Jolly West PNG
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Excerpt
November 24 2019
"Yet not one researcher was ever federally investigated, nor were any victims ever notified. Despite the outrage of congressional leaders and more than three years of headlines about the brutalities of the program, no one â not the âBlack Sorcererâ Sidney Gottlieb, nor senior CIA official Richard Helms, nor Jolly West â suffered any legal consequences."
=INSIDE THE ARCHIVE OF AN LSD RESEARCHER WITH TIES TO THE CIAâS MKULTRA MIND CONTROL PROJECT=
"Louis Jolyon West seems to have used chemicals and hypnosis liberally in his medical practice, possibly leading to the death of a child and the execution of an innocent man."
THE CIA SEEMS to have pared MKUltra back in the mid-â60s, according to congressional testimony and surviving financial records, but Jolly Westâs government-funded research continued apace. Late in the fall of 1966, West arrived in San Francisco to study hippies and LSD. Tall, broad, and crew cut, with an all-American look in keeping with his military past, he cobbled together a new wardrobe and started skipping haircuts. He secured a government grant and took a yearlong sabbatical from the University of Oklahoma, nominally to pursue a fellowship at Stanford, although that school had no record of his participation in a program there.
When he arrived in Haight-Ashbury, West was the only scientist in the world whoâd predicted the emergence of potentially violent âLSD cultsâ such as Charles Mansonâs Family. In a 1967 psychiatry textbook, West had contributed a chapter called âHallucinogens,â warning students of a âremarkable substanceâ percolating through college campuses and into cities. LSD was known to leave users âunusually susceptible and emotionally labile.â It appealed to alienated kids who would crave âshared forbidden activity in a group setting to provide a sense of belonging.â
Acid, he wrote, made people more difficult to hypnotize; it was better to pair hypnosis with long bouts of isolation and sleep deprivation.
Another of his papers, 1965âs âDangers of Hypnosis,â foresaw the rise of dangerous groups led by âcrackpotsâ who hypnotized their followers into violent criminality. He cited two cases: a double murder in Copenhagen committed by a hypno-programmed man, and a âmilitary offenseâ induced experimentally at an undisclosed U.S. Army base. (Itâs not at all clear that the latter referred to Shaverâs killing of Chere Jo Horton.)
Heâd also supervised a study in Oklahoma City, in which heâd hired informants to infiltrate teenage gangs and engender âa fundamental changeâ in âbasic moral, religious or political matters.â The title of the project was âMass Conversion,â and it had been funded by Gottlieb.
In the Haight, West arranged for the use of a crumbling Victorian house on Frederick Street, where he set up what he described as a âlaboratory disguised as a hippie crash pad.â The âpadâ opened in June 1967, at the dawn of the summer of love. He installed six graduate students in the âpad,â telling them to âdress like hippiesâ and âlureâ itinerant kids into the apartment. Passersby were welcome to do as they pleased and stay as long as they liked, as long as they didnât mind grad students taking notes on their behavior.
According to records in Westâs files, his âcrash padâ was funded by the Foundations Fund for Research in Psychiatry, Inc., which had bankrolled a number of his other projects, too, across decades and institutions. Dr. Gordon Deckert, Westâs successor as chair at the University of Oklahoma, told me that he found papers in Westâs desk that revealed that the Foundations Fund was a front for the CIA.
https://theintercept.com/2019/11/24/cia-mkultra-louis-jolyon-west/
https://www.littlebrown.com/titles/tom-oneill/chaos/9780316477574/
[note: The Intercept is a limited hangout]