Veterans won another court order requiring the U.S. Department of  Veterans Affairs to hand over more documents about its Cold War-era drug  experiments on thousands of Vietnam veterans.
U.S. Magistrate  Judge Jacqueline Scott Corley in Oakland, Calif., said the documents  requested were "squarely relevant" to the claim that the government  failed to adequately notify veterans of the chemicals they were exposed  to and what that exposure might do to their health.
The Army and  the CIA, with the help of Nazi scientists, used at least 7,800 veterans  as human guinea pigs for testing the effects of up to 400 types of  drugs and chemicals, including mescaline, LSD, amphetamines,  barbituates, mustard gas and nerve agents, the Vietnam Veterans of  America and individual soldiers claim in a 2009 class action.
The  government covered up the true nature of its experiments, which began  in the 1950s under code names such as "Bluebird," "Artichoke" and  "MKUltra."
In "Project Paperclip," the Army and CIA allegedly  recruited Nazi scientists to help test various psychochemicals and  develop a new truth serum using its own veterans as test subjects.
"Over  half of these Nazi recruits had been members of the SS or Nazi Party,"  according to the class action. "The 'Paperclip' name was chosen because  so many of the employment applications were clipped to immigration  papers."
Veterans say the government was trying to develop and  test substances that could trigger mind control, confusion, euphoria,  altered personality, unconsciousness, physical paralysis, illogical  thinking and mania, among other effects.
More...
No comments:
Post a Comment