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CCHR: Congressional Hearing Revives Lessons from MKULTRA Era – Why Past Psychiatric Human Rights Abuses Demand Vigilance Today
Rezul News/10740584
A recent congressional hearing on MKULTRA highlights the need for stronger safeguards against coercive psychiatric and behavioral research.
LOS ANGELES - Rezul -- By CCHR International
A recent U.S. House Oversight Committee hearing has spotlighted the need for greater public awareness of historical institution-backed psychiatric experiments under a clandestine program known as MKULTRA that violated human rights on a massive scale in the 1960s and 70s. The hearing, the first of its kind since the 1970s Senate Church Committee investigations into MKULTRA, underscores how past abuses involving mind-control research, memory manipulation, and coercive behavioral interventions must inform today's oversight of emerging neuroscience and behavioral technologies.[1] The Citizens Commission on Human Rights (CCHR) has long advocated for transparency and accountability in mental health and applauded the public awareness hearing. "Institutional involvement in these programs was widespread," Jan Eastgate, CCHR's President, states. "The public deserves full disclosure so that we can prevent similar violations from occurring today and ensure a mental health system based on human rights being protected."
Decades ago, the CIA's MKULTRA program and related projects enlisted numerous universities, hospitals, and researchers in unethical experiments on unwitting individuals. These included the use of LSD, hypnosis, high-intensity electroshock, prolonged drug-induced comas, attempts to erase or implant memories, and create assassins. Many participants suffered devastating, long-term harm, with some reduced to childlike states.
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The reflected systemic abuse rather than isolated incidents, according to CCHR.
Public records and investigative reporting have since revealed how certain prominent figures in psychiatry played central roles, publicly denying deeper involvement while internal documents told a different story. One 1956 paper by a key participant described techniques to replace real memories with fictional ones through hypnosis, stating it was "feasible to take the memory of a definite event... and... bring about the subsequent conscious recall to the effect that this event never actually took place."[2]
In the early 1970s, proposals for a "Violence Initiative" further highlighted risks of specific psychiatric research tied to social control. These included suggestions for genetic screening and invasive interventions targeting urban populations, raising serious concerns about racial bias and civil rights. Outrage from advocacy groups, including CCHR, civil rights organizations, and the NAACP, helped halt the initiative. [3]
Learning from History to Protect the Future
Experts testifying at the June 30, 2026 hearing emphasized that MKULTRA should not be viewed as ancient history. Advances in neuroscience, artificial intelligence, and brain-computer interfaces raise parallel concerns about potential misuse for behavior modification or loss of personal autonomy. As author Stephen Kinzer noted in related testimony regarding the program's goals: the drive to "implant a new mind" often began with efforts to "destroy the mind that was there already." [4]
Investigative journalist Tom O'Neill, author of Chaos, submitted documentation during the hearing calling for deeper examination of record inconsistencies and undisclosed ties.
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CCHR urges lawmakers, the media, and the public to prioritize:
Since its founding in 1969 by the Church of Scientology and the late Dr. Thomas Szasz, CCHR has worked to expose psychiatric human rights violations and has been instrumental in the passage of more than 190 laws protecting individuals from abusive practices. The organization continues to advocate for ethical standards that place people's rights and dignity first.
Sources:
[1] "Congress Reopens the CIA's MKULTRA Files as Witnesses Call for Answers," Military Daily News, 6 July 2026
[2] Tom O'Neill and Dan Piepenbring, "Inside the Archive of an LSD Researcher With Ties to the CIA's MKUltra Mind Control Project," The Intercept, 24 Nov. 2019; Testimony of Tom O'Neill, 30 June 30, 2026
[3] Samuel Chavkin, "The Mind Stealers: Psychosurgery and Mind Control" 1978; "West (Louis Jolyon) papers, 1890-1998, bulk 1948-1998," OAC University of California; "INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS AND THE FEDERAL ROLE IN BEHAVIOR MODIFICATION," The Staff of the Subcommittee on Constitutional Rights of the Committee on the Judiciary U.S. Senate, 93rd Congress, Second Session, Nov. 1974
[4] Testimony of Stephen Kinzer to the Task Force on the Declassification of Federal Secrets, House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, 30 June 2026
A recent U.S. House Oversight Committee hearing has spotlighted the need for greater public awareness of historical institution-backed psychiatric experiments under a clandestine program known as MKULTRA that violated human rights on a massive scale in the 1960s and 70s. The hearing, the first of its kind since the 1970s Senate Church Committee investigations into MKULTRA, underscores how past abuses involving mind-control research, memory manipulation, and coercive behavioral interventions must inform today's oversight of emerging neuroscience and behavioral technologies.[1] The Citizens Commission on Human Rights (CCHR) has long advocated for transparency and accountability in mental health and applauded the public awareness hearing. "Institutional involvement in these programs was widespread," Jan Eastgate, CCHR's President, states. "The public deserves full disclosure so that we can prevent similar violations from occurring today and ensure a mental health system based on human rights being protected."
Decades ago, the CIA's MKULTRA program and related projects enlisted numerous universities, hospitals, and researchers in unethical experiments on unwitting individuals. These included the use of LSD, hypnosis, high-intensity electroshock, prolonged drug-induced comas, attempts to erase or implant memories, and create assassins. Many participants suffered devastating, long-term harm, with some reduced to childlike states.
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The reflected systemic abuse rather than isolated incidents, according to CCHR.
Public records and investigative reporting have since revealed how certain prominent figures in psychiatry played central roles, publicly denying deeper involvement while internal documents told a different story. One 1956 paper by a key participant described techniques to replace real memories with fictional ones through hypnosis, stating it was "feasible to take the memory of a definite event... and... bring about the subsequent conscious recall to the effect that this event never actually took place."[2]
In the early 1970s, proposals for a "Violence Initiative" further highlighted risks of specific psychiatric research tied to social control. These included suggestions for genetic screening and invasive interventions targeting urban populations, raising serious concerns about racial bias and civil rights. Outrage from advocacy groups, including CCHR, civil rights organizations, and the NAACP, helped halt the initiative. [3]
Learning from History to Protect the Future
Experts testifying at the June 30, 2026 hearing emphasized that MKULTRA should not be viewed as ancient history. Advances in neuroscience, artificial intelligence, and brain-computer interfaces raise parallel concerns about potential misuse for behavior modification or loss of personal autonomy. As author Stephen Kinzer noted in related testimony regarding the program's goals: the drive to "implant a new mind" often began with efforts to "destroy the mind that was there already." [4]
Investigative journalist Tom O'Neill, author of Chaos, submitted documentation during the hearing calling for deeper examination of record inconsistencies and undisclosed ties.
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CCHR urges lawmakers, the media, and the public to prioritize:
- Greater oversight of behavioral research involving vulnerable populations.
- Protections against chemical or electroshock interventions.
- Education about historical abuses to safeguard informed consent and human rights today.
Since its founding in 1969 by the Church of Scientology and the late Dr. Thomas Szasz, CCHR has worked to expose psychiatric human rights violations and has been instrumental in the passage of more than 190 laws protecting individuals from abusive practices. The organization continues to advocate for ethical standards that place people's rights and dignity first.
Sources:
[1] "Congress Reopens the CIA's MKULTRA Files as Witnesses Call for Answers," Military Daily News, 6 July 2026
[2] Tom O'Neill and Dan Piepenbring, "Inside the Archive of an LSD Researcher With Ties to the CIA's MKUltra Mind Control Project," The Intercept, 24 Nov. 2019; Testimony of Tom O'Neill, 30 June 30, 2026
[3] Samuel Chavkin, "The Mind Stealers: Psychosurgery and Mind Control" 1978; "West (Louis Jolyon) papers, 1890-1998, bulk 1948-1998," OAC University of California; "INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS AND THE FEDERAL ROLE IN BEHAVIOR MODIFICATION," The Staff of the Subcommittee on Constitutional Rights of the Committee on the Judiciary U.S. Senate, 93rd Congress, Second Session, Nov. 1974
[4] Testimony of Stephen Kinzer to the Task Force on the Declassification of Federal Secrets, House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, 30 June 2026
Source: Citizens Commission on Human Rights International
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