sensitive to the CIA that it would
kill one of its own? To find an answer we have
to go back to the fifties when the two great
ideologies of the 20th century, communism and
capitalism, were locked in a battle to the death
and no act no matter how morally shocking
was ruled out in the struggle for victory.
THE NUCLEAR stand-off of the Cold War
had sent both sides back to their drawing
boards. If it were impossible to employ nuclear
weapons without assuring mutual total
destruction, what other weapons could the
boffins come up with given virtually
unlimited funds and no moral restraints that
would win any future war? Two possibilities
attracted attention. The first was bacteriological
warfare.
Bacteriological warfare is remarkably cheap; it
has been described as "the poor man's nuclear
bomb." A deadly virus sufficient to wipe out
every living person over an area of one square
mile would cost only about $50. In the 1950s
both sides in the Cold War set up research
establishments to develop biological weapons,
methods of delivering them, and methods of
protecting against them. Dr. Frank Olson
worked in this area.
Trained as a biochemist, he had been
employed since 1943 in the Special Operations
Division at Fort Detrick, Maryland, was
associated with a CIA secret research unit
known at the time as MK-ULTRA, and came
to Britain frequently between 1950-53 to work
at the British Microbiological Research
Establishment (MRE) at Porton Down. Olson
was part of a team which was developing
aerosol delivery systems for biological weapons
that included staphylococcus enterotoxin,
Venezuelan equine encephalomyelitis and
anthrax. Olson seems to have concentrated on
counter-biological warfare, trying to find
vaccines and special clothing that would protect
against attack.
Deadly effective though it may be, biological
warfare has drawbacks. There is always the
risk that it may get out of control and attack
not only the enemy but those who decided to
employ it in the first place. Like nuclear
warfare, biological warfare could wipe out
civilisation as we know it. So Olson and some
of his colleagues became intrigued by another
type of weapon altogether, one which attacked
not the body but the mind.
Those scientists in the Western intelligence
community who supported the idea of
developing brain-washing programmes had two
gurus Dr Douglas Ewan Cameron, a
Glasgow-born psychiatrist, and Dr. Sydney "The Gimp" Gottlieb, the CIA's top expert on
brainwashing. Cameron won his post-graduate
diploma in psychiatric medicine at the
University of London before joining the staff at
John Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, in 1926. He
became convinced that the mentally ill posed a
grave threat to Anglo-American civilisation and
should be forcibly sterilised.
During the Second World War he was a
member of the Military Mobilization
Committee of the American Psychiatric
Association and was appalled to learn that of
the fifteen million men inducted into the US
armed forces, two million had to be rejected on
neuropsychiatric grounds, a proportion far
higher than in any other nation. He set about
finding remedies including electroshock
(60,000 ECTs in a single year), lobotomies and
other forms of psychosurgery, sensory
deprivation and mind-altering drugs all used
on patients who had little or no say in their
treatment. Conscientious objectors, many of
them Quakers, were defined by Cameron as
mentally-ill and sometimes forced to accept
treatment.
When the end of the war revealed that the
Nazis had been carrying out similar
experiments 23 German doctors were
convicted at Nuremberg the Western
intelligence community suddenly became very
interested in Cameron's work. This interest
grew to an obsession after the Stalin show trials
with the robotic, apparently artificially-induced
confessions made by the accused. Then the
behaviour of American POWs held in Chinese
camps during the Korean War and their
subsequent denunciation of the American way
of life, futher convinced the CIA that the
communists were already well advanced in
mind control techniques. In intelligence circles
there were rumours of a Soviet plot to place
brain-washed zombies in the White House and
other citadels of Western power.
The American response was MK-ULTRA. Its
director, Dr. Gottleib, sought help from his
Scottish hero, Cameron, and set him up with
cover organisations to distance the CIA from
some of the more abhorent aspects of
MK-ULTRA's work. So Cameron founded the
Society for the Investigation of Human
Ecology, ran a proprietary company called
Psychological Assessment Associates, and
contributed papers to learned journals on
"Psychic Driving", "The Restructuring of the
Personality" and "Suggestion and
Extra-Sensory Perception."
The short-term goals were to counter any
communist plot to insert brain-washed
assassins into the West. However, according to
authors Gerald Colby and Charlotte Dennett,
biographers of Nelson Rockefeller one-time
chairman of a committee overseeing the
MK-ULTRA operation the scientists also
wanted to find drugs or techniques by which "a
man could be surreptitiously drugged through
the medium of an alcoholic cocktail at a social
party ... and the subject induced to perform
the act of attempted assassination of an official
in a government in which he was
well-established socially and politically."
A far-fetched idea, perhaps, but one whose
currency was not limited to the CIA. A few
years later, the surreptitious administration of a
mind-altering drug in a drink at a party was
suggested as a possible solution to a strange
double death in Sydney, Australia. On the
morning of January 1, 1963, Dr. Gilbert Bogle,
and his lover, Mrs. Margaret Chandler, were
found dead on a river bank after a riotous party
given by staff of the Commonwealth Scientific
and Industrial Research Organization. Bogle, a
brilliant scientist, had told friends that he was
about to go to the US to work on scientific
research of great military importance. The
deaths were never solved, but Sydney
detectives became convinced that Bogle and
his colleagues had been experimenting with
LSD and the effect it produced on their
thought-processes the invitation to the New
Year's party required each guest to bring a
painting done under the influenced of the
drug and either by accident or by design
someone had slipped the couple what turned
out to be an overdose.
Repeated requests to the BBI under the
Freedom of Information Act asking for details
of the work that Bogle would have been doing
in the US have met with refusal on the grounds
of national security. But the speculation is
irresistible that it might have involved
experiments in mind control similar to those
that Olson had worked on.
The long-term aim of these experiments with
mind-altering drugs is thought by those who
have studied the MK-ULTRA programme to
have been to ensure the dominance of
Anglo-American civilisation in the "war of all
against all the key to evolutionary success."
Brain-washing would be used not only to
defeat the enemy but to ensure compliance and
loyalty of one's own population.
Where did Dr. Olson fit into all this? A Harley
Street psychiatrist, Dr. William Sargant, now
dead, was sent by the British goverment in the
early 1950s to evaluate MK-ULTRA. On his
return he told a colleague and friend, former
BBC television producer, Gordon Thomas,
that what Cameron and Gottlieb were up to
was as bad as anything going on in the Soviet
gulags.
Thomas, whose books include a 1988 study of
the CIA's forays into mind-control, Journey
into Madness: Medical Torture and the Mind
Controllers, says "Sargant told me that he had
urged the British government to distance this
country from it. He said it was blacker than
black." According to Thomas, Sargant told him
that Frank Olson had come to Britain between
1950-53 to work on attachment at Porton
Down and had also made frequent visits to "an
intelligence facility" in Sussex. This is
confirmed by entries in the special passport
that Olson used.
The stamps on the passport, which declare that
the bearer was on "official business for the
Department of the Army" indicate a pattern of
travel that took Olson between various British
military airfields, France, Occupied Germany,
Scandanavia and the United States between
May 1950 and August 1953. Prosecuting
attorney Saracco believes that something
happened on one of these trips that holds the
key to Olson's death. Since the matter is still
before a grand jury Saracco cannot talk about
it but Gordon Thomas has his own idea of
what it was. "The CIA was using German SS
prisoners and Norwegian Quislings
[collaborators] taken from jails and detention
centres as guinea pigs to test Cameron's
theories about mind control. The Agency
preferred to conduct such clinical trials outside
the United States because sometimes they were
terminal the human guinea pig ended up
dead. Olson was accustomed to seeing lethal
experiments done on animals but when human
beings were used in this way it was too much
for him. I believe that he wanted out."
Mike Miniccino, an American businessman and
historical researcher who has spent 25 years
studying the MK-ULTRA programme and
developing a database on its activities says that
if Olson expressed doubts about MK-ULTRA
and its work then he would have done so to
William Sargant, the Harley Street psychiatrist,
who had evaluated MK-ULTRA's work and
who had been a close colleague of Olson's.
And although as we already know Sargant
wanted the British government to distance itself
from the CIA's work with MK-ULTRA,
Miniccino says he nevertheless was committed
to the principle of mind control and became the
link between the British Secret Intelligence
Service and MK-ULTRA. Miniccino adds, "So
if Frank Olson expressed serious doubts about
the MK-ULTRA project to Sargant, then he
signed his own death warrant."
What Miniccino is implying and what public
prosecutor Saracco wants to prove is that the
MK-ULTRA mind control project with its
clinical trials on unsuspecting human
beings was such a sensitive issue with the
western intelligence community that it would
go to any lengths to prevent an insider like
Olson, from blowing the whistle.
Is this, then, what happened? Did Olson tell the
British psychiatrist/SIS agent Sargant that he
wanted out of the mind-control project, and
that his conscience might compel him to reveal
publicly what the intelligence services had been
doing? Did Sargant then pass this on to SIS,
who in turn told the CIA? Was a decision then
taken to make certain that Olson never talked
by destroying his memory with drugs and,
when this failed, by murdering him and making
it look like a suicide?
Apart from the evidence set out earlier, there is
another compelling fact that supports this
theory. Until Mrs Olson died in 1993, a regular
visitor at her house was Olson's former boss in
Special Operations, Vincent Ruwet. Ruwet
would spend long daytime hours with Mrs
Olson. The two would drink together at her
house (Mrs. Olson became an alcoholic) while
Ruwet listened to the problems she faced in
bringing up her three fatherless children.
Everyone considered him to be a sympathetic
family friend. But newly-discovered documents
reveal that Vincent Ruwet had been assigned
by the CIA to "keep track of the wife." If
Olson was a threat because of what he knew,
and knowledge can be passed on, then the CIA
would have to spy on all those who had been
close to him in case he had told them the truth
about MK-ULTRA. The CIA has always
maintained as a matter of historical record that
it has never murdered an American citizen on
American soil. If, as a result of Eric Olson's
persistence in trying to uncover what really
happened to his father, and the investigating
skills of public prosecutor Saracco, this turns
out to be a lie, it could well be the beginning of
the end of the Agency.
Eric Olson says, "The Cold War is over and
there are now ongoing national debates about
the future of the CIA and about unethical
medical testing on humans. My father's case
covers both. The use of hallucinogens,
hypnosis, electroshock and other procedures in
an attempt to control the way people behave
was the CIA's equivalent of the Manhattan
[atom bomb] Project. MK-ULTRA was secret,
shocking and incredibly dangerous. They
couldn't afford to take the risk of letting my
father continue to be involved or, considering
all he knew, allowing him to quit. So he was
terminated instead. My father's murder crossed
a line in the sand which the U.S. government
has always publicly respected. The guilty ones
will not be allowed to get away with it." Or as
Fox Mulder would say, "The truth is out
there."