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Writers Articles And Opinions |
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19 August 2010 By H.P. Albarelli Jr. and Dr.
Jeffrey S. Kaye
Bobby is seven
years old, but this is not the first time he has been
subjected to electroshock. It's his third time. In
all, over the next year, Bobby will experience eight
electroshock sessions. Placed on the examining table,
he is held down by two male attendants while the
physician places a solution on his temples. Bobby
struggles with the two men holding him down, but his
efforts are useless. He cries out and tries to pull
away. One of the attendants tries to force a thick
wedge of rubber into his mouth. He turns his head
sharply away and cries out, "Let me go, please. I
don't want to be here. Please, let me go." Bobby's
physician looks irritated and she tells him, "Come on
now, Bobby, try to act like a big boy and be still and
relax." Bobby turns his head away from the woman and
opens his mouth for the wedge that will prevent him
from biting through his tongue. He begins to cry
silently, his small shoulders shaking and he stiffens
his body against what he knows is coming.
Mary is only
five years old. She sits on a small, straight-backed
chair, moving her legs back and forth, humming the
same four notes over and over and over. Her head,
framed in a tangled mass of golden curls, moves up and
down with each note. For the first three years of her
life, Mary was thought to be a mostly normal child.
Then, after she began behaving oddly, she had been
handed off to a foster family. Her father and mother
didn't want her any longer. She had become too strange
for her father, whose alcoholism clouded any awareness
of his young daughter. Mary's mother had never wanted
her anyway and was happy to have her placed in another
home. When the LSD Mary has been given begins to have
its effects, she stops moving her head and legs and
sits staring at the wall. She doesn't move at all.
After about ten minutes, she looks at the nearby
physician observing her, and says, "God isn't coming
back today. He's too busy. He won't be back here for
weeks."
From early
1940 to 1953, Dr. Lauretta Bender, a highly respected
child neuropsychiatrist practicing at Bellevue
Hospital in New York City, experimented extensively
with electroshock therapy on children who had been
diagnosed with "autistic schizophrenia." In all, it
has been reported that Bender administered
electroconvulsive therapy to at least 100 children
ranging in age from three years old to 12 years, with
some reports indicating the total may be twice that
number. One source reports that, inclusive of Bender's
work, electroconvulsive treatment was used on more
than 500 children at Bellevue Hospital from 1942 to
1956, and then at Creedmoor State Hospital Children's
Service from 1956 to 1969. Bender was a confident and
dogmatic woman, who bristled at criticism, oftentimes
refused to acknowledge reality even when it stood
starkly before her.
Despite
publicly claiming good results with electroshock
treatment, privately Bender said she was seriously
disappointed in the aftereffects and results shown by
the subject children. Indeed, the condition of some of
the children appeared to have only worsened. One
six-year-old boy, after being shocked several times,
went from being a shy, withdrawn child to acting
increasingly aggressive and violent. Another child, a
seven-year-old girl, following five electroshock
sessions had become nearly catatonic.
Years later,
another of Bender's young patients who became overly
aggressive after about 20 treatments, now grown, was
convicted in court as a "multiple murderer." Others,
in adulthood, reportedly were in and of trouble and
prison for a battery of petty and violent crimes. A
1954 scientific study of about 50 of Bender's young
electroshock patients, conducted by two psychologists,
found that nearly all were worse off after the
"therapy" and that some had become suicidal after
treatment. One of the children studied in 1954 was the
son of well-known writer Jacqueline Susann, author of
the bestselling novel "Valley of the Dolls." Susann's
son, Guy, was diagnosed with autism shortly after
birth and, when he was three years old, Dr. Bender
convinced Susann and her husband that Guy could be
successfully treated with electroshock therapy. Guy
returned home from Bender's care a nearly lifeless
child. Susann later told people that Bender had
"destroyed" her son. Guy has been confined to
institutions since his treatment.
To their
credit, some of Dr. Bender's colleagues considered her
use of electroshock on children "scandalous," but few
colleagues spoke out against her, a situation still
today common among those in the medical profession.
Said Dr. Leon Eisenberg, a widely respected physician
and true pioneer in the study of autistic children, "[Lauretta
Bender] claimed that some of these children recovered
[because of her use of shock treatment]. I once wrote
a paper in which I referred to several studies by [Dr.
E. R.] Clardy. He was at Rockwin State Hospital - the
back up to Bellevue - and he described the arrival of
these children. He considered them psychotic and
perhaps worse off then before the treatment." (This
writer could find no case where any of Bender's
colleagues spoke out against her decidedly racist
viewpoints. Bender made it quite clear that she felt
that African-Americans were best characterized by
their "capacity for laziness" and "ability to dance,"
both features, Bender claimed, of the "specific brain
impulses" of African-Americans.)
About the same
time Dr. Bender was conducting her electroshock
experiments, she was also widely experimenting on
autistic and schizophrenic children with what she
termed other "treatment endeavors." These included use
of a wide array of psycho-pharmaceutical agents,
several provided to her by the Sandoz Chemical Co. in
Basel, Switzerland, as well as Metrazol, sub-shock
insulin therapy, amphetamines and anticonvulsants.
Metrazol was a trade name for pentylenetetrazol, a
drug used as a circulatory and respiratory stimulant.
High doses cause convulsions, as discovered in 1934 by
the Hungarian-American neurologist and psychiatrist
Ladislas J. Meduna.
Metrazol had
been used in convulsive therapy, but was never
considered to be effective, and side effects such as
seizures were difficult to avoid. The medical records
of several patients who were confined at Vermont State
Hospital, a public mental facility, reveal that
Metrazol was administered to them by CIA contractor
Dr. Robert Hyde on numerous occasions in order "to
address overly aggressive behavior." One of these
patients, Karen Wetmore, received the drug on a number
of occasions for no discernible medical reason. During
the same ten-year period in which Metrazol was used by
the Vermont State Hospital, patient deaths
skyrocketed. In 1982, the FDA revoked its approval of
Metrazol.
Here it should
be noted that, during the cold war years, CIA and Army
Counter-Intelligence Corps (CIC) interrogators,
working as part of projects Bluebird and Artichoke,
sometimes injected large amounts of Metrazol into
selected enemy or Communist agents for the purposes of
severely frightening other suspected agents, by
forcing them to observe the procedure. The almost
immediate effects of Metrazol are shocking for many to
witness: subjects will shake violently, twisting and
turning. They typically arch, jerk and contort their
bodies and grimace in pain. With Metrazol, as with
electroshock, bone fractures - including broken necks
and backs - and joint dislocations are not uncommon,
unless strong sedatives are administered beforehand.
A November
1936 Time magazine article seriously questioned the
benefits of Metrazol, citing "irreversible shock" as a
"great danger." The article described a typical
Metrazol injection as such: "A patient receives no
food for four or five hours. Then about five cubic
centimeters of the drug [Metrazol] are injected into
his veins. In about half-a-minute he coughs, casts
terrified glances around the room, twitches violently,
utters a horse wail, freezes into rigidity with his
mouth wide open, arms and legs stiff as boards. Then
he goes into convulsions. In one or two minutes the
convulsions are over and he gradually passes into a
coma, which lasts about an hour. After a series of
shocks, his mind may be swept clean of delusions.... A
patient is seldom given more than 20 injections and if
no improvement is noted after ten treatments, he is
usually given up as hopeless."
The Army, the CIA and Metrazol
Army CIC
interrogators working with the CIA at prisoner of war
camps and safe house locations in post-war Germany on
occasion used Metrazol, morphine, heroin and LSD on
incarcerated subjects. According to former CIC officer
Miles Hunt, several "safe houses and holding areas
outside of Frankfurt near Oberursel" - a former Nazi
interrogation center taken over by the US - were
operated by a "special unit run by Capt. Malcolm S.
Hilty, Maj. Mose Hart and Capt. Herbert Sensenig. The
unit was especially notorious in its applications of
interrogation methods [including the use of
electroshock and Metrazol, mescaline, amphetamines and
other drugs]." Said Hunt: "The unit took great pride
in their nicknames, the 'Rough Boys' and the 'Kraut
Gauntlet,' and didn't hold back with any drug or
technique ... you name it, they used it." Added Hunt,
"Sensenig was really disappointed when it was found
that nothing had to be used on [former Reichsmarschall]
Herman Goering, who was processed through the camp.
Goering needed no inducement to talk."
Eventually,
CIC interrogators working in Germany would be assisted
in their use of interrogation drugs by several
"former" Nazi scientists recruited by the CIA and US
State Department as part of Project Paperclip. By
early 1952, the CIC's Rough Boys would routinely use
Metrazol during interrogations, as well as LSD,
mescaline and conventional electroshock units.
Metrazol-like
drugs are still used in interrogations today.
According to reports from several former
noncommissioned Army officers, who served on
rendition-related security details in Turkey, Pakistan
and Romania, drugs that produce effects quite similar
to Metrazol are still used in 2010 by the Pentagon and
CIA on enemy combatants and rendered subjects held at
the many "black sites" maintained across the globe.
Observed one former officer recently, "They would
twist up like a pretzel, in unbelievable shapes and
jerk and shake like crazy, their eyes nearly popping
out of their heads."
In 2008, at
the behest of US Sens. Carl Levin, Joe Biden and Chuck
Hagel and in reaction to a March 2008 article in The
Washington Post, the Pentagon initiated an Inspector
General Report on the use of "mind-altering substances
by DoD [Department of Defense] Personnel during
Interrogations of Detainees and/or Prisoners Captured
during the War on Terror." It is not known if the
investigation has been completed. Among the more
famous recent cases of the use of drugs upon prisoners
concerns one-time alleged "enemy combatant" Jose
Padilla, who had originally been accused of wanting to
set off a "dirty bomb." The charge was later forced,
but Padilla was held in solitary confinement for many
months and forced to take LSD or other powerful drugs
while held in the Navy brig in Charleston, South
Carolina.
The government
has gone to great efforts to keep the public
uninformed as regards use of drugs on prisoners. In an
article by Carol Rosenberg for McClatchy News in July
2010, Rosenberg reported that, when covering the
Guantanamo military commissions trials, when the
question of "what psychotropic drugs were given
another accused 9/11 conspirator, Ramzi bin al Shibh,
the courtroom censor hits a white noise button so
reporters viewing from a glass booth can't hear the
names of the drugs. Under current Navy instructions
for the use of human subjects in research, the
undersecretary of the Navy is described as the
authority in charge of research concerning "consciousness-altering
drugs or mind-control techniques," while at the same
time is also responsible for "inherently controversial
topics" that might attract media interest or
"challenge by interest groups."
Dr. Bender Discovers LSD
In 1955
and1956, Dr. Bender began hearing glowing accounts
about the potential of LSD for producing remarkable
results in children suffering mental disorders,
including autism and schizophrenia. Bender's earlier
work with electroshock therapy had brought her into
contact with several other prominent physicians who,
at the time, were covert contractors with the CIA's
MK/ULTRA and Artichoke projects. Primary among these
physicians were Drs. Harold A. Abramson, Paul Hoch,
James B. Cattell, Joel Elkes, Max Fink, Harris Isbell
and Alfred Hubbard. Some of these names may be
familiar to readers. Dr. Abramson, a noted allergist
who surreptitiously worked for both the US Army and
CIA since the late 1940s, was the physician Frank
Olson was taken to see, shortly before his murder in
New York City in November 1953. About a year earlier,
Drs. Hoch and Cattell were responsible for injecting
unwitting New York State Psychiatric Institute patient
Harold Blauer with a massive dose of mescaline that
killed him. Dr. Elkes was one of the earliest
physicians in Europe to experiment with LSD, having
requested samples of the drug from Sandoz Chemical Co.
in 1949. Elkes was a close associate of Dr. Abraham
Wikler, who worked closely with Dr. Harris Isbell at
the now-closed Lexington, Kentucky, prison farm, where
hundreds of already drug-addicted inmates were given
heroin in exchange for their participation in LSD and
mescaline experiments underwritten by the CIA and
Pentagon. Elkes worked closely with the CIA, Pentagon
and Britain's MI6 on drug experiments in England and
the United States.
Dr. Fink, who
was greatly admired by Bender, is considered the
godfather of electroshock therapy in the United
States. In the early 1950s and beyond, Fink was a
fully cleared CIA Project Artichoke consultant. In
1951, CIA officials under the direction of Paul Gaynor
and Morse Allen of the agency's Security Research
Service (SRS) that oversaw Artichoke, worked closely
with Fink in New York City in efforts to thoroughly
explore the merits of electroshock techniques for
interrogations. The CIA was especially interested in
the use of standard electroshock machines in producing
amnesia, inducing subjects to talk and making subjects
more prone to hypnotic control. According to one CIA
document, Fink told officials "an individual could
gradually be reduced through the use to electroshock
treatment to the vegetable level."
In addition to
Fink, Bender also greatly admired the work of Dr.
Lothar B. Kalinowsky, a psychiatrist who also
consulted closely with the CIA on electroshock
matters. Kalinowsky, who was part Jewish and had fled
Germany in 1933, was Fink's close friend and, like
Fink, was widely recognized as an expert on
electroconvulsive therapy. Kalinowsky met with the
CIA's Allen and Gaynor frequently and sometimes was
accompanied by Dr. Fink at the New York State
Psychiatric Institute, where he worked closely with
Dr. Hoch.
While it is
clear from Dr. Bender's papers that she also
considered the early LSD work of "Dr." Alfred M.
Hubbard in Vancouver, Canada, to be "very substantial
and beneficial," it is important to state here that
Hubbard was not a physician nor did he have any formal
medical training. Hubbard, a jovial character who
sometimes worked with the FBI and CIA, was a strong
proponent of the use of LSD. Despite the fact that he
had no medical credentials and once served time in
prison for smuggling, he hoodwinked the Sandoz
Chemical Co. into supplying him such ample amounts of
LSD that he dispersed so widely and abundantly that he
earned the title "The Johnny Appleseed of LSD."
Hubbard's use of LSD in allegedly curing alcoholism is
still cited today. How Hubbard so easily passed as a
physician is unknown. Even a 1961 paper published by
New York Medical College, Department of Psychiatry,
and authored by Dr. A.M. Freedman, cited Hubbard's LSD
work with "children, primarily delinquents" to have
been 85% successful."
Other
physicians whom Dr. Bender consulted about the effects
of LSD on children were Drs. Ronald A. Sandison,
Thomas M. Ling and John Buckman. These three worked in
England at both the Chelsea Clinic in London and
Potwick Hospital in Worcestershire, outside of London.
Sandison is credited with having been the first person
to bring LSD into England, this in 1952 after he met
Albert Hofmann in Basle, Switzerland, at the Sandoz
Chemical laboratories. Hofmann handed Sandison a box
of around 600 ampules, each containing 100 micrograms
of LSD. Back in England, Sandison shared his
psychedelic bounty with associates Drs. Ling and
Buckman. Before the year was out, Sandison also turned
Hubbard on to LSD, guiding Hubbard through his first
trip. Sandison also began a new treatment program at
the Gothic-looking Potwick facility that he dubbed
Psycholytic Therapy. His program's patients were
mostly schizophrenics. In 1958, an LSD treatment unit
was established at Potwick. Over the years, it has
been reported that the CIA, MI6 and the Macy
Foundation secretly helped finance the unit. Dr. Elkes
helped by raising about $75,000 for the unit's
operation. For the next ten years the unit
administered over 15,000 doses of LSD to about 900
patients.
Drs. Buckman
and Ling worked closely with Sandison in the Potwick
unit. In 1963, Buckman and Ling wrote in a
publication, describing "good examples" of the use of
LSD in psycholytic psychotherapy: "The patients'
experiences under LSD have not supported Marx's dictum
that Religion is the opium of the people but rather
that there is a deep basic belief in a Supreme Being,
whether the religion background be Christian, Jewish
or Hindu."
Dr. Buckman
also worked at London's Chelsea Clinic, often times
treating adults and sometimes children. Buckman
believed strongly that "frigidity" in women could be
treated successfully with LSD. In 1967, he said of
LSD: "Many therapists believe that a transcendental
experience - a feeling that it is a good world and one
is a part of it - is a curative experience in itself."
According to several informed sources in the London,
for years MI6, the British intelligence service and
the CIA closely monitored the LSD work conducted by
Sandison, Ling and Buckman.
Two Sisters, LSD and Dr. Buckman
Marion McGill,
today an attorney and college professor in the western
United States and her sister, Trudy, were sent in 1960
by their parents to be interviewed by Drs. Ling and
Buckman at the Chelsea Clinic in London. At the time,
Marion was 13 years old and her sister was 15. Marion
says that both her mother and father were "quite taken
with the benefits of LSD and thought that we would
also benefit from the drug." Both parents had
undergone a series of ten LSD "treatments" at the
Chelsea clinic. Marion goes on:
"As a 13-year
old at the time, my decision-making capacity was very
limited. I was, by nature, fairly compliant and
docile, rather eager to please my parents. I
understood nothing of what was being suggested for me
and my 15 year-old sister - namely that we participate
in some sort of 'research' that both our parents had
also participated in. Whether the word 'experiment'
was used, I don't recall. The term 'LSD' was vaguely
familiar, however, because my parents were 'taking'
this drug as a form of 'quick therapy' - their term
for it - that had been recommended by my uncle, a
psychiatrist at a well known east coast medical
school. Both parents needed therapy, in my view. While
highly successful professionally, my father was a
tightly wound, rather angry and insecure man, an
accomplished academic, but an 'industrial strength
narcissist,' as I later called him. My mother was a
submissive, obedient, Catholic woman without much
identity of her own, other than being a doctor's wife.
"My sister and
I, however, were about as 'normal' as any two
teenagers could be. We were at the top of our classes
in school; both of us had lots of friends,
participated in extra curricular activities. We didn't
need 'therapy.' We were told we would get a day off
from school after each overnight stay at the clinic
for this LSD. It was perhaps the prospect of a day off
from Catholic girls' school that persuaded us to do
it. I wasn't aware of making a 'decision.' The purpose
of this program was never explained. There were to be
10 sessions - once a week for 10 weeks. I believe they
started in January 1960.
"The
experiences at the clinic where the LSD was
administered were quite strange. There was a brief
'interview' by Dr. John Buckman, asking banal
questions about health issues (none), but providing no
information about what to expect from the LSD. There
was no mention, for example, of hallucinations or
perceptual distortions or anything frightening. I was
not informed of any persistent effects, such as
nightmares. Certainly the possibility of lasting
damage was not mentioned. The word 'experiment' was
not used. There was, in other words, no informed
consent whatsoever. I was not told that I could refuse
to participate, that I could quit at any time (as
provided in the Nuremberg Code). Since I was below the
age of consent, my parents would have been the ones to
agree to this. Indeed, they were the ones to suggest
that we be used in these experiments. It would not
otherwise have happened. But my parents would never
discuss this in later years and never explained why
they did it.
"During the 10
sessions, each of which involved an injection, my
sister and I were kept in separate bedrooms, darkened
rooms, usually with someone present in the room, but I
don't know who the person was. Occasionally, my mother
was also present. At times, I was so frightened by the
hallucinations that I screamed and tried to escape
from the room. I remember once actually reaching the
hallway and being forcibly put back into the bedroom
by my mother. I saw a wild array of images -
nightmarish visions, occasionally provoking hysterical
laughter, followed immediately by wracking sobs. I had
no idea what was happening to me. It was terrifying.
"There was no
effort to counsel us during or after each of these
sessions. There was no 'debriefing,' no explanation of
what was happening or why this was being done to us.
Why I did not refuse to participate after I first
experienced it, I don't know. But as an adult and
later as a professional medical ethicist, I recognized
this lack of resistance as a function of childhood
itself. Most children who are victims of parental
abuse do not know how to resist. They fear rejection
by parents more than they fear the abuse, it seems.
The 'power differential' is huge between parents and
children and the dependence on parents is virtually
absolute. We were also, living in London at the time,
away from our friends. My sister and I had been told
not to talk about what we were doing. We were
Catholics, obedient to parents, etc. Our father was a
doctor, after all - it was hard to grasp that he would
do harm to us or that our mother would. Children just
don't think this way initially. A child's dependency
usually means trusting one's parents or caregivers.
"Although each
individual session was often terrifying, any lasting
effects of the LSD unfolded gradually. In the weeks
immediately following the final session, I experienced
frequent nightmares - visions of crawling insects,
horrible masks, etc. I couldn't sleep. I was afraid to
shut my eyes. I became afraid of the dark. My parents
were dismissive and unsympathetic. Their attitude was,
in some ways, more disturbing to me than the
experiments themselves because it meant that my
parents had known full well that the experience would
very likely be frightening - and hadn't cared.
"I discovered
that my parents were dishonest and unfeeling in ways
that I could not comprehend. They told my sister and
me never to talk about the LSD experiences, never to
disclose what had happened in London. This further
ruptured our relationship with them, a relationship
that was, by then, permanently damaged. I was still
dependent on them, however and so was my sister.
"Two years
after these experiments, during her freshman year in
college, my sister suffered a nervous breakdown. I
don't know the extent to which the LSD may have
precipitated this. But my parents' response to what
was probably a mild breakdown from which my sister
could have recovered, was coercive and drastic. She
had been asking questions about the LSD at this time.
She was angry about it. We both were. We talked about
it together, but I was afraid to confront our parents.
My sister was not. The angrier she became, the more
she was 'diagnosed' as a 'psychiatric' case and the
more medication she was given. To this day, my sister
is heavily medicated. She never fully recovered from
that first episode.
"Our parents
responded to my sister's anger in a way that
frightened me further. I also felt tremendous guilt
for not being able to prevent the horrors that my
sister endured. Once she was 'classified' as a
psychiatric patient, she was lost. Everything that was
done to her in the name of 'treatment' seemed to me to
be a form of ongoing abuse and torture.
"The fact that
our father was a prominent, internationally known and
widely respected physician - and his brother, who had
introduced us to this LSD horror, was a prominent,
internationally known and widely respected
psychiatrist - made it impossible to expose them or go
against them. Their reputations were more important to
them than the health and well being of my sister.
"My own
response was simply to leave home. I never trusted my
parents again after the London LSD experience. I
discovered many other ways in which my father and my
uncle lied, covered up, dissembled and eventually
threatened me, in order to keep this story from being
told.
"On a positive
note, the experience informed my career choices in
both human rights and medical ethics, but it also made
me alert to the ways in which academic medicine was -
and is - corrupted by the drug industry itself and by
the continuing abuse of human subjects to further the
development of drugs as weapons - both for
interrogation potential and also, more subtle behavior
control on a massive scale. My own experience also
sensitized me to the special vulnerability of children
and teenagers in the medical environment.
"Even when I
subsequently confronted my father with the evidence
that LSD had been tested by the CIA for use as a
military weapon in the 1950s and 1960s, he dismissed
his participation by saying that it was an
'enlightening experience, like visiting an art
gallery.' When I pointed out that this was not my
experience as a child, he dismissed it, including the
presumption that I must be a 'conspiracy theorist' to
propose such a thing. At the age of 91, he finally
admitted that it had perhaps not been a very good idea
to subject my sister and me to LSD.
"Dr. Buckman
and Ling were knowing participants in ongoing
intelligence-based work with mind altering drugs. I
'met' Buckman in London when I was 13, but encountered
him again years later at the university medical school
in the United States where he was on the faculty.
"I went to see
Dr. Buckman in his office. I asked him what he thought
about the ethics of using children in an LSD
experiment. At first, he didn't seem to realize who I
was. I identified myself as one of his 'subjects' and
gave him my business card as a Medical Ethicist and
lawyer. He was clearly shocked, stood up, refused to
talk to me and told me to leave his office. Shortly
thereafter, I received a phone call from my father.
His brother, the psychiatrist and colleague of Dr.
Buckman, had been alerted to my impromptu visit.
Subsequently, both my uncle and my father threatened
me, saying they would make sure I lost my university
faculty position if I disclosed anything publicly
about the LSD experiments in London.
"'You will
never work in bioethics again,' they said.
"The response
of all these men to the threat of disclosure indicates
their lack of ethical scruples, their lack of empathy,
their own pathology. I don't know what the exact term
would be, but I suspect there is a form of
psychological 'doubling' at work - the sort of thing
that was described in [Robert Jay] Lifton's book, The
Nazi Doctors who were able to ignore their Hippocratic
oath to 'first, do no harm,' and to inflict
unimaginable horrors on their fellow human beings.
"The loss of
my sister has been a life long source of sorrow for
me. I attribute it to the LSD and its cover up,
whether the chemicals themselves 'caused' her
disintegration or not. In law this is called a
'contributing cause.' I learned that people cover up
the most awful things, not just within a family but
within communities, within universities, within
'polite society.' There is probably no absolute
barrier that will prevent these things from being
done, but they have to be exposed and called out for
what they are, whenever they occur."
Dr. Bender's LSD Experiments on
Children
Shortly after
deciding to initiate her own LSD experiments on
children, Bender attended a conference sponsored by a
CIA front group, the Josiah Macy Foundation. The
conference focused on LSD research and featured Dr.
Harold A. Abramson as a presenter. In 1960, Abramson
conducted his own LSD experiments on a group of six
children ranging in age from five to 14 years of age.
A few short months after the Macy Foundation
conference, Dr. Bender was notified that her planned
LSD experiments would be partially and surreptitiously
funded by the Society for the Investigation of Human
Ecology (SIHE), another CIA front group then located
in Forest Hills, New York. The Society, headed by
James L. Monroe, a former US Air Force officer who had
worked on top-secret psychological warfare and
propaganda projects, oversaw about 55 top-secret
experiments underwritten by the CIA. These projects
involved LSD, ESP, black magic, astrology,
psychological warfare, media manipulation, and other
subjects. Apparently, Bender's work with children and
LSD raised some concerns at the CIA's Technical
Services Division (TSD). A 1961 TSD memo written to
Monroe questioned the "operational benefits of Dr.
Bender's work as related to children and LSD," and
requested to be kept "closely appraised of the
possible links between Dr. Bender's project and those
being conducted under separate MK/ULTRA funding at
designated prisons in New York and elsewhere."
In 1960, Dr.
Bender launched her first experiments with LSD and
children. They were conducted within the Children's
Unit, Creedmoor State Hospital in Queens, New York.
The LSD she used was supplied by Dr. Rudolph P.
Bircher of the Sandoz Pharmaceutical Company. (Dr.
Bircher also provided Bender with UML-491, also a
Sandoz-produced product, very much like LSD but
sometimes "dreamier" in effect and longer lasting.)
Her initial group of young subjects consisted of 14
children diagnosed schizophrenic, all under the age of
11. (Because diagnostic criteria for schizophrenia,
autism, and other disorders have changed over the
decades, one cannot assess what actual conditions
these children really had.) There were 11 boys and
three girls, ranging in age from six to ten years old.
Jean Marie is
almost seven years old. She came here nearly a year
ago after her parents abandoned her to the care of an
aunt who had no interest in raising her. Marie, who
prefers to be called Jean, is shy, withdrawn, and
distrustful of most adults she encounters. There are
reports she may have been sexually molested by her
uncle ... Despite her withdrawn nature she smiles
easily, and enjoys the company of other children.
After receiving LSD on three occasions earlier this
month, Marie ceased smiling at all and lost any
interest in others her age ... In the past week, she
seems to have become easily agitated and has lost any
interest in reading, something she seemed to very much
enjoy before treatment.
In a published
report on her 196 LSD experiments with 14 "autistic
schizophrenic" children, Bender states she initially
gave each of the children 25 mcg. of LSD
"intramuscularly while under continuous observation."
She writes: "The two oldest boys, over ten years, near
or in early puberty, reacted with disturbed anxious
behavior. The oldest and most disturbed received
Amytal sodium 150 mg. intramuscularly and returned to
his usual behavior." Both boys were then excluded from
the experiment.
The 12
remaining children were then given injections of 25
mcg. of LSD and then days later were each given 100
mcg. of LSD once a week. Bender's report states: "Then
it was increased gradually to twice and three times a
week as no untoward side-effects were noticed....
Finally, it was given daily and this continued for six
weeks until the time of this report."
Bender's
findings and conclusions concerning her LSD
experiments indicated she found the use of the drug
promising. Bender reported: "In general, they [the
children] were happier; their mood was 'high' in the
hours following the ingestion of the drug ... they
have become more spontaneously playful with balls and
balloons ... their color is rosy rather than blue or
pale and they have gained weight." Bender concluded:
"The use of these drugs [LSD, UML-401, UML-491] ...
will give us more knowledge about both the basic
schizophrenic process and the defensive autism in
children and also about the reaction of these
dilysergic acid derivatives as central and autonomic
nervous system stimulants and serotonin antagonists.
Hopefully these drugs will also contribute to our
efforts to find better therapeutic agents for early
childhood schizophrenia."
In an
article published in 1970, Dr. Bender reported on
the results of LSD dosing upon "two adolescent boys
who were mildly schizophrenic." She reported that the
boys experienced perceptual distortions. They thought
the researchers were making faces at them, that their
pencils were becoming "rubbery," and one boy reported
the other boy's face had turned green. The boys began
to complain that they were being experimented upon.
Even so, Bender and her associate continued the two
male adolescents on a regimen of 150 mcg. per day, in
divided doses, of LSD. While one of the boys
supposedly "benefited very much," Bender reported that
he later returned to the hospital as "a disturbed
adult schizophrenic." The other boy kept complaining
that he was being experimented upon and they stopped
giving him LSD, not because of the drug's effects
itself, Bender explained, but "because of the boy's
attitude towards it," which she attributed to "his own
psychopathology."
Dr. Bender's
LSD experiments continued into the late 1960s and,
during that time, continued to include multiple
experiments on children with UML-401, a little known
LSD-type drug provided to her by the Sandoz Company,
as well as UML-491, also a Sandoz product. Bender's
reports on her LSD experiments give no indication of
whether the parents or legal guardians of the subject
children were aware of, or consented to, the
experiments. Without doubt, parents or guardians were
never informed that the CIA underwrote Bender's work.
Over the years, there have been multiple reports that
many of Bender's subject children were either "wards
of the State" or orphans, but the available literature
on the experiments reveals nothing on this. The same
literature makes it obvious that the children had been
confined to the Creedmoor State Hospital for long
periods of time and that many, if discharged, needed
"suitable homes or placements in the community." There
is also no evidence that any follow-up studies were
conducted on any of the children experimented upon by
Dr. Bender. Today, Dr. Bender is best known and highly
regarded in some circles as the creator of the
Bender-Gestalt Test, which measures motor skills in
children.
On Bender's
use of LSD on children, Dr. Leon Eisenberg said years
later: "She did all sorts of things. Lauretta Bender
reached success in her career long before randomized
controlled trials had even been heard of. She didn't
see the need for trials of drugs because she was
convinced she knew what worked." (See: "A History of
Autism: Conversations with the Pioneers" by Adam
Feinstein, Wiley-Blanchard, 2010.) Many other
physicians speaking privately were far less diplomatic
in condemning Bender's LSD work, but, still today,
many are reluctant to criticize her, and, remarkably,
many of the aging stalwarts of the arguable "virtues"
and "potential" of LSD continue to cite her work with
children as groundbreaking science.
Today, nearly
60 years beyond the horrors of Dr. Bender's
CIA-sponsored experiments on children, few people are
aware that they were conducted. For most people,
regardless of their awareness of the experiments, it
is difficult to fathom how intelligent, highly
educated physicians and scientists could partake in
such brutal, uncaring, unethical and illegal
experiments on children. What was the basis of their
motivation? Was it the quest for some sort of elusive
medical grail? Was it for economic gain? Or was it
simply the result of a misguided search for knowledge
that appeared so infinitely important that any sense
of compassion and respect for human rights and dignity
was cast aside in the name of a higher goal or good -
a search at times so exhilarating with the sense that
one is at the precipice of a momentous discovery that
any semblance of respect for humankind was thrown
aside?
One can easily
come to any and all these conclusions simply by
reading the professional papers of such scientists and
researchers. Not once do any of these papers express
concern for the subjects at hand or denote any pangs
of conscience at violating any oaths, codes and
statutes regarding patient rights, human rights or
human dignity. That America's most shameful period of
human experimentation, the years 1950 through to about
1979, came on the heels of the making and adoption of
the Nuremberg Codes only adds to the shame and
hypocrisy. Today, human experimentation is still
aggressively conducted by US government-sponsored and
employed physicians and scientists regardless of those
codes, which came directly out of the shocking madness
of the Nazi era. That government-sponsored
experimentation still occurs makes a mockery of any
governmental efforts, however valid, to protect people
from science run amok - and a nation that uses its
young, its children, for such pursuits is a nation
whose commitment to human rights and democratic
principles should be seriously questioned and
challenged.
(The names
Marion McGill and that of her sister Trudy, are
pseudonyms. Marion is a highly respected attorney and
college professor, who asked that her real name not be
used in this article. All other names in this article
are real.)
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