Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Three Generations of a Hackneyed Apologia for Censorship Are Enough

http://www.popehat.com/2012/09/19/three-generations-of-a-hackneyed-apologia-for-censorship-are-enough/                 

Three Generations of a Hackneyed Apologia for Censorship Are Enough

Law
In her Los Angeles Times opinion piece justifying prosecution of the author of the "Innocence of Muslims" video on YouTube, Sarah Chayes opens exactly the way I've come to expect:
In one of the most famous 1st Amendment cases in U.S. history, Schenck vs. United States, Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. established that the right to free speech in the United States is not unlimited. "The most stringent protection," he wrote on behalf of a unanimous court, "would not protect a man in falsely shouting fire in a theater and causing a panic."
Holmes' famous quote is the go-to argument by appeal to authority for anyone who wants to suggest that some particular utterance is not protected by the First Amendment. Its relentless overuse is annoying and unpersuasive to most people concerned with the actual history and progress of free speech jurisprudence. People tend to cite the "fire in a crowded theater" quote for two reasons, both bolstered by Holmes' fame. First, they trot out the Holmes quote for the proposition that not all speech is protected by the First Amendment. But this is not in dispute. Saying it is not an apt or persuasive argument for the proposition that some particular speech is unprotected, any more than saying "well, some speech is protected by the First Amendment" is a persuasive argument to the contrary. Second, people tend to cite Holmes to imply that there is some undisclosed legal authority showing that the speech they are criticizing is not protected by the First Amendment. This is dishonest at worst and unconvincing at best. If you have a pertinent case showing that particular speech falls outside the First Amendment, you don't have to rely on a 90-year-old rhetorical flourish to support your argument.
Holmes' quote is the most famous and pervasive lazy cheat in American dialogue about free speech. This post is not about fisking Sarah Chayes; her column deserves it, but I will leave it to another time. This post is about putting the Holmes quote in context, and explaining why it adds nothing to a First Amendment debate.

Holmes' Full-Throated Approval For Suppression of Wartime Dissent
Holmes' famous quote comes in the context of a series of early 1919 Supreme Court decisions in which he endorsed government censorship of wartime dissent — dissent that is now clearly protected by subsequent First Amendment authority.
The three cases in question arose from socialist criticism of conscription during World War One. The criticism at issue, to modern tastes, was a clearly protected and rather mild expression of opinion. Here's what got Socialist Party of America chair Charles Schenck prosecuted and imprisoned under the Espionage Act:
The document in question [a pamphlet Schenck helped produce], upon its first printed side, recited the first section of the Thirteenth Amendment, said that the idea embodied in it was violated by the Conscription Act, and that a conscript is little better than a convict. In impassioned language, it intimated that conscription was despotism in its worst form, and a monstrous wrong against humanity in the interest of Wall Street's chosen few. It said "Do not submit to intimidation," but in form, at least, confined itself to peaceful measures such as a petition for the repeal of the act. The other and later printed side of the sheet was headed "Assert Your Rights." It stated reasons for alleging that anyone violated the Constitution when he refused to recognize "your right to assert your opposition to the draft," and went on:
"If you do not assert and support your rights, you are helping to deny or disparage rights which it is the solemn duty of all citizens and residents of the United States to retain."
It described the arguments on the other side as coming from cunning politicians and a mercenary capitalist press, and even silent consent to the conscription law as helping to support an infamous conspiracy. It denied the power to send our citizens away to foreign shores to shoot up the people of other lands, and added that words could not express the condemnation such cold-blooded ruthlessness deserves, &c., &c., winding up, "You must do your share to maintain, support and uphold the rights of the people of this country."
Holmes, writing for a unanimous Supreme Court, affirmed Schenck's conviction on the theory that this expression could be punished in wartime even though it merely urged "peaceful measures such as a petition for the repeal" of conscription, on the theory that the government could suppress speech that might interfere with the draft. This led to Holmes' oft-quoted phrase:
We admit that, in many places and in ordinary times, the defendants, in saying all that was said in the circular, would have been within their constitutional rights. But the character of every act depends upon the circumstances in which it is done. Aikens v. Wisconsin, 195 U.S. 194, 205, 206. The most stringent protection of free speech would not protect a man in falsely shouting fire in a theatre and causing a panic. It does not even protect a man from an injunction against uttering words that may have all the effect of force. Gompers v. Bucks Stove & Range Co., 221 U.S. 418, 439. The question in every case is whether the words used are used in such circumstances and are of such a nature as to create a clear and present danger that they will bring about the substantive evils that Congress has a right to prevent. It is a question of proximity and degree. When a nation is at war, many things that might be said in time of peace are such a hindrance to its effort that their utterance will not be endured so long as men fight, and that no Court could regard them as protected by any constitutional right. It seems to be admitted that, if an actual obstruction of the recruiting service were proved, liability for words that produced that effect might be enforced. The statute of 1917, in § 4, punishes conspiracies to obstruct, as well as actual obstruction. If the act (speaking, or circulating a paper), its tendency, and the intent with which it is done are the same, we perceive no ground for saying that success alone warrants making the act a crime.
The two companion cases from 1919 are quite similar. In Debs v. United States, Holmes once again delivered the opinion of a unanimous Supreme Court, affirming a criminal conviction under the Espionage Act. Famed socialist Eugene V. Debs was sentenced to ten years in prison for a speech that Holmes summarized at length (are there any short socialist speeches?) in support of the basis for Debs' conviction. It's a lot of text — skip it if you will — but I quote it to demonstrate that Holmes implied that even the most generic phrases of criticism of the government can be punished if they are part of an effort to "obstruct" conscription:
The main theme of the speech was Socialism, its growth, and a prophecy of its ultimate success. With that we have nothing to do, but if a part or the manifest intent of the [249 U.S. 211, 213] more general utterances was to encourage those present to obstruct the recruiting service and if in passages such encouragement was directly given, the immunity of the general theme may not be enough to protect the speech. The speaker began by saying that he had just returned from a visit to the workhouse in the neighborhood where three of their most loyal comrades were paying the penalty for their devotion to the working class- these being Wagenknecht, Baker and Ruthenberg, who had been convicted of aiding and abetting another in failing to register for the draft. Ruthenberg v. United States, 245 U.S. 480 , 38 Sup. Ct. 168. He said that he had to be prudent and might not be able to say all that he thought, thus intimating to his hearers that they might infer that he meant more, but he did say that those persons were paying the penalty for standing erect and for seeking to pave the way to better conditions for all mankind. Later he added further eulogies and said that he was proud of them. He then expressed opposition to Prussian militarism in a way that naturally might have been thought to be intended to include the mode of proceeding in the United States.
After considerable discourse that it is unnecessary to follow, he took up the case of Kate Richards O'Hare, convicted of obstructing the enlistment service, praised her for her loyalty to Socialism and otherwise, and said that she was convicted on false testimony, under a ruling that would seem incredible to him if he had not had some experience with a Federal Court. We mention this passage simply for its connection with evidence put in at the trial. The defendant spoke of other cases, and then, after dealing with Russia, said that the master class has always declared the war and the subject class has always fought the battles-that the subject class has had nothing to gain and all to lose, including their lives; that the working class, who furnish the corpses, have never yet had a voice in declaring war and never yet had a voice in declaring [249 U.S. 211, 214] peace. 'You have your lives to lose; you certainly ought to have the right to declare war if you consider a war necessary.' The defendant next mentioned Rose Pastor Stokes, convicted of attempting to cause insubordination and refusal of duty in the military forces of the United States and obstructing the recruiting service. He said that she went out to render her service to the cause in this day of crises, and they sent her to the penitentiary for ten years; that she had said no more than the speaker had said that afternoon; that if she was guilty so was he, and that he would not be cowardly enough to plead his innocence; but that her message that opened the eyes of the people must be suppressed, and so after a mock trial before a packed jury and a corporation tool on the bench, she was sent to the penitentiary for ten years.
There followed personal experiences and illustrations of the growth of Socialism, a glorification of minorities, and a prophecy of the success of the international Socialist crusade, with the interjection that 'you need to know that you are fit for something better than slavery and cannon fodder.' The rest of the discourse had only the indirect though not necessarily ineffective bearing on the offences alleged that is to be found in the usual contrasts between capitalists and laboring men, sneers at the advice to cultivate war gardens, attribution to plutocrats of the high price of coal, &c., with the implication running through it all that the working men are not concerned in the war, and a final exhortation, 'Don't worry about the charge of treason to your masters; but be concerned about the treason that involves yourselves.' The defendant addressed the jury himself, and while contending that his speech did not warrant the charges said, 'I have been accused of obstructing the war. I admit it. Gentlemen, I abhor war. I would oppose the war if I stood alone.' The statement was not necessary to warrant the jury in finding that one purpose of the speech, whether incidental [249 U.S. 211, 215] or not does not matter, was to oppose not only war in general but this war, and that the opposition was so expressed that its natural and intended effect would be to obstruct recruiting. If that was intended and if, in all the circumstances, that would be its probable effect, it would not be protected by reason of its being part of a general program and expressions of a general and conscientious belief.
Holmes dismisses Debs' free speech defense with a passing reference to the matter being resolved in Schenck.
Debs continues a crucial and dangerous rhetorical dodge from Schenck — the deliberate obfuscation of what dangers, exactly, the government has the power to prevent. Holmes writes:
Its first recommendation was, 'continuous, active, and public opposition to the war, through demonstrations, mass petitions, and all other means within our power.' Evidence that the defendant accepted this view and this declaration of his duties at the time that he made his speech is evidence that if in that speech he used words tending to obstruct the recruiting service he meant that they should have that effect. The principle is too well established and too manifestly good sense to need citation of the books. We should add that the jury were most carefully instructed that they could not find the defendant guilty for advocacy of any of his opinions unless the words used had as their natural tendency and reasonably probable effect to obstruct the recruiting service , &c., and unless the defendant had the specific intent to do so in his mind.
In neither Schenck nor Debs does Holmes offer more specifics — like "the government has the power to prohibit ends like anti-draft riots or refusals to report for duty." Rather, Holmes uses deliberately vague language susceptible to the interpretation that the government has the power to prohibit speech that might lead people to demonstrate against, vote against, and petition their government to alter conscription. This is a calculated blurring of the line between what the government wants to avoid (a drop in support for the war and the draft) and what it should have the power to prevent (active defiance of the law, on the one hand, versus criticism of the law, on the other).
Frohwerk v. United States is the last of the shameful 1919 trilogy. Frohwerk was convicted under the Espionage Act for conspiring to produce a local newspaper critical of the war and of conscription. Once again Holmes wrote for the court, identifying the language that led to a ten-year sentence for Frohwerk. Once again, the quote is long, but important to establishing the breadth of speech targeted:
The first begins by declaring it a monumental and inexcusable mistake to send our soldiers to France, says that it comes no doubt from the great trusts, and later that it appears to be outright murder without serving anything practical; speaks of the unconquerable spirit and undiminished strength of the German nation, and characterizes its own discourse as words of warning to the American people. Then comes a letter from one of the counsel who argued here, stating that the present force is a part of the regular army raised illegally; a matter discussed at length in his voluminous brief, on the ground that before its decision to the contrary the Solicitor General misled this Court as to the law. Later, on August 3, came discussion of the causes of the war, laying it to the administration and saying 'that a few men and corporations might amass unprecedented fortunes we sold our honor, our very soul' with the usual repetition that we went to war to protect the loans of Wall Street. Later, after more similar discourse, comes 'We say therefore, cease firing.'
Next, on August 10, after deploring 'the draft riots in Oklahoma and elsewhere' in language that might be taken to convey an innuendo of a different sort, it is said that the previous talk about legal remedies is all very well for those who are past the draft age and have no boys to be drafted, and the paper goes on to give a picture, made as moving as the writer was able to make it, of the sufferings of a drafted man, of his then recognizing that his country is not in danger and that he is being sent to a foreign land to fight in a cause that neither he nor any one else knows anything of, and reaching the conviction that this is but a war to protect some rich men's money. [249 U.S. 204, 208] Who then, it is asked, will pronounce a verdict of guilty upon him if he stops reasoning and follows the first impulse of nature: self-preservation; and further, whether, while technically he is wrong in his resistance, he is not more sinned against than sinning; and yet again whether the guilt of those who voted the unnatural sacrifice is not greater than the wrong of those who now seek to escape by illadvised resistance. On August 17 there is quoted and applied to our own situation a remark to the effect that when rulers scheme to use it for their own aggrandizement loyalty serves to perpetuate wrong. On August 31 with more of the usual discourse, it is said that the sooner the public wakes up to the fact that we are led and ruled by England, the better; that our sons, our taxes and our sacrifices are only in the interest of England. On September 28 there is a sneering contrast between Lord Northcliffe and other Englishmen spending many hundreds of thousands of dollars here to drag us into the war and Count Bernstorff spending a few thousand to maintain peace between his own country and us. Later follow some compliments to Germany and a statement that the Central powers are carrying on a defensive war. There is much more to the general effect that we are in the wrong and are giving false and hypocritical reasons for our course, but the foregoing is enough to indicate the kind of matter with which we have to deal.
Next, in stark contrast to what he would say a year later, Holmes' minimized and dismissed the argument that there was insufficient evidence to show these words had any actual tendency to promote lawlessness:
It does not appear that there was any special effort to reach men who were subject to the draft; and if the evidence should show that the defendant was a poor man, turning out copy for Gleeser, his employer, at less than a day laborer's pay, for Gleeser to use or reject as he saw fit, in a newspaper of small circulation, there would be a natural in [249 U.S. 204, 209] clination to test every question of law to be found in the record very thoroughly before upholding the very severe penalty imposed. But we must take the case on the record as it is, and on that record it is impossible to say that it might not have been found that the circulation of the paper was in quarters where a little breath would be enough to kindle a flame and that the fact was known and relied upon by those who sent the paper out. Small compensation would not exonerate the defendant if it were found that he expected the result, even if pay were his chief desire. When we consider that we do not know how strong the Government's evidence may have been we find ourselves unable to say that the articles could not furnish a basis for a conviction upon the first count at least. We pass therefore to the other points that are raised.
After Holmes' opinions in the Schenck trilogy, the law of the United States was this: you could be convicted and sentenced to prison under the Espionage Act if you criticized the war, or conscription, in a way that "obstructed" conscription, which might mean as little as convincing people to write and march and petition against it. This is the context of the "fire in a theater" quote that people so love to brandish to justify censorship.
Sarah Chayes' L.A. Times column demonstrates how Holmes' rhetorical dodges can be employed in support of unprincipled and broad calls for censorship. Holmes blurred the line between what the government should be able to prevent (speakers urging listeners to imminent lawbreaking, like riots) and what it would merely like to prevent (loss of support for the war). Similarly, Chayes and her ilk blur the line between what the government should be able to prevent (speech intended to incite, and likely to incite, people to imminent lawbreaking), what it would like to prevent (violence by mobs, whether actually motivated by insulting videos or whether manipulated by forces using those videos) and what it should not be able to prevent (expressions of opinion which might offend someone and be used as an excuse for violence). Holmes accepted you shouldn't be permitted to make the populace doubt the war efforts in wartime; Chayes and her ilk accept you shouldn't be able to say things that can be used by distant mobs as justifications for rioting.
Holmes' Repentance — Too Little, Too Late
Conventional wisdom says that Holmes rethought his broad support of censorship when he grasped how open-ended it truly was. The next trilogy of cases before the Supreme Court, starting in late 1919, is consistent with that view. Holmes dissented repeatedly as the Supreme Court reaped what he had sown. In Abrams v. United States, the Supreme Court upheld the Espionage Act convictions of Russian immigrants. Though the defendants' publications included words that came significantly closer to advocating lawlessness than the Schenck defendants, what is notable is the breadth of power the majority confers upon the government to suppress wartime dissent:
The purpose of this obviously was to persuade the persons to whom it was addressed to turn a deaf ear to patriotic appeals in behalf of the Government of the United States, and to cease to render it assistance in the prosecution of the war.
Holmes, a regretful Dr. Frankenstein struggling against his creation, dissented. He first offered what in my opinion is a disingenuous and utterly unconvincing attempt to distinguish the case from Schenck, abruptly discovering fastidiousness about proof that expression actually has a tendency to cause lawbreaking:
I never have seen any reason to doubt that the questions of law that alone were before this Court in the cases of Schenck, Frohwerk and Debs, 249 U.S. 47, 204, 211, were rightly decided. I do not doubt for a moment that, by the same reasoning that would justify punishing persuasion to murder, the United States constitutionally may punish speech that produces or is intended to produce a clear and imminent danger that it will bring about forthwith certain substantive evils that the United States constitutionally may seek to prevent. The power undoubtedly is greater in time of war than in time of peace, because war opens dangers that do not exist at other times.
But, as against dangers peculiar to war, as against others, the principle of the right to free speech is always the same. It is only the present danger of immediate evil or an intent to bring it about that warrants Congress in setting a limit to the expression of opinion where private rights are not concerned. Congress certainly cannot forbid all effort to change the mind of the country. Now nobody can suppose that the surreptitious publishing of a silly leaflet by an unknown man, without more, would present any immediate danger that its opinions would hinder the success of the government arms or have any appreciable tendency to do so.
What follows is one of Holmes' most famous quotes defending freedom of expression, one that marks him unjustifiably and undeservedly in public memory as a champion of free speech.
Persecution for the expression of opinions seems to me perfectly logical. If you have no doubt of your premises or your power, and want a certain result with all your heart, you naturally express your wishes in law, and sweep away all opposition. To allow opposition by speech seems to indicate that you think the speech impotent, as when a man says that he has squared the circle, or that you do not care wholeheartedly for the result, or that you doubt either your power or your premises. But when men have realized that time has upset many fighting faiths, they may come to believe even more than they believe the very foundations of their own conduct that the ultimate good desired is better reached by free trade in ideas — that the best test of truth is the power of the thought to get itself accepted in the competition of the market, and that truth is the only ground upon which their wishes safely can be carried out. That, at any rate, is the theory of our Constitution. It is an experiment, as all life is an experiment. Every year, if not every day, we have to wager our salvation upon some prophecy based upon imperfect knowledge. While that experiment is part of our system, I think that we should be eternally vigilant against attempts to check the expression of opinions that we loathe and believe to be fraught with death, unless they so imminently threaten immediate interference with the lawful and pressing purposes of the law that an immediate check is required to save the country.
Yeah. Now you tell us.
Schafer v. United States is more of the same. It involved German-language newspapers in Philadelphia that opposed the war and mocked American efforts. Quoth the majority, advocating a standard that's little more than "this was bad for morale":
To them its derisive contempt may have been truly descriptive of American feebleness and inability to combat Germany's prowess, and thereby chill and check the ardency of patriotism and make it despair of success, and in hopelessness relax energy both in preparation and action. If it and the other articles, which we shall presently refer to, [251 U.S. 466, 479] had not that purpose, what purpose had they? Were they the mere expression of peevish discontent, aimless, vapid, and innocuous? We cannot so conclude. We must take them at their word, as the jury did, and ascribe to them a more active and sinister purpose. They were the publications of a newspaper, deliberately prepared, systematic, always of the same trend, more specific in some instances, it may be, than in others. Their effect or the persons affected could not be shown, nor was it necessary. The tendency of the articles and their efficacy were enough for offense-their 'intent' and 'attempt,' for those are the words of the law-and to have required more would have made the law useless. It was passed in precaution. The incidence of its violation might not be immediately seen, evil appearing only in disaster, the result of the disloyalty engendered and the spirit of mutiny.
. . . .
The purpose is manifest, however the statements of the article may be estimated, whether as criminal means, violations of law, or the exercise of free speech and of the press, [251 U.S. 466, 481] and its statements were deliberate and willfully false; the purpose being to represent that the war was not demanded by the people but was the result of the machinations of executive power, and thus to arouse resentment to it and what it would demand of ardor and effort. In final comment we may say that the article in effect justified the German aggressions.
This time Holmes joined Justice Brandeis, who began laying the groundwork for what would later become a principled application of the "clear and present danger" test.
The jury which found men guilty for publishing news items or editorials like those here in question must have supposed it to be within their province to condemn men, not merely for disloyal acts, but for a disloyal heart: provided only that the disloyal heart was evidenced by some utterance. To prosecute men for such publications reminds of the days when men were hanged for constructive treason. And, indeed, the jury may well have believed from the charge that the Espionage Act had in effect restored the crime of constructive treason. 2 To hold that such harmless additions [251 U.S. 466, 494] to or omissions from news items, and such impotent expressions of editorial opinion, as were shown here, can afford the basis even of a prosecution, will doubtless discourage criticism of the policies of the government. To hold that such publications can be suppressed as false reports, subjects to new perils the constitutional liberty of the press, already seriously curtailed in practice under powers assumed to have been conferred upon the postal authorities. Nor will this grave danger end with the passing [251 U.S. 466, 495] of the war. The constitutional right of free speech has been declared to be the same in peace and in war. In peace, too, men may differ widely as to what loyalty to our country demands; and an intolerant majority, swayed by passion or by fear, may be prone in the future, as it has often been in the past to stamp as disloyal opinions with which it disagrees. Convictions such as these, besides abridging freedom of speech, threaten freedom of thought and of belief.
Anyone who can reconcile that with the Schenck cases is a better lawyer than I.
Finally, Pierce v. United States concerned Espionage Act convictions premised on anti-war leaflets which, the majority accepted, obstructed the war and contained actionable false statements about the war. In his opinion — which Holmes joined — Justice Brandeis questioned whether the evidence sufficed to show that the defendants knew that statements in the leaflets were false, questioned whether some of the challenged statements were fact or opinion (including, notably, discussions of the reasons for the war, exactly the sort of discussions found outside of First Amendment protection in the Schenck trilogy), and questioned the proof that the defendant intended to obstruct the war by distributing the leaflets. It's a rigorous examination of the government's theory of the case and justifications for censorship; it's also utterly irreconcilable with what Holmes wrote just months before, in which he broadly stated that intent to obstruct could be inferred from the contents, and in which he ignored distinctions between fact and opinion.
The damage Holmes inflicted — the malleable and unprincipled standard of censorship he drafted — was not thoroughly rebuffed until a half-century later. Brandenburg v. Ohio states the modern standard:
These later decisions have fashioned the principle that the constitutional guarantees of free speech and free press do not permit a State to forbid or proscribe advocacy of the use of force or of law violation except where such advocacy is directed to inciting or producing imminent lawless action and is likely to incite or produce such action. . . . A statute which fails to draw this distinction impermissibly intrudes upon the freedoms guaranteed by the First and Fourteenth Amendments. It sweeps within its condemnation speech which our Constitution has immunized from governmental control.
Note that Brandenburg does suggest, explicitly, that some speech is unprotected by the First Amendment. But people seeking a generic pro-censorship quote go to Holmes, not Brandenburg, and well they should — Schenck supports a loose and unprincipled interpretation of what the "fire in a theater" might be. [Edit: as a commenter points out, note that to be fair to Chayes she does mention Brandenburg even though she opens with Schenck.]
The Consequences of Uncritical Deference to the Government
Holmes was not specifically hostile to speech. It's likely that his permissive approach to government censorship in the Schenck arises from his deference to the other branches of government. Deference from the judiciary is a good thing when it comes to interference in general policy. It's a dangerous thing when it comes to interpretation of the state's power over the individual. Perhaps no Holmes case demonstrates this so well — or is so widely and justifiably condemned — as Buck v. Bell, in which Holmes wrote the opinion upholding forcible sterilization under a governmental eugenics policy. That led him to another famous rhetorical flourish, to which I allude in my title:
We have seen more than once that the public welfare may call upon the best citizens for their lives. It would be strange if it could not call upon those who already sap the strength of the State for these lesser sacrifices, often not felt to be such by those concerned, in order to prevent our being swamped with incompetence. It is better for all the world if, instead of waiting to execute degenerate offspring for crime or to let them starve for their imbecility, society can prevent those who are manifestly unfit from continuing their kind. The principle that sustains compulsory vaccination is broad enough to cover cutting the Fallopian tubes. Three generations of imbeciles are enough.
Holmes' shocking callousness in this quote is different than his language in Schenck, but his casual and colloquial approach to endorsing government power over individuals is the same. As in Schenck, he offers a catchy slogan where a meticulous and principled standard is called for.
Bear all of that in mind the next time someone name-drops Holmes and cites Schenck as part of a broad endorsement of censorship. The problem isn't that they're incorrectly citing Holmes. The problem is that they are citing him exactly right, for the vague, censorious, and fortunately long-departed "standard" he articulated. Justice Holmes, three generations of hearing your sound-bite are enough.

McMartin Preschool Revisited

http://www.whale.to/b/constantine3.html             
McMartin Preschool Revisited

How a Mysterious CIA-DIA Front Plied "Manchurian" Mind Control
Techniques & Experimental Psychotechnology on Involuntary Human
Subjects Behind a Facade of Child Molestations

by Alex Constantine

Part One
Part 2
Part One
Welcome to Manhattan Beach
        Paul Bynum graduated from college in 1972 and joined the
Hermosa Beach police department a year later. At 31 he was
promoted to the rank of chief detective. Bynum was not a
traditional investigator. One fellow detective often thought he
was "too bright to be a cop." Off duty, he drove an MG and mixed
with the '60s survivors at the Sweetwater Cafe.
        In 1976 Bynum was assigned the investigation of the Karen
Klaas murder. Klaas was the divorced wife of Bill Medley, a
vocalist for the Righteous Brothers. She was raped and murdered
one morning about an hour after dropping her five-year-old son
off at the McMartin preschool in Manhattan Beach.
        Neighbors told police they'd been alarmed at the sight of
a menacing stranger before the murder wandering through the
neighborhood. Police later entertained speculation that Klaas had
been stalked. Throughout the  week her body was found, this same
stranger had popped up several times on her corner. A neighbor
phoned Karen to warn her. She didn't answer. When friends entered
the back door of the house, concerned for her safety, they found
a Caucasian male with a beard, about 5'7", 28 years old, dressed
in a long olive green coat with a tunic collar and boots. He was
leaving through the front door. Klaas was found naked and
unconscious. She died five days later. Nothing was stolen. Police
had no indication that Klaas knew the man who assaulted her.
        In 1984, shortly after indictments were handed to
defendants in the McMartin child molestation case, Gerald Klaas,
her husband, drove off a cliff in Oregon and was killed. Children
alleged in a grand jury hearing that teachers at the preschool
had threatened to kill family members if they talked about abuse,
It was rumored around town that the Klaas deaths and the McMartin
case may have been related.
        But police said no. "We have no leads, no suspects and
we're not coordinating with Manhattan Beach," Hermosa Beach Lt.
Mike Lavin told reporters.1
        In 1979, Paul Bynum was forced out of the police
department without an explanation despite an unblemished record.
After Bynum had wrapped up an investigation of a series of
murders of teenage girls in nearby Redondo Beach, culminating in
the arrest and conviction of serial killers Roy Norris and
Lawrence Bittaker, police chief Frank Beeson pressured Bynum to
take a stress leave. Bynum was haunted by the serial murder
investigation, but remained confident in his emotional stability.
He refused the leave. The chief obtained an order from the city
manager, and Bynum was forced out on an indefinite disability
leave.
        He chalked it up to internal politics, "paranoia."
        "When the papers reported that Beeson had shown up
apparently drunk at his first Hermosa council meeting and dropped
his revolver on the floor," Bynum told reporter Kevin Cody, "he
thought we had tipped reporters." Beeson was unaware that
reporters routinely attended meetings of the city council.2
        Bynum set out on a new career as a private investigator.
In March 1984, he was retained by the Buckeys' defense attorney,
Danny Davis, and in the course of his investigation came to the
conclusion that children had been abused at the preschool. He
found the video-taped interviews of the children by child
therapists "credible." One afternoon, Cody informed Bynum that
hundreds of children had alleged molestation took place at the
preschool. Bynum was shocked. He stammered he had no idea so many
children were involved.
        In 1986 he was called to testify at the trial of Ray
Buckey by prosecutor Lael Rubin. The morning he was to appear, a
juror's home was burglarized, and Bynum's testimony was
rescheduled for the next morning.
        "Neither side is going to like what I have to say," he
told Cody. For one thing, there was the matter of Bynum's lost
citation books, records he'd kept while a detective in Hermosa
Beach. When the police arrested Ray Buckey on molestation
charges, the "lost" books were discovered on the preschool
attendent's desk. What were official police records doing in
Buckey's home?
        And Prosecutor Rubin had intended to ask Bynum about a
map turned up by DA investigators in March 1986, pin-pointing the
location of turtle shells Bynum had unearthed at the lot next to
the McMartin preschool. (The children claimed teachers had
killed turtles to demonstrate what would happen to them and their
families if they talked about the molestations. Bynum, while
retained by the defense, had managed to corroborate a key point
in the testimony of the children.)
        Bynum's court appearance was preempted by "suicide,"
although the timing left some parents in the case convinced he'd
been murdered.3 His body was discovered by his wife at 5:45 in
the morning. He died of a head shot from a .38 caliber pistol.
        "None of the half dozen people questioned who were close
to Bynum could think of any reason why his involvement in the
case might have driven him to suicide," reported the Easy Reader
in Manhattan Beach. "Paul was kind of a worrier," said Stephen
Kay, a deputy district attorney and friend of the Bynum family,
"but there was no hint of suicide. He was very upbeat about his
wife and new daughter, both of whom he adored."4
        The belief that Bynum had been murdered was fueled by the
memory of another odd death, the alcohol toxicity that claimed
the life of Judy Johnson. She was the first mother to speak
publicly about child molestation at McMartin and sympathizers of
the Buckeys in the press have gone to great lengths to portray
Johnson as "crazy." Her life was inverted the day her son came
home from the McMartin school, bleeding. Strangers entered her
life, intimidated her. She lived in fear, and felt it necessary
to keep a gun in the house. Her estranged husband turned hostile.
Paranoia led her to believe him a perpetrator. She took to
alcohol. She was allergic to alcohol. It poisoned her.
        The death of Judy Johnson was met with howls of laughter
in greater Los Angeles. She will be remembered as the delusional
paranoiac who set in motion a wave of "hysteria" carried through
Southern California by a sensational press and out across the
plains, contaminating lives and decimating families everywhere. A
groundless witch-hunt. This was the explanation doled out by
"experts" from leading universities.
        Nevertheless, children who attended the preschool still
insist they were abused. And the detailed memories of their
parents are sharply at odds with the simple caricature of the
case repeated endlessly in the press. They recall not suggestive
questioning, but the long hours of testimony by dozens of
children, the telephoned death threats, how some of the children
suffered deep emotional problems requiring hospitalization.
Knowing child pornography to be a highly lucrative business, they
frown at the snickering over the childrens' disclosures that they
were forced to play "naked movie-star" games. They haven't put
aside as freak accident the first exhibit in the case, a
physician's report that one of the children suffered "blunt force
trauma" of sexual areas.5 The parents were left to ponder why
some of the toddlers in the care of the McMartins had chlamydia,
a sexually-transmitted infection.6
        Where was the humor in all of this?

Open Season
        The parents wondered, like everyone else, at the
incredibility of the charges -- yet they had to question Peggy
McMartin's testimony that she only worked at the school for a
short time, when payroll records showed that she had been
employed there for years. To the families, the final verdict of
Ray Buckey meant it was now "open season on children."
        And the press opened fire. The world was told redundantly
that ABC's Wayne Satz, the reporter who broke the case (killed by
a heart attack at 41), and Kee MacFarlane, a therapist testifying
for the prosecution, had an affair, as if this had any bearing on
the allegations of the children. Even Oliver Stone, perhaps in
ignorance, took to the bandwagon with a film made for HBO,
written by Abby Mann, theorizing that hysteria in Manhattan Beach
was kindled when one child returned home from school one
afternoon with "a red bottom" -- this would be the son of Judy
Johnson, and he hadn't been spanked -- he was bleeding from the
anus.
         This hardly constitutes media "spin." It is a conscious
participation in a felony. The account of the case pounded into
collective memory by media repetition goes that far to distort
the facts. The widespread media coverage was, according to Los
Angeles Times editor Noel Greenwood, "a mean-spirited campaign"
organized to discredit the children and their therapists.7
        But why should certain members of the corporate press,
and segments of the legal and psychiatric professions, go to such
lengths to suppress evidence of organized child abuse at
McMartin?
        The traumatic crimes reported by the toddlers bear an
uncanny resemblance to mind control programming, a specialty of
certain classified federal agencies and cult cut-outs on the
black budget payroll.8
        The children are often ridiculed because some of their
charges are impossible. Tunnels under the preschool? Too
ludicrous to consider. But as it happens, there were tunnels,
confirmed in 1993 by a team of five scientists from leading
universities.
        The unearthing of the tunnels, like much of the critical
evidence, never made it to the courtroom. They have been
discreetly excluded from newspaper accounts.
        Filling the void, Debbie Nathan, a widely published
skeptic of ritual abuse, heaped ridicule on the tunnel
allegations in the Village Voice in June 1990. She maintained the
McMartin site had already been "painstakingly probed for tunnels.
None were found."9 Nathan's account is a fabrication. In fact,
recalls Dr. Roland Summit, who contributed to the final report on
the tunnel excavation, parents started digging and prosecutors,
reluctantly forced to a showdown, "commissioned a superficial
search of open terrain." District Attorney Ira Reiner then
declared the tunnel stories unfounded "without going under the
concrete floor of the preschool." Once the tunnels were
officially discounted, attempts to explore for an underground
reality were instant targets for ridicule."10
        Archaeologist Gary Stickel was retained to lead the
excavation on the re-commendation of Dr. Rainier Berger, chairman
of UCLA's Interdisciplinary Archeology Program, by parents of
McMartin children.11 Initially Stickel sided with the Buckeys,
believing the abuse allegations to be so much moonlight for
hysterics. However, he'd heard of late homicide detective Paul
Bynum, the first to dig at the site:

        Bynum apparently conducted his informal digging in
February, 1984 (Daily Breeze, 1987). It is significant to note
he did unearth some buried animal remains, "numerous pieces of
tortoise shells and bones" (Daily Breeze, 1987). "There was keen
interest at the time since it was reported that the children
testified that tortoises, rabbits, and other small animals were
mutilated to terrorize the children into keeping silent" (Daily
Breeze, 1987).12

        But "experts" courted by the press snaffled at the
suggestion that animals were killed to frighten children at
McMartin and other preschools around the country. It was not
until 1993 that a study by the National Center for Child Abuse
and Neglect confirmed that children are not only threatened in
day care settings, "most threats are very specific in terms of
what the consequence of disclosure will be and how the threat
will be carried out.... The use of such severe threats is
obviously quite frightening to young children and is effective in
preventing disclosure. In fact, it appears that threats used in
day care center cases may go beyond what is usually needed to
silence victims, and may in some instances be made for purposes
of psychological terror in and of itself."13

Into the Grotto
        Most reporters in Southern California pooh-poohed
evidence of coercion, but there was a great, gaping silence when
the tunnels were found.
        "I asked my daughter," recalls Jackie MacGauley, a mother
of two children who attended the preschool, "'How could they have
taken you to these places without being seen?' And she answered
me as though I was silly to ask such a question. She said,
'Through the tunnels, of course.'"
        The Los Angeles Times ran a spate of features poking fun
of the excavation team until actual evidence of tunnels was
discovered. Then the Times  ran a brief news item, one paragraph
long, dryly noting that "evidence" of tunnels had been found, and
never mentioned the subject again. The local Beach Reporter
covered the story without a blush: "parents began to dig with
shovels, allegedly in an area pointed out by a nine-year-old
former student of the McMartin preschool, who told them to dig
behind a cement planter in the northeast corner. When parents
unearthed several broken turtle shells and a few bones, they
stopped digging and notified the district attorney's office."15
        Once the entrance was exposed, Stickel used remote
sensing equipment to read the terrain conductivity of the empty
lot next to the preschool. The survey was conducted by a
respected geophysicist, Robert Beer, working with an
electromagnetic scanner. The tunnel opening was found precisely
where children said it would be. Stickel: "Some of the children
had stated there had been animal cages placed along that wall and
that they had entered a tunnel under the cages." A foreign soil
deposit was found near the foundation. Clearing the anomaly with
a backhoe, they found the roots of an avocado tree cut to clear a
path for the tunnel. The roots had been cut with a hand saw and
torn away, and shreds dangled on either wall of the tunnel.
        That's the moment editors at the Times chose to pull
reporters off the story. All other news outlets rapidly followed
suit.
        But the excavators cleared the foreign soil and followed
the tunnel anyway. It "meandered under Classroom No. 4 and then
most of Classroom No. 3.... There is no other scenario that fits
all of the facts except that the feature was indeed a tunnel,"
they concluded. "The date of the construction and use of the
tunnel was not absolutely established, but an assessment of seven
factors of data all indicate that it was probably constructed,
used and completely filled back in sometime after 1966 (the
construction date of the preschool)."15
        Dr. E. Michael, a specialist in forensic geology in
Malibu, was called to examine a cavity in the underground
passage. Together with Dr. Herbert Adams of the geology
department at Cal State University, a ground resistivity reading
of the tunnel was followed from the preschool to a triplex next
door, a traversing section parallel to the north wall of the
school, 5 feet away, extending 20 feet eastward, 10 to 15 feet
beneath the surface.16
        Gerald Hobbs, a local tree surgeon for 25 years, did much
of the actual digging. Hobbs:

        The children had told two different stories about this
tunnel prior to the dig. One, that they had gone through the
tunnel and came up in the house next door, and two, they had come
up in the garage, which blocked the house from the street. At any
rate, the tunnel went in that direction.... That evening I went
to the house next door and followed the walk between the school
and the house, only about 4-1/2 feet apart. I went about 30 feet
down between the buildings and found a crawl space under the
house. I bellied my way toward the southwest corner of the house.
After going about 20 feet, I found an area inside the west wall
of the house where the floor was cut out. If I remember
correctly, the area of floor that was missing was 36" X 38" X
41".16

        A total of 77 animal bones were found buried at the
McMartin site, an assortment of the osteo-remains of domestic
cattle, chickens, dogs and a single rabbit.17
        However, Debbie Nathan, the hide-bound "skeptic" of
ritual abuse, a scion of the False Memory Syndrome Foundation,
told another story. The McMartin site, she insisted, had already
been "painstakingly probed for tunnels" by the D.A.'s office.
(Not so, as we've seen). "None were found. [The McMartin] parents
have invested years believing in demonic conspiracies and
underground nursery tunnels. (Until recently the parents were
still digging. They came up with Indian artifacts)." No mention
of Bynum's independent findings. No mention of the dig as it
happened in the real world. She reserves much of her scorn for
former FBI agent Ted Gunderson and Jackie MacGauley. Nathan seems
not to realize that Gunderson and MacGauley brought in Stickel
and his geological team to defuse accusations they were directly
engaged in the dig. They weren't. The search for the tunnels was
independent, and scores of volunteers pitched in.
        Nathan's refrain of "no evidence" is hollow. She has
been known to contort around the facts of ritual abuse in a
grotesque parody of journalism and is frequently blind to
critical evidence. Nathan continues to find "no evidence" of
abuse at McMartin despite the nightmares, the acting-out, medical
molestation reports and sexual infections. The tunnel excavation,
she assures with psychic certainty (and a sniff of
condescension), is a "hoax."
        To come to the point: Nathan's propaganda, repeated in
the New York Times and a host of other corporate publications,
happened to conceal a classified mind control operation the CIA
and Pentagon had undertaken thirty years before....

End of Part One

- Notes -

        1. Kevin Cody, "Former HB Officer's Suicide Adds Questions
to McMartin Mystery," Easy Reader (Manhattan Beach tabloid news
weekly), November 17, 1987.
        2. Ibid.
        3. The Easy Reader obituary declares, "none of the half
dozen people questioned who were close to Bynum could think of
any reason why his involvement in the case might have driven him
to commit suicide. But the timing of Bynum's death and the
controversy already surrounding the McMartin case ... inevitably
spawned speculation that a link existed between his suicide and
his pending testimony."
        4. Cody.
        5. McMartin trial record, evidentiary exhibit one.
        6. Interviews with parents.
        7. Alex Constantine, "Ray Buckey's Press Corps and the
Tunnels of McMartin," Psychic dictatorship in the U.S.A.
Portland: Feral House, 1995, pp. 77-96.
        8. A theme of Psychic Dictatorship in the U.S.A.
        9. Debbie Nathan, "What McMartin Started: The Ritual
Abuse Hoax," Village Voice, June 12, 1990.
        10. Roland Summit, M.D., "Introduction," Archaeological
Investigations of the McMartin Preschool Site, Manhattan Beach,
California, unpublished report by archaeologist Gary Stickel of
the McMartin Tunnel Project, 1993, p. ii.
        11. Gary Stickel, foreword to Archaeological
Investigations.
        12. Ibid.
        13. Kelly, Brant and Waterman, "Sexual Abuse of Children
in Day Care Centers," Journal of Child Abuse & Neglect (17),
1993, p. 74.
        14. Stickel, Archaeological Investigations, p. 95. The
assessment of the tunnel's age was corroborated by Dr. Jon
Michael, a geologist on the McMartin project.
        15. Dr. E. Michael, in a letter to Dr. Gary Stickel, July
2, 1992, pp. 2-3.
        16. Gerald Hobbs, "Notes on Investigation of the
Neighboring Tri-plex,"in Archaeological Investigations, p. 176.
        17. Charles Schwartz, Ph.D., "The McMartin Preschool
Osteological Remains" (2nd report), Archaeological Investigations,
June 15, 1990, p. 1.

Part II

        Federally funded biomedical and behavioral research has
resulted in major advances in health care and improved the
quality of life for all Americans.

                                    - Bill Clinton
                                      February 17, 1994

Bad Apples
        Intelligence officials squirm through hard questions so
gracefully that their appearance at investigative hearings is
always lively with congressmen bellowing in outraged disbelief at
their agility. A spy is a liar by definition, so no one listened
in 1964 when CIA director Richard Helms, in a letter to the
Warren Commission, made reference to Langley's interest in a
cyborgean form of "biological radio communication"
        "Cybernetics," Helms explained, "can be used in molding
of a child's character ... the amassing of experience, the
establishment of social behavior patterns..." -- What was that?
Machines? Molding character? No one at the Warren Commission
thought to ask the CIA official what the devil he was talking
about -- "... control of the growth processes of the
individual..."1
        Helms wasn't a lunatic. At McGill University, Georgetown,
Cornell and some 40 other upper-tier academic institutions around
the country, psychiatrists and engineers on the CIA payroll R&D'd
the technology of remote "biological communication." The
breathtaking potential of the devices, however, has been marred
by the bloodthirsty protocol of CIA-military experimentation.
        One subject of the experiments in the 1960s, a
psychologist living in Germany today recalled in a letter to the
Freedom of Thought Foundation, an organization of researchers and
subjects of CIA-DoD mind control experiments, his grim history as
a guinea pig. The experience was horrifyingly similar to the
abuse later described by hundreds of toddlers in southern
California. And he suggests how far-fetched cover stories (psi or
"psychic" spying experiments, "alien" abductions) routinely
conceal EM assaults on mind and personality:

        The functions of torture ... associate the original
personality of the victim with pain, panic and horror -- the
desired personality is conditioned with pleasure afterwards, to
function as aversive conditioning to establish new behavior
patterns, establish a panic-controlled mechanism of amnesia ("If
you remember, you will try to betray us, but we will be informed
before you succeed in managing this, because we are everywhere,
then you will be tortured again, so you will not remember."),
produce an artificial, controlled multiple personality disorder
(which is, under natural conditions, a result of traumatization).
        And by the way, torture itself, even if not combined with
mind control techniques, elicits amnestic disorders or memory
blocks.... With heavy electroshocks the victim is regressed to a
state of an infant. Then the torture resembles psychologically
the ill-treatment in childhood. Rape is common, too, as an
equivalent of sexual abuse in infancy.
        Being a human robot means to be mentally ill, means to be
a person suffering from Multiple Personality Disorder (MPD), the
difference between a "natural" MPD and a artificial,
mind-controlled MPD is that the latter was consciously tailored
by the controllers to whom the victim is tied by invisible
unconscious chains.
        Many students in the field of psychology and psychiatry
don't believe that mind control is possible ... and that is
probably because they haven't understood the basic concept: MPD
produced by a stimulation of the natural conditions of its
causes. This is very important: Only if the natural conditions of
the causes of MPD are reproduced [will] a human robot work
reliably. And that is a "must" in all clandestine actions.
        You may ask why I can be so sure. There are two reasons:
As a psychologist I know a little bit about the mechanisms of
mind and behavior, and I am a victim.
        As far as I can remember I was the victim of a program
with the aim to delete my personality -- literally to dissolute
my personality and extract it from my nervous system. They told
me that I was sentenced to death and that they have found a
method to execute me, but leave my body alive. In short: They
tried to make a human robot or a slave out of me [with]:
        * Classical hypnosis, drugs and so on.
        * Electrical torture of my genitals. They used a device
which I call a torture trouser. This is a sort of loin-cloth made
of leather and steel bonds by which an electrode is fastened to
the genitals of the victim. For electric supply they use a cable
or a battery so that you can freely move and if the torturer
wants to torture you he sends an electric signal to the battery
using a transmitter. This is a very practical device for aversive
behavior modification....
        * They gave me a drug that induces near-death
experiences. When I was clinically dead a voice suggested to me
that he was god and that he had decided that I have to be born
again as a slave. Then I was reanimated.
        * They used electromagnetic fields to induce panic, fear,
depression and pleasure, by this means they conditioned me very
effectively. They used ESB too, but it was not so effective.
They even coagulated parts of my nucleus amygdala, but it wasn't
effective, too. They conditioned my EEG.
        * They obviously have found a wavelength with hypnotic
effects so that they could give me posthypnotic orders. I wasn't
able not to obey.
        * My memory was erased by electroshocks, radiation and
the described torture mechanism. As far as I can remember all
this happened between 1972 and 1982. There are some reminiscences
making me believe that the first manipulations started earlier,
1967. Some other reminiscences furnish some evidence that they
began to dissociate my mind when I was a little child living in
an orphanage, younger than three years old.
        I am not a mad man. I am 43 years old. I am a
psychologist and a doctor of the economic and social sciences. I
am working for a network of facilities treating drug addicts, and
I am responsible for public relations. I am strongly convinced
that I am out of danger now. I don't know whether they used
modern electronic mind control methods. I can't believe that they
implanted brain transmitters into my skull, but who knows.
        I don't know why they chose me for this program. There
are lots of more or less nonsensical cover stories ... being a
man from outer space, having dangerous paranormal (psi)
faculties, being able to unmask spies by using these methods....2

        "Averse conditioning ... electric shocks ... rape is
common" -- years later, the McMartin children would also claim to
be "tied by invisible unconscious chains" to morbidly cruel
adults engaged in traumatic "clandestine actions." Another
survivor of the grim experiments in the 1960s has memories nearly
identical to those of the McMartin toddlers: "hypnosis,
electroshock, sensory deprivation, by isolation -- in closets, in
underground dirt rooms, in graves, underwater, death threats to
self, others and animals, use of drugs ... seduction and
blackmail."3
        At the preliminary McMartin hearing, 14 children
testified for 88 days. They described 45 threats to them and
their parents.4 The tactic is debated. One psychologist will
frown at threatening children. Another will dismiss the very
mention of death threats as a hysterical aberration or a "false
memory."
        Guess which psychologist has a classified resume ...

Virtual Hell
        Walter Urban, a defense attorney for the Buckeys, told
New York Times reporter David Hechler in 1988 the "stories" of
children at McMartin were impossible to believe. "Such as: 'I was
molested." Where did it occur? 'In a hot-air balloon over the
desert.' 'In a speed boat, where sharks were all around, and they
told us that we were going to be thrown to the sharks if we
didn't agree to be molested.' That kind of stuff."5 Other
children swore they'd witnessed teachers at the preschool flying.
        Children say the darnedest things. Of course, anyone with
a gram of sense rejects these claims out of hand. Then again ...
        Chris de Nicola would keep Amnesty International's entire
staff occupied for a year. Born in July, 1962, Nicola was used at
the age of four in federally-sponsored hypnotic imaging
experiments at Kansas City University. "I was strapped down," she
recalls. A doctor festooned her head and body with electrodes,
"used what looked like an overhead projector and repeatedly said
he was burning different images into my brain while a red light
flashed, aimed at my forehead. In between each sequence he used
electric shock on my body and told me to go deeper and deeper
while repeating each image would go deeper into my brain, and I
would do whatever he told me to do. I felt drugged because he had
given me a shot before he started the procedure. When it was
over, he gave me another shot. The next thing I remember I was
with my grandparents again in Tucson."6 (The McMartin children
also spoke of adults slipping them drugs, and electric-convulsive
shocks are a recurrent theme of intelligence-cult abuse claims.)
The "doctor" in this instance was L. Wilson Greene; with a little
research, the girl's therapist discovered with a little research
that a man with this name was the scientific director of the
chemical and radiological lab at the Army Chemical Center.7
        Children forced to be used in the experiments have spoken
of wearing virtual-reality goggles. Thirty years after the
barbaric treatment Nicola received, the beaming of images to the
visual cortex is stock-and-trade stuff to the microwave mafia.
The virtual-reality goggles were described by child mind control
subject well before they were commercialized. The children
reported that there were made to view threatening images, or
convinced them they'd taken part in murder, cannibalism and other
horrific crimes.8
        In January 1996, the full-grown director of a support
group for ritually abused children in Los Angeles (she has worked
closely with the families in the McMartin case) discovered
firsthand what happened at the preschool when the local mind
control team targeted her for torture from a remote source. The
experience began with a splitting headache, "like needles" boring
into her cranium. The attack continued for seven or eight hours.
She was reduced to screaming and crying and took to bed. When she
closed her eyes, her head was filled with images of figures in
robes moving in a circle. She opened her eyes and the figures
still swarmed in the darkness in front of her. She switched on
the light. The image was still there.9
        She wasn't hallucinating. And the McMartin children
weren't suffering "false memories." These days, the images --
frequently combined with an electronic form of hypnosis -- are
projected to the brain's visual pathways, received with perfect
clarity.
        There are innumerable examples of helpless private
citizens who've had the misfortune to fall prey to the whims of
the mind control fraternity.
        One of them was Patrick Warden, a high-potential
high-achiever who scored in the 98th percentile of his high
school intelligence test in 1969, an accomplishment he repeated
on his graduate record exam at the University of California at
Berkeley. In 1980 a CIA recruiter approached him. In short order,
invasive "voices" came to him. Warden was told the Agency wanted
him to become a public relations officer for the agency's "mental
telepathy system." The "system," he  discovered by scouring
obscure biomedical journals and the few books on CIA mind control
available, is "operational," employing "technology that operates
apparently by radio and microwaves, and can broadcast voices and
visual images, including somatic sensations, and affect the
autonomic nervous system across distances.... Though in its
primitive form the MTS mimics psychic phenomena, it involves
man-made technology."10
        The are innumerable instances of ritual abuse accompanied
by exotic "psychic" images, voices, sensations, special effects
of the type generated by technology described in documented
histories of CIA mind control. Consider the case of Chad Ingram,
the son of confessed ritual abuser Paul Ingram of Olympia,
Washington. Lawrence Wright, in a 1993 New Yorker feature that
attempted to debunk ritual abuse and exonerate Ingram based on
opinions of psychologists from the False Memory Syndrome
Foundation. The shrinks dismissed the boy's memories of abuse
out-of-hand because "he had heard voices in his head."11
        Impossible? A doctor at one of Stockholm's most
prestigious hospitals acknowledges that young children were used
for experiments involving advanced mind control technology to
evaluate their "thought activity and reactions."12 This line of
R&D quite naturally evolved into tinkering with the transmission
of virtual-reality images and voices to the brain.
        The devices have been around for decades. And they
weren't produced in the dog-star cluster, shipped by flying
saucer to earth, though the CIA, military intelligence sector and
certain psychologists (with a CIA pedigree) have convinced
hundreds of millions that "aliens" come from untold light-years
away to stick CIA implants in our heads, the most unbelievable
cover story ever told -- one passionately defended by many of the
same skeptics who drown allegations of ritual abuse -- the
torture of children -- in condescending snorts of laughter, and
pride themselves on rational thinking. (But then, about 70% of
the human brain is composed of fat.)
        Richard Helms wasn't betraying his own deepest ambitions
when he told the Warren Commission of the Agency's experiments in
"molding a child's character" with cybernetics.

Notes

        1. Walter Bowart, Operation Mind Control, New York: Dell,
1978, p. 256.

        2. Anonymous letter, Free Thinking,  Freedom of Thought
Foundation newsletter, prepublication review copy, vol. 1, no. 4,
March 1995.

        3. Marcia Chambers, "Bail is Rejected in Child Sex Case,"
New York Times, December 20, 1986, p. 34.

        4. Renee Bright, letter to the President's Advisory
Commission on Human Radiation Experiments, March 9, 1995, p. 2.

        5. David Hechler, The Battle and the Backlash: The Child
Sexual Abuse War, Lexington, Massachusetts: Lexington Books,
1988, p. 334.

        6. Chris De Nicola, statement to the President's
Commission on Human Radiation Experiments, April, 1995 hearings,
p. 1.

        7. Valerie Wolf, letter to Presidential Advisory
Commission on Human Radiation Experiments, March 12, 1995, p. 3.

        8. Valerie Wolf, "Report on Behavior and Activities
Reported by My Patients from 1988 to Present,"Presidential
Advisory Commission hearings.

        9. Interview with author, January 24, 1996. Compare this
virtual-reality vision with the memory of Paul Ingram in the
Olympia, Washington ritual abuse case: "Ingram began seeing
people in robes kneeling around a fire. He thought he saw a
corpse." Lawrence Wright, "Remembering Satan - Part I," The New
Yorker, May 17, 1993, p. 73.

        10. Patrick A. Warden, "Mind Control and Mental
Telepathy,' MindNet Notes (electronic journal),  August 1, 1993.

        11. Wright, p. 74. Often, as our German subject notes,
post-hypnotic suggestion is used to dissolve a child's memory of
the trauma, protecting the identities of his tormentors. It's
fairly common for a subject to resort to self-mutilation, a
post-hypnotic command, when recalling blocked memories of
childhood abuse in therapy sessions, according to Los Angeles
child therapist Catherine Gould. Such programming could explain
the sudden illness of Chad Ingram when confronting certain
memories: "Chad produced a memory of being assaulted by Ray Risch
[a mechanic for the Washington state police and a cohort of the
boy's father] in the basement of Ingrams' house when he was ten
or twelve years old. At this point, Chad leaned forward 'in a
trance-like state.' Sometimes he would go off for 5-10 minutes
without saying anything." Wright, p. 77.
        "A major part of the mind control experimentation [on
children] was involved in wiping out the memory of the subject
through electric shock, trauma and drugs." - Valerie Wolf, report
to Clinton's Commission on Radiation, March 12, 1995, p. 4.

        12. Robert Naeslund, a victim of Swedish mind control
research, original ms. of Brain Transmitter, a privately-printed
expose.

Sex, Drugs, the CIA, MIND CONTROL and Your Children

http://www.whale.to/b/alexander.html            
Sex, Drugs, the CIA, MIND CONTROL and  Your Children 
By A.B.H. Alexander
Probe Magazine 1997
Throughout history, among the ruling elite. Just how to control the populace and defeat your enemies is a top priority. In the waning years of the Vietnam conflict we heard our generals stressing that we should win the hearts and minds of our enemy, this strategy was proving successful, but it was too little too late. In the late 1930's Adolf Hitler and his colleagues had to make a choice between building more weapons of mass destruction and weapons of mass control. Hitler choose the later. Those in ruling positions decide between subtle methods of control by media, taxes, religion and health measures, or simple, brutal police state tactics.
The use of propaganda techniques made famous by Joseph Goebbels became such a sublime way of Influencing the masses that our latter day propagandists are now more numerous than ever. The only thing that has changed is their title; they now call themselves "spin doctors", and they aren't spinning the truth.
Chinese philosopher and strategist. Sun Tzu, said. "All warfare Is based on deception. A skilled general must be master of the complementary arts of simulation and dissimulation; while creating shapes, to confuse and delude the enemy, he conceals his true dispositions and ultimate intent. Moving as intangibly as a ghost in the starlight, he Is obscure. Inaudible. His primary target is the mind of the opposing commander; the-vlctorlous situation, a product of his creative Imagination." (i) Sun Tzu fully realized that real victory lies in controlling the thoughts of your enemy.
Today, controlling the mind of what is perceived as the enemy has risen to new heights. While propagandists and spin doctors are the more visible tools, there is a much more sinister understanding of how advances in technology can turn any human being into a kind of slave. The worst part of it all is that many of those so enslaved are so well conditioned to their state of misery that they accept the yoke with little struggle.
What tools are used and how far have these projects gone? Previous issues of PROBE and many other publications as well, have recently highlighted the potential use of this ultimate weapon of mind control. Part of this article will explore the lesser known but depraved use of this power over a group of selected people with incestual and sexual abuse backgrounds.
First, we must separate fantasy from fiction and find out what can be documented. Second, we must remember that what we are searching for is supposed to be kept a secret. Therefore, while the quality of information is mixed. It may also be very disturbing.
Bill Kurtis's TV-show, A & E Investigative Report on the assassination of Robert Kennedy suggested that Sirhan Sirhan was a mind controlled assassin or patsy that would have been created under Project Artichoke .(2) The object of this project was to create the real "Manchurian Candidate", an assassin who could be programmed to kill a target and then not even remember he did it. Sirhan Sirhan fit the profile. Angry at the death of his parents during a conflict with Israel the convicted assassin of RFK was said to have been in a trance-like state during and after the shooting. Later, Sirhan Sirhan would state strongly that he did not actually remember anything that happened during the shooting, but everyone said he did it, so he must have done it.
The 1976 Church Committee hearings on the CIA and its mind control projects like MK-ULTRA did scratch the surface of a few of its goals:
1)  To develop "substances which will promote illogical thinking and impulsiveness to the point where the recipient would be discredited in public."
2)   To develop "materials to render the induction of hypnosis easier and substances which will produce 'pure' euphoria with n< subsequent let-down."
3)  To develop "materials and physical methods which will produce amnesia for events preceding and during their use."
4)   To develop "substances which alter personality structure in such a way that the tendency of the recipient to become dependent upon another person is enhanced."
5) To develop "substances which will lower the ambition and general working efficiency of men. "(3)
With the vast amount of evidence that carn be assembled about these projects, and the hundreds or likely thousands of unwitting volunteers who have been experimented or over the past 45 years it gets easier to understand how this power has been used.
It would seem that the evolution of mind control as a weapon started as a tool for the perfect espionage agent and then grew into the making of the 'perfect soldier'. Later use of the combination of chemicals, electronic frequencies and propaganda would suggest mass control of government workers and finally mass control of a general population With the right mind tool could you turn a vital productive nation into a fearful, intimidated group of mediocre producers who are kept comfortable with leisure activity and a plentiful supply of drugs? Could this be happening in America ?....Judge for yourself
Conditioning adults in mind control programs involves a certain degree of breaking down their current mental barriers against acts of violence which they would not normally perform. Rational humans acknowledge a dark side to their personalities, but most keep these fleeting violent ideas from being seriously considered. While adult conditioning presents a certain resistance, programming of young children offers a whole set of new and terrifying options for those who would worship such control. How is it done? what is done? and how are these unwitting subjects found?
Project names often associated with mine control research include: MK ULTRA MK NAOMI, PROJECT PANDORA, PROJECT. BLUEBIRD and PROJECT ARTICHOKE. Where it comes to sexual abuse and children, another name pops up, that's PROJECT MONARCH. One can expect a variety of chemical electrical, low frequency stimulation and deprivation techniques to have been employed in the past. The efforts of people like Dr. Louis Jolyn West will always be associated with an experiment of overdosing and killing an elephant with LSD in front of a group of school children. Dr. West also figured prominently in wanting to create a center for the study of violence in California to mentally recondition criminals using a variety of highly experimental mind control techniques. Then Governor Ronald Reagan was at first supportive of the center, but when public opinion shifted away from Dr. West, Reagan's backing vanished.  
Television and movies have utilized mind control techniques to heighten or influence audience response. The movie. The Exorcist allegedly used subliminal sounds and pictures on the screen. It is claimed a full screen death mask of Father Karras and the word "pig" was flashed along with certain sound effects which heightened emotions and gave many a viewer sweaty palms. The CIA connection to this movie comes through the author/producer William Peter Blattey who served as a policy branch chief in the psychological warfare division of the USAF. Steve Jacobson claimed in his 1991 audio tape, Mind Control in the Media, that Blattey was a CIA operative.
A teenager seeking care for an arthritic leg in Montreal , Canada , was one of 80 victims to fall into a CIA/Canadian mind control experiments between 1957 and 1961. A Dr. Ewen Cameron performed what were called "psychic driving" experiments on unwitting volunteers like then 18 year old Robert Logic. Cameron was head of the prestigious American Psychiatric Association and was known by some as the father of Canadian psychiatry. This lofty reputation allowed Cameron to receive $60,000 from the CIA to discover if he could effectively wipe out someone's memory, and then reprogram it for whatever purpose the controller wished. The money would be funneled through a CIA front organization called the Society for the Investigation of Human Ecology. Logic claimed he lost 23 days of his life during this experiment, which subjected him to LSD injections, electroshock and being forced
Logic claimed he lost 23 days of his life during this experiment which subjected him to LSD injections, electroshock and being forced to listen for hours to taped messages including, "You killed your mother (4).
It was not until documents about these experiments were pried out and made public in 1977 (the year oddly enough, when Dr. Cameron died) that the survivors of this tortuous ordeal could begin their quest for Justice. In October of 1988, Logic and seven other survivors split a paltry out-of-court settlement from the U.S. Department of Justice of just $750,000 to pay for the damages incurred by Cameron and his CIA cronies. Later, in 1992, Canadian authorities would settle their suit with the same people for another $6.28 million. All of the survivors suffered life long problems as the result of these experiments. Velma Orlikow flew into unexplained rages and lost the ability to read. Another victim, Linda Macdonald, spent 86 days in a so-called sleep room and came out so mentally destroyed that she could not read, write, or recognize her family. She also had to be toilet trained again. (5)
People like Linda, Robert and Velma were not suing simply for the money, but to prevent such programs from happening again. However, these mind control programs may have expanded considerably since those early days and with the perfected technology now instituted, it is likely to be bigger and better than ever. ..
Since volunteers for such mentally-hazardous duty are practically nonexistent, people have to be deceived as to the true purpose of the experiment in order to gain their cooperation. Failing this, they may be simply abducted off the street, to be used and sometimes discarded.
Evidence of the later has filtered in from several sources, notably a 1993 article in U.S. News & World Report which exposed a Washington D.C. group called the FINDERS. The group appears to be a "stuck in the 1960's" outfit offering to help kids who want to live in the old hippie, communal atmosphere. The article did suggest that their might be a more sinister purpose behind the Finders, a purpose which includes child peddling, Satanism and kiddie porn operations. As of 1996, the Finders are still headquartered in Washington D.C. with that same kind of "old hippies just looking after the kids" look. (6) Their founder is a 75-year old retired USAF Master Sergeant by the name of Marion David Pettie. The leader acknowledges only having received a ninth grade education, claiming that he preferred a more experiential kind of education, and school was interfering with it. The tall, graying cult leader now resides in Culpeper , Virginia , and is sometimes referred to as "the stroller" because of his frequent walks through town. The 1987 incident which plagues the Finders involves the Tallahassee , Florida , Police Department investigation of two adult males found transporting six children aged two to seven years old. The Dodge van, and the condition in which the children were found, was described by officers [Walter Kreitlow and Fredric Haiduk] in their report:
"The police had received an anonymous telephone call relative to two well dressed white men wearing suits and ties in Myers Park, [Tallahassee], apparently watching six dirty and unkempt children in the playground area. A Mr. HOULIHAN and AMMERMAN were near a 1980 blue Dodge van bearing the Virginia license number XHW-557, the inside of which was later described as foul-smelling, filled with maps, books, letters, with a mattress situated to the rear of the van which appeared as if it were used as a bed. The overall appearance of the van gave the impression that all eight persons were living in it The children were covered with insect bites, were very dirty and most of the children were not wearing underwear and all the children had not been bathed in many days." (7)
There was keen interest in searching the Finders headquarters by James Bradley, a Detective for the Washington D.C. Police Department. Krietlow also had suspicions that the subjects had been involved in supplying children for kiddie porn activities south of the border. The combination of the two was enough to trigger a search of the Finders Washington D.C. headquarters on February 5, 1987 . Special agents for the Department of the Treasury, Ramon Martinez and Lynwood Rountree, reported:
"During the course of the search warrants, numerous documents were discovered which appeared to be concerned with international trafficking in children, high tech transfer to the United Kingdom and international transfer of currency."
Also in the report:
"Further inspection of the premises disclosed numerous files relating to activities of the organization in different parts of the world. Locations I observed are as follows: London , German, the Bahamas , Japan , Hong Kong , Malaysia , Africa , Costa Rica and " Europe . There was also a file identified as Palestinian. Other files were identified by member name or "project" name. The projects, appearing to be operated for commercial purposes under front names for the FINDERS. There was one file entitled "Pentagon Break-In" and others which referred to members' operating in foreign countries. Not observed by me but related by an MPD (Metropolitan Police Department) officer, were intelligence files on private families not related to the Finders The process undertaken appears to have been a systematic response to local newspaper advertisements for baby sitters, tutors, etc. A member of the Finders would respond and gather as much information as possible about the habits, identity, occupation, etc. of the family. The use to which this information was to be put is still unknown. There was also a large amount of data collected on various child care organizations.
The warehouse contained a large library, two kitchens, a sauna, hot tub and a video room. The video room seemed to be set up as an indoctrination center. It also appeared that the organization had the capability to produce its own videos. There were what appeared to be training areas for children and what appeared to be an altar set up in a residential areaofthe warehouse. Many jars of urine and feces were located in this area. (8)"
On March 31, 1987 either Martinez or Rountree contacted Washington D.C. Detective Bradley, and agree that they would review the documents seized at the Finders in the next couple of days. The following report of this meeting explains why no action was taken in a case that was replete with moral crimes against children:
"On April 2, 1987 ,   I arrived at MPD at approximately 9:00 AM. Detective Bradley was not available. I spoke to a third party who was willing to discuss the case with me on a strictly "off the record" basis. I was advised that all the passport data had been turned over to the State Department for their investigation. The State Department in turn advised MPD that all travel and use of the passports by the holders of the passports was within the law and no action would be taken. This includes travel to Moscow , North Korea and North Vietnam from the late 1950's to I970's.
The individual further advised me of circumstances which indicated that the investigation into the activity of the Finders had become a CIA internal matter. The MPD report has been classified secret and was not available for review. I was advised that the FBI had withdrawn from the investigation several weeks prior and that the FBI Foreign Counter intelligence Division had directed MPD not to advise the FBI Washington Field Office of anything that had transpired. No further information will be available. No further action will be taken." (9)
Wendell Minnick, author of Spies and Provocateurs: An Encyclopedia of Espionage and Covert Action, reports he spent two years and over $1,000 in phone bills researching the Finders. There are two somewhat conflicting reports on the Finders from Minnick. In a May, 1996, Washington City Paper, Minnick states "the Finders would love you to think they're a CIA front, but I would say they're really nothing. You're going to hear a lot of bullshit on the Finders because they lie. These are dysfunctional adults, but they're all working their asses off. They're constantly working on some project. If you have a cult, the best way to control people is to keep them busy, to keep their minds occupied." On the internet, Minnicks Winter 1995, article, The Finders: The CIA and the Cult of Marion David Pettie, says something different. The Finders were suspected of abducting children for sale, but never had it proved. Minnick states a 1987 raid resulted in the recovery of one telex ordering "the purchase of two children from Hong Kong to be arranged through a contact in the Chinese embassy there." At the time of the raid, Justice Department agents discovered a Chinese student living with the Finders. Wang Gen-xin was a graduate student in the anatomy department at Georgetown University . His involvement has not been clarified.
Minnick added, "The one line that crucifies the CIA and the Finders on the same cross startles the imagination: "CIA made one contact and admitted to owning the Finders organization as a front for a domestic computer training operation, but that it had gone bad." Was this a leaked bit of info for damage control or connections between the CIA and the Finders? (10] It is known to many that after his retirement from the Air Force in 1956, Pettie's wife. Isabel, joined the CIA as a support secretary serving the station chief in Frankfurt , Germany , from 1957-61. Pettie's son, George, served in the CIA's drug activities in Air America during the Vietnam war. While this may not be conclusive proof of Marion Pettie's direct involvement with the CIA in some kind of child porn, abduction, sacrifice scheme, it draws one much closer to it.
It would seem obvious to most that this official intervention betrays a protective reaction when it comes to Finder activities. When the CIA is involved and there is; international considerations about these allegations, it is difficult not to use the term cover-up.
Since 1987, there has been good reason for that uneasy feeling about the Finders. Marion Pettie expanded his organization into dozens of properties in Virginia and Florida , in addition to their Washington D.C. headquarters. These real estate holdings were estimated to be worth over 2.2 million dollars.
This financial success has put the Finders back in the gentle crosshairs of the mainstream press again. Several articles around the country have again performed in mediocre fashion to shed light on this bizarre group. This May, the Washington City Paper stated the Finders were "mostly middle aged men who are- always in dark suits and wouldn't be out of place managing a local funeral home." The reporter also mentions that townspeople say, "the Finders constantly walk the streets, following people home and taking extensive notes and pictures," (11)
Another author, Mark Riebling, dabbles momentarily in the Finders pool of strangeness in his 1994 book, Wedge: The Secret War Between the FBI and the CIA . Riebling states in his book, "just before Christmas 1993, both agencies were embarrassed by a Justice Department investigation into whether the CIA had improperly used the FBI to cover up its connections to a computer training cult called Finders, which had been accused but acquitted of child abuse."
The flak is increasing for the Finders, as Paul Arico and seven other ex-members are corning back to file suit for the piece of their pie they gave up to Pettie when they joined. As often happens in real cult-like organizations a percentage or all of your worldly goods are required to be donated to the group, and total obedience to the leader is an absolute must. Even a former member Robert "Tobe" Terrell, who left the Finders in 1991, said the vision of the group had changed, "the nature of the group shifted from an idealistic Utopian community to more of a military like organization where following orders became more important that the vision". (12)
Officially, the Justice Department admits that the Finders case is still "an open investigation." The CIA sings a different but expected tune. Spokesman Mark Mansfield said "allegations of my agency's involvement with the group were an absurdity that popped up every couple of years." (13)
An October. 1977, NBC-TV broadcast segment entitled, "The Children and the CIA," brought out another possible covert link between the CIA and children. The CIA story was that they had simply brought a group of children together for observation at a number of summer camps for possible later recruitment and to watch their behavior. However, there are disturbing barbs to this story, one in which the counselors were not told that the camp was being financed by the CIA. The agency once again used the front organization called the Society for the Investigation of Human Ecology. (14) This was the same group that paid Dr. Cameron for his Canadian mind-blanking experiments in the 60's. Considering the track record of the CIA, to suspect ulterior motives in this case would only be common sense.
In 1995, the President's Committee on Radiation was hearing complaints in Washington D.C. about hazardous exposure at sites and plants around the country. The testimony mostly focused on the damaging effects of that exposure to radiation. However, on March 15, 1995 , the testimony of New Orleans therapist Valerie Wolf and two of her patients dropped a bombshell in the proceedings that was never covered by the mainstream press. Wolf and her patients stated that they had been part of an "extensive CIA brainwashing program as young children (in one case, starting at age seven). Their brainwashing included torture, rape, electroshock, powerful drugs, hypnosis and death threats." (15) According to their testimony, the CIA then induced amnesia to prevent their recalling anything that really happened.
Personal eyewitness accounts exist regarding the use of children and women in such secret programs. Any allegations of organized, high level sexual abuse are likely to end up getting you or your character assassinated. This makes any such revelation extremely rare and hence, worth looking into. The next segment is a summary of what is perhaps the most incredible tale of such an organized program created by American and Post WWII German scientists from Operation Paperclip; it is called Project Monarch.
The essence of Project Monarch is the total subjugation of a persons will and personality to the manipulations of their controllers. To accomplish this goal the subjects personality is fractured into a MPD (Multiple Personality Disorder). By , fracturing the strength of the single personality into multiple ones it has becomes possible to set one part of a personality against another, or create personalities which will submit to sexual abuse or perform as an assassin or serve as a courier. Upon completion of the assignment that personality is suppressed and another brought forth to give the honest appearance of nothing being wrong. One well known example could be Sirhan Sirhan. Another lesser known example is Cathy O'Brien and her daughter Kelly.
O'Brien tells her tale with the help of the man who rescued her from this dilemma, Mark Phillips in the book, Trance-Formation of America . She claims that her future was sealed from the moment of birth in December of 1957, "My pedophile father, Earl O'Brien, brags that he began substituting his penis for my mothers's nipple soon after I was born. My multi generational incest-abused mother, Carol Tanis, did not protest his perverse actions due to (reportedly) having similar abuse as a child which caused her to acquire Multiple Personality Disorder (MPD)." (16)
The terror of this experience with her father along with her mothers refusal to help her, forced young Cathy to dissociate from these events by creating an entirely new personality, to deal with her father. Traumatic events in one's life can create a repressed memory or a condition of shock so severe that the victim becomes incapable of living with it on their own. In O'Brien's case she discovered her family's perverted and abusive sexual history during her upbringing, but since that was all she knew, the acceptance of ritual abuse was sadly became the norm.
This dysfunctional family found ways to profit from their children's misery, which led to many personal contacts with government officials. O'Brien describes a few of them, "My mother's oldest brother. Uncle Bob, was a pilot in Air Force Intelligence and often boasted that he worked for the Vatican . Uncle Bob was also a commercial pornographer, producing kiddie porn for the local Michigan Mafia, which looped back to Mafia porn king and U.S. Representative Jerry Ford (or known by some as Leslie Lynch King Jr.)". [Yes, she means Gerald Ford the 38th President of the U.S. ](17)
Cathy's father, Earl, only had a sixth grade education and applied that toward an occupation as a local sport fisherman and worm digger. The main Income for the family was coming through his pornographic exploitation of his younger family members, (Cathy would soon have two more sisters and four brothers, all of whom were used). By the time Cathy was six, they had moved to a bigger house near the eastern shore of Michigan . This location helped him deal with the tourists and drug dealers who were happy to pay for sex with children.
There was a bump ahead in the road for Earl, as he was caught selling kiddie porn through the mail. Uncle Bob came to the rescue, he knew of government people with the DIA (Defense Intelligence Agency) that were recruiting multi-generational incest abused children with MPD for its genetic mind control studies. Cathy states, "I was a prime candidate, a chosen one. My father seized the opportunity as it would provide him immunity from prosecution. In the midst of the pandemonium that ensued. Jerry Ford arrived at our house for a meeting with my father, the evidence in hand. Not long after that, my father was flown to Boston for a
O'Brien claims that at age 13, she was actually sold by her father to U.S. Senator Robert Byrd of Virginia , two-week course at Harvard on how to raise me for this off-shoot of MK-ULTRA  Monarch. ."(18)
The involvement in Project Monarch was not simply sexual. According to O'Brien, the MPD would trigger a Dissociative Identity Disorder or DID. Mind control experts knew this could lead to an extraordinary high pain threshold, a heightened visual acuity and a compartmentalization of her memory which would allow for retention of detailed messages and data that she would not ordinarily comprehend. These memory compartments are what clinicians would refer to as personalities. This would allow O'Brien and others like her to perform a variety of sexual and diplomatic tasks for the puppet masters in the CIA, DIA, NSA, or any of the other security agencies in the alphabet soup of government security acronyms.
The language and conditioning of O'Brien was continued as she was given to higher level handlers. There is a term given to the few that submit to the way Cathy O'Brien was conditioned; they are called Presidential Models. This means they will be used and abused by only those of highest authority for a variety of purposes. There was a lot of use of fantasy land themes like the Wizard of Oz, Disney characters, Alice in Wonderland and Cinderella in this conditioning. The memory she acquired during this painful training allowed her to recall many specific incidents for the book Trance-Formation of America . On one such occasion, in a lodge near Greybull , Wyoming , Dick Cheney, the White House Chief of Staff to President Ford and Secretary of Defense to President George Bush gave Cathy the illusion of a choice as to how she was to be sexually used. "Make up your mind," Cheney coaxed. Unable to speak, O'Brien was silent. "You don't get a choice, anyway. I make up your mind for you. That's why you're here, for me to make you a mind, and make you mine-mind. You lost your mind a long time ago. Now I'm going to give you one. Just like the Wizard (of OZ) gave the Scarecrow a brain, the Yellow Brick Road led you here to me. You've come such a long, long way, for your brain, and I will give you one."(i9) said Cheney, according to O'Brien.
In exchange  for lucrative  Defense Department contracts, O'Brien claims that at age 13, she was actually sold by her father to U.S. Senator Robert Byrd of Virginia , who was also head of the powerful Senate Appropriations Committee. As a Presidential Model she would be set up with various foreign leaders. Keywords would be given by the party she would meet and this would allow access to the personality or compartment in her memory that held the message. At 27 years of age O'Brien would deliver such a message to the future president of Mexico .
O'Brien's understanding of NAFTA (North American Free Trade Agreement) was that it was considered a significant step in implementing the New World Order. Cathy recollects Senator Byrd saying, "propaganda disguising the true purpose of NAFTA includes the concept of "free trade" which the U.S. and Mexican governments had long since shared. "Free trade" of child and adult mind-controlled slaves, cocaine, heroin and business has been not-so-secretly proliferating for years."
In 1984, Carlos Salinas was the Vice President of Mexico, but George Bush favored him over Miguel de la Madrid in the next election. O'Brien says that President Reagan informed her, "the U.S. would guard the integrity of elections by covertly overseeing them." Salinas was going to be President of Mexico at any cost and O'Brien delivered the following message to him:
"I have a message from the Vice-President of the United States of America to our neighbors in Mexico . America is willing to share its wealth through a trade agreement with Mexico . We'll trade our cash for control over Mexico 's cocaine and heroin production. By controlling your drug industry, we can open the border between our countries to allow a free flow of cocaine and heroin into the U.S. , bought and paid for in American dollars to build Mexico . Eventually this could dissolve the border between our countries altogether as Mexico 's economy grows to match ours. If we begin today, this dream could be realized by the turn of the century--sharing the same continent, sharing the same wealth. Why? The drug industry already dictates what the Mexican government can or cannot do. By giving the U.S. control of your drug industry, Mexico regains control over her government. Re-established power backed by U.S. dollars will bring Mexico on an economic par with America . We can begin by spreading the world through the drug cartels that the U.S. is covertly willing to open the borders to free drug trade by making agents available to show you the passage and routes through which the drugs are to be delivered. Only U.S. agents can bring Mexican heroin and (South American) cocaine across the border and likewise they will bring the cash in. Explain to those select few who control the drug empires that the cruise line (NCL=Norwegian Cruise Line) agreement is going into mass expansion, tearing down the border between our countries enough to allow for as many drugs to come in as Mexico can deal out. When do we begin?"(20)
There are those who may say that this story is too incredible; a legitimate government would never deal with drug cartels to give better access for such a socially destructive commodity. History would prove such a naive conclusion wrong. The French are reported to have bought the entire opium crop from the Golden Triangle in Burma in 1953, before they were kicked out of Southeast Asia .
The British had two major conflicts with the Chinese over opium, in fact, they were called the Opium Wars in 1839 and 1856. These wars would force the Chinese to import opium to help control the population. The fact that opium, cocaine and their synthetic derivatives are illegal has only increased their value. In the same way that the Prohibition Act of the 1930's allowed organized crime to get a great tax free start, the drug dealers of today have enormous sums of wealth to legitimately buy into any kind of business or government in the world.
As for Cathy O'Brien, there were two things that would jiggle her loose from the grip of these controllers; one was her daughter, Kelly, and the other was the man that would recognize her plight and rescue her, Mark Phillips.         
The first marriage for Cathy O'Brien was not going to be a vessel of love and harmony for a Project Monarch slave. A member of a Grand Ol' Opry band who according to O'Brien was a part-time occult serial killer was chosen to father her child. His name was Wayne Cox and he also supported Senator Byrd's activities. It would be Byrd who commanded Cathy to move from Michigan to Nashville to marry.
O'Brien recalls what she called a "predestined" marriage, "Cox's primary role was to shatter my mind further through repeated occult trauma as well as to father my daughter, Kelly, to be raised in the genetic mind-control studies of Project Monarch. Cox would take me to the backwoods of his hometown swamp in Chatham , Louisiana , for months at a time for occult traumatization. Cox had been brought up in witchcraft by his mother and admittedly longed for her sexually and ritually. Together they subjected me to their beliefs, which included what equates to a weakened version of mind control used by witches for centuries, anchored in superstition rather than scientific fact. During the three years I was with Cox, he ritually impregnated and aborted me six times, consuming several of his own offspring and preserving the others shaped in ceramic for sale in his interstate occult body parts business."(21)
Born in February, 1980, Cathy's daughter Kelly never had a chance at a normal life; her abuse started just as early as her mothers. A Lt. Col. Michael Aquino used many NASA bases as a site for further conditioning O'Brien as a Presidential Model. After the basic programming would be completed, O'Brien and later her daughter Kelly, would be sent to what was called " Charm School ," in Youngstown , Ohio .
According to O'Brien, the Mellon banking family, which was Senator Byrd's endowment of the arts largest contributor. This member would be referred to as the "Governor." He would later become Governor of Pennsylvania and U.S. Attorney General, Dick Thornburgh.
The description of this Charm School would make one welcome the comfort of Frankenstein's castle, "housed in an identified stone historical railroad barren's former residence, the basement was in fact a wine cellar dungeon. It was dark, damp and musty and was decorated in classic torture chamber fashion. It was complete with various hanging chains, a stretching rack, whips and altars including one specially designed for bestiality sex. "(22)
Kelly's experience in this project, and Charm School , would be understandably traumatic. The drawing by Kelly shows that something is definitely not right about this school. This experience would seem to serve on positive purpose, which was to give Cathy as the mother of her child the strength to look for a way out.
Mark Phillips openly admits to his involvement in some aspects of mind control research with the Yerkes Primate Center in Atlanta , Georgia , in the late 1960's. Debunkers may automatically cry he is some kind of misinformation specialist because of this, but there is more to consider. There are many sub-contractors to the Department of Defense (DOD) in mind control research and Phillips is another one of them with a high level clearance. Perhaps we should listen first and judge later.
The knowledge of human psychology led Phillips into a successful sales career. In 1988, A childhood acquaintance, Ray Myers, introduced Phillips to country music entertainer, Alex Houston. Houston was looking for someone with international business skills to help him with a potentially profitable idea about an electrical capacitor device which could increase energy efficiency for large industry. In the process of looking at the idea, Phillips discovered Ray Myers and his wife Regina . were pedophiles and that they abused Cathy and her daughter. However, it was business first, and Phillips would take precautions against Houston from the beginning.
Phillips designed the logo, the company name-UniPhayse, and drew up contracts with a lot of "honesty" type clauses. Houston was puzzled by these clauses but his lust for the deal must have spurred him on as he accepted the terms.
Several months later, through contacts made, the pair were dealing with a Mr. Yoon from the People's Republic of China . Following the conclusion of several successful meetings, it looked like the Chinese were ready for UniPhayse . Houston and Phillips returned to Tennessee briefly, where Phillips first met Cathy and her daughter Kelly. Upon meeting them at the gate, Phillips impression were, "She appeared to me to be young, beautiful, very dumb and dressed like a prostitute." (23)
Months later, Mr.Yoon would invite Houston and Cathy along with Mark and his wife to China to formally sign the Joint venture agreement. Phillips was getting divorced and Houston adamantly refused to attend with his wife or by himself, stating he had an entertainment "gig" that he could not cancel. Phillips and his soon to be ex-wife attended, but right before their return to the U.S. , a man with the Chinese Ministry of Defense showed him an extraordinary file that would change his life.
The file clearly demonstrated extensive knowledge of Phillip's background with the Department of Defense and his security clearance. While it was made obvious that the Chinese knew all about him, blackmail was the furthest thing from their mind. Their main concern was Alex Houston. The Chinese knew Houston had been involved with the CIA, drugs, money laundering, child prostitution and slavery. The comment from this Chinese bearer of bad tidings was, " Houston was a very bad man and his crimes were of the White House." (24)
Extensive classified documentation to support these claims was provided to Phillips, along with photographs of Houston involved in sodomizing a terrified young Haitian boy. The Chinese simply did not want Houston involved in the deal, so arrangements had to be cleverly devised to eliminate him.
Fortunately, Houston was out of town enough to provide Phillips with enough time to search his files for a way to void the partnership. It didn't take long, as shipping bills, bank deposit slips and even a copy of a letter instructing a customer not to discuss details of a deal with anyone but him were found. Houston was selling the business out the back door, behind Phillips back. This is where the honesty clauses came into affect, which allowed Phillips to take over completely if this kind of foul play was discovered.
Having saved the deal, Phillips wondered what could be done about the plight of Cathy and Kelly. The knowledge from behavior modification or mind control programs can be used negatively for absolute control or positively to enhance one's abilities to learn and grow; from Phillips testimony one might think he was involved more with the latter.
A secret meeting with a good friend from his days in Vietnam (who was then a General) would help resolve what could be done. Phillips asked how would you spring these people out of it? The General replied, "I wouldn't," than lamented how things had changed and that the CIA, FBI and the Mafia are the same and they're making their moves on the military. Phillips pressed the issue and the General recommended a method of using a biblical passage, as those in Tennessee used Christian-based programming. Before the General left, he warned, "Mark, this is nuts, go to China and take them with you. Forget about this red, white and blue cesspool, it'll clean up. There are a lot of good guys in the inside busting their asses to stop this mess, but you're not going to save the world."(25) Phillips left the meeting and although he does not state this Generals fate, he did say he never saw him again.
Obviously, the book Trance-Formation gives full details of the rescue and how by selling his possessions and constantly moving, he managed to stay ahead of those who he suspected wished him and Cathy dead. While both have attempted legal action in Tennessee to redress these injuries and to get her daughter Kelly, out of a mental institution in Tennessee , they have been stonewalled; in fact the justification of national security has been used as a brick wall to separate mother and daughter.
The fate of Kelly remains in question. Her hospitalization since 1989 for homicidal/ suicidal behavior is a tale of abuse by state authorities, regardless of whether you believe the rest of their story. Kelly has been denied an attorney to represent her and the social worker assigned operates on a "need to know" basis, according to Cathy.
There is an address for those who would like to write to 16-year old Kelly, she certainly is doing the best she can to write for help herself, (see letter from Kelly) To contact Kelly write to her c/o Cathy O'Brien, PO Box 158352, Nashville, TN, 37215.        
From 1992 on, I have had the opportunity to interview Gunther Russbacher, a man who claims to have been one of the top covert agents for the CIA. In past issues of The PROBE we have detailed his involvement as the pilot for George Bush during the October Surprise dealings and other clandestine actions involving American POW/MIA's (See PROBE #1 and #4). Naturally, in the mainstream press and even in some of the alternative press the debunking efforts have been successful. However, there is still evidence of his credibility that is not addressed by the skeptics, so conversely he does have a measure of credibility.
During a 1993 interview with Russbacher in a Missouri prison, we got on the subject of the perverse habits of those in powerful places. Russbacher launched into a quick summary of Operation Clydesdale, which he claimed was done out of Arnold , Missouri . The purpose was to ferret out wealthy pedophile types who were engaged in kiddie snuff pornography. A toll free phone number was distributed in all the right places to lure out those who enjoy either viewing, recruiting or using children in what must be labeled as one of the most horrific acts one human can do to another.
The goal of this operation was to get the location of those needing this perverse fix and do, what Russbacher called, "a field resolution" on them. Russbacher claimed that his team was involved in 400 such resolutions, and that the international network base of this organized pedophile group was around 10,000. As the operation drew closer to high level government types around the world, it was shut down.
The existence of this operation and a list of those who were "resolved" has yet to be brought to light, but we are looking for verification on these events.
While Russbacher's credential may be open to debate, those of Ted Gunderson are not. For 28 years he served with the FBI and ended his career as head of the Los Angeles , California office, one of their largest operations. Gunderson has written and commented extensively on organized pedophile operations and also believes there are ties in the U.S. between 6-50,000 missing children every year and their very well protected and organized abductors. In a report on the group mentioned earlier in this article, the Finders. Gunderson had this to say:
"The Finders-A CIA front established in the 1960's. It has top clearance and protection in its assigned task of kidnapping and torture-programming young children throughout the U.S. Members are specially trained government kidnappers known to be sexual degenerates who involve the kidnapped children in satanic sex orgies and bloody rituals as well as the murders of other children and slaughter of animals.
  
They use a fleet of unmarked vans to grab targeted children from parks and schoolyards. In doing so they use children within their organization as decoys to attract the victims close to the vans where they are grabbed by adults. They then drug the children and transport them to a series of safe houses for safe keeping. They are then used in their ceremonies for body parts, sex slaves and some are auctioned off at various locations in the northern hemisphere. In the past they have been auctioned off near a location in Nevada and Toronto , Canada . Marion David Pettie, the leader of the cult, is an identified homosexual pedophile and a CIA officer. His son was an employee of a CIA proprietary firm, Air America , which was notorious for smuggling drugs, destinedfor the U.S. , out of the Golden Triangle into Saigon during the Vietnam war." (26)
Allegations of widespread sexual abuse of children by well known politicians and a contingent of popular Hollywood personalities were reported by both O'Brien and Gunderson.
In 1984 statistics stated that were about 90% of the missing 1.8 million missing children each year are runaways. Of the 10% remaining six to fifty-thousand were rarely brought back to their parents and 2,500 of that number were found dead. (27)
The tragic case of the abduction of six-year old Adam Walsh from a Hollywood , Florida , Sears store in July of 1981 triggered a frantic search for two weeks. Adam's severed head was found in a canal 100 miles from the scene of the abduction. The anguished father, John used his emotion to an effort to spearhead an effort to save other children and their families from this pain by pioneering a TV show to find those missing. Given the current testimony in this article such efforts are needed, but they overlook the organized and protected groups that are a sizeable part of this whole ugly process. However, that may be changing.
While the press doesn't treat these news items like OJ Simpson, the sex scandal in Belgium may be a symptom that people are ready for the truth about some of their missing children. It began in 1993 when convicted rapist, car thief and arms dealer, Marc Dutroux, was building a room in his cellar to hold children he kidnapped. Police checked it out, but believed that Dutroux was using the cellar as a drainage system for the house.
Later, little girls started disappearing and Dutroux was again questioned. The police reportedly searched the house and found nothing. What they missed were two eight year old girls who were dying in the cellar; two girls whose cries were ignored by the officers who stated they thought they were coming from another house. Either this is one for Ripley 's Believe It Or Not of incompetency or they are covering up.
In August of this year, Dutroux would be arrested for kidnapping after a van was seen near the scene of an abduction and traced back to him. By that time, four children and lour young women were known dead and ten more were missing. In Dutroux's abode they would find video's of him raping young girls so he could sell them to other pedophiles. Uutroux also said he found out that men would pay a lot more for little girls as prostitutes. Police now suspect Dutroux was supplying a larger pedophile ring with children.
To further aggravate the public the examining judge in the case, Jean-Marc Connerotte, was dismissed after he had attended a dinner in support of those parents who had lost their children.
The Prime Minister of Belgium, Jean-Luc Dehaene, was a little slow to move on this powder keg, refusing to cut short his vacation when the case broke in August. Now Dehaene is promising reforms in the judicial system and more effort to get to the bottom 'of the pedophilia scandal in Belgium ,
These predictable political moves are not enough to satisfy the growing contempt the people have for their government in this sensitive case. On October 20, nearly 300,000 people took to the streets in Belgium showing support of Judge Connerotte and in protest of the governments handling of this affair. (28)
What does it take for people to have concern for a problem before it lands on their doorstep? There is a polarization of fear that is permeating the planet and each of us needs to decide whether we want to live with this fear or without it. Do we work for Justice or accept whatever verdict the unjust decide to deliver? At stake is our children, our morality and our future. Dare we abdicate our responsibility to ourselves?
References:
1)  Sun Tzu-The Art of War, Translated by Samuel B. Griffith, Oxford University Press, 1963
2) A & E Investigative Reports, Who Killed RFK, Bill Curtis Productions, 1994
3) The CIA's program of Behavior Modification-Project MK ULTRA. Government Printing Office 8-31-77 . As mentioned in Steamshovel Press #12, article The High and the Mighty, JFK, MPM.LSD & the CIA pt. 4, 1995
4)  Article: Settling with the CIA by William Lowther, Macleans Magazine 10-17-88 pg. 51
5) Article: Canada to Pay the Victims of Mind Altering Treatment by Clyde Famsworth , New York Times International 11-19-92 pg. A6
6) Article: The Monarch Project by Andy Boehm. Available through Prevailing Winds Research PO Box 23511 , Santa Barbara , CA. 93121
7-9) Report: Missing Children by Ted L. Gunderson. for a catalog on all his reports write to: PO Box 18000-259 , Las Vegas , NV 89114 v
10) Article: The Finders, the CIA and the Cult of Marion David Pettie by Wendell Mlnnick, Unclassified #35, Winter 1995 pg. 19-21
11) Article: Finder Keeper by Eddie Dean, The Washington City Paper May 24. 1996 pg. 20
12) Ibid #11
13) Article: Secretive Group Puzzles Culpeper by Eric Nolan, The Culpeper Star Exponent Dec. 12, 1995 pg. 12
14) Ibid #6
15) Article: CIA Experiments with Mind Control on Children by Jon Rappoport, Perceptions Magazine, Vol. 2, #4 Sept/Oct. 1995 pg. 56
16-25) Trance-Formation of Americaby Cathy O'Brien and Mark Phillips, Reality Marketing Inc. Available through Adventures Unlimited Press, PO Box 74, Kempton, 111. 60946 $15
26)  Ibid #7
27) Article: Special Report, Stolen Children by David Geiman Newsweek, March 19, 1984 pg. 78-82
28) Article: Sex Case Queries Add to Belgian Scandal by Ray Mosely Chicago Tribune-Sunday October 27, 1996 pg. 6 sec. 1       s             \-
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