Class-action
lawsuit sought over CIA's mind-control study
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CANADIAN PRESS
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Janine
Huard, 79, speaks to reporters about her class-action suit at the
Federal courthouse in Montreal yesterday. Huard says CIA funded
brain-washing experiments were carried out on her and hundreds of other
patients at McGill University's Allan Memorial Institute more than five
decades ago. |
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MONTREAL (Jan 11, 2007)
Patients
were put in isolation, tied down or drugged, and subjected to hours and
hours of taped recordings meant to brainwash them at the behest of the
Central Intelligence Agency, a court was told yesterday.
They
were subjected to massive electroshocks, experimental drugs and LSD,
most of them unwilling and unknowingly part of the U.S. spy agency's
experimentation, a Federal Court judge was told yesterday.
Now it's time for the federal government to
compensate those victims, lawyer Alan Stein argued.
Stein
is seeking court approval for a class-action lawsuit on behalf of his
client, Janine Huard, one of the hundreds of patients of Dr. Ewen
Cameron to be subjected to the Cold War-era experiments.
"She
never knew that she was being subjected to these experiments or that
she was being used by Dr. Cameron and his staff as a guinea pig," Stein
told the court.
Cameron pioneered "psychic driving," by which he
believed he could erase the memories of patients and rebuild their
psyches without psychiatric defect.
The idea intrigued the CIA, which recruited
Cameron to experiment with mind control techniques beginning in 1950.
The
experiments carried out at the Allan Memorial Institute at McGill
University were jointly funded by the CIA and the Canadian government.
They
were part of a larger CIA program called MK-ULTRA, which also saw LSD
administered to U.S. prison inmates and patrons of brothels without
their knowledge, according to testimony before a 1977 U.S. Senate
committee.
Huard, a petite great-grandmother who will be 79
at
the end of the month, was a patient of Cameron three separate times
from 1951 to 1962.
She said she was drugged, shocked and forced to
listen to recorded messages for hours on end, day after day.
"It was torture," she said outside the court
yesterday.
Huard said it left her unable to care for her four
children and plagued with migraines and memory loss.
Huard
was one of nine Canadian victims who received nearly US$67,000 from the
CIA in 1988 to compensate her for her suffering. But her claim for
compensation from the federal government, which jointly funded the
experiments, was rejected three times.
Frederic Paquin, the
lawyer for the federal attorney general, said the government does not
contest that Huard underwent the treatments she claims.
"It's in the medical record," Paquin told the
court.
But
he argued it's too late for a lawsuit, more than four decades after
Cameron's death and more than a decade after her claim was rejected.