Mugshot Mysteries
A 42-year-old man checks himself into a New York psychiatric hospital for depression after his marriage ends. Five weeks later a doctor injects him with 450 milligrams of an Army chemical-warfare compound, a mescaline derivative no human had ever been given at that dose. Two hours and twenty-two minutes later he is dead. The death certificate blames his heart. It will keep blaming his heart for twenty-two years. His name was Harold Blauer. He thought he had checked in for a broken heart. This week on Mugshot Mysteries, Kathryn and Gabriel continue their three-part MKUltra series with Part 2, "The Names," the episode about the people the program actually happened to. The CIA burned most of the MKUltra records in 1973, so what survives is mostly receipts. This episode is about the names that survived anyway, because the victims sued, or because their families refused to stay quiet. We start with Harold Blauer, dead in a hospital that was supposed to help him. Then Stanley Glickman, a 26-year-old American painter in Paris who accepted a drink from a stranger at a café in 1952, allegedly laced with LSD, and spent the next forty years a recluse who never painted again. We go inside Operation Midnight Climax, the CIA safehouses in Greenwich Village and San Francisco where a gin-soaked federal agent named George Hunter White sat behind a one-way mirror and watched men, lured back by paid sex workers and dosed without their knowledge, come apart in real time. We cover Edgewood Arsenal, where the Army exposed more than 7,000 soldiers to LSD, sarin, VX, and a battlefield incapacitant called BZ under the cover of testing "equipment." And we run an inventory of the program's stranger corners: hypnosis experiments aimed at producing an assassin, attempts at remote brain control, a plan to weaponize dolphins, and a late-career detour into psychics and the occult. Then we end in two places that resist easy answers. Pont-Saint-Esprit, the French village that descended into mass hallucination in 1951, officially blamed on contaminated bread but tied by one investigative journalist to a covert LSD field test. And a small house in Maryland, where the sister-in-law of a dead scientist woke at the exact moment he went out a tenth-floor window, and swore for the rest of her life that he had come to say goodbye. Multiply every name we can give you by all the ones we cannot. That is the program. Part 3, "The Sleep Room," is next. This is Part 2 of our three-part MKUltra series. New episodes drop every Mugshot Monday. Search Mugshot Mysteries wherever you listen. SOURCES: U.S. Senate Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities (the Church Committee), hearings and reports on the CIA's MKUltra program, 1975 to 1976; Rockefeller Commission Report, 1975; Joint Hearing before the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence and the Subcommittee on Health and Scientific Research, "Project MKULTRA, The CIA's Program of Research in Behavioral Modification," August 1977; surviving MKUltra financial records recovered under the Freedom of Information Act; Marks, J., The Search for the "Manchurian Candidate": The CIA and Mind Control, 1979; Kinzer, S., Poisoner in Chief: Sidney Gottlieb and the CIA Search for Mind Control, 2019; Barrett v. United States, U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, the litigation over the 1953 death of Harold Blauer following injection of the Army Chemical Corps compound EA-1298 at the New York State Psychiatric Institute; Kronisch v. United States, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, 1998, the litigation brought by Stanley Glickman and continued by his estate; documentation of Operation Midnight Climax and the CIA safehouses operated by federal narcotics agent George Hunter White, including White's own diaries; records and reporting on the U.S. Army's Edgewood Arsenal human experimentation program, circa 1955 to 1975, and the related veterans' class action Vietnam Veterans of America v. Central Intelligence Agency, filed 2009; MKUltra subproject documentation concerning hypnosis research associated with CIA officer Morse Allen, bioelectric and remote-influence research, and research by John Lilly into dolphin cognition; accounts of the program later described as "Operation Often" and CIA interest in parapsychology and the occult, as described in published histories; Albarelli, H.P., A Terrible Mistake: The Murder of Frank Olson and the CIA's Secret Cold War Experiments, 2009, and Kaplan, S., Le Pain Maudit, regarding the 1951 Pont-Saint-Esprit mass poisoning; BBC reporting on the Pont-Saint-Esprit case, 2010; the Olson family's account of the events surrounding Frank Olson's 1953 death. DISCLAIMER: Content warning: This episode describes nonconsensual drugging and chemical experimentation, a death resulting from a government experiment, covert dosing of unwitting civilians and soldiers, the use of sex work as an operational tool, a mass-poisoning event, severe mental health crises, and references to suicide. Please take care while listening, and consider stepping away if any of this is difficult. Nothing in this episode constitutes medical, psychological, or legal advice. The Mugshot Mysteries podcast is independently produced and is not affiliated with, sponsored by, or endorsed by any individual, agency, government, company, or institution referenced in this episode, including the Central Intelligence Agency, the U.S. Army, the New York State Psychiatric Institute, the University of Hawaii, or Sandoz. Our account is drawn from publicly available sources, including declassified U.S. government records, Congressional and commission reports, court filings and rulings, surviving MKUltra financial documentation, published histories, and investigative journalism. Because the CIA destroyed most MKUltra records in 1973, key figures such as the number of subjects, dates, dosages, and program details are incomplete, vary across sources, and in many cases cannot be confirmed. Where the record is uncertain, we have tried to say so. Some events discussed here remain genuinely contested. In particular, the cause of the 1951 Pont-Saint-Esprit poisoning is disputed: most academic sources attribute it to foodborne contamination, while the theory that it resulted from a covert CIA LSD test comes principally from one journalist's work and has been widely characterized as unproven. Claims regarding parapsychology research, dolphin weaponization, and certain other subprojects are likewise drawn from incomplete records and reporting of varying reliability. We present these as claims and disputes, not as established fact, and allegations raised in litigation that was not resolved on the merits remain allegations. The supernatural account near the end of the episode is related as a family member's personal recollection and is offered as such, not as a verifiable event. References to any person, living or deceased, are made in the context of documented history, public records, and reporting, and are not intended to defame, harass, or cause harm. The commentary and interpretations offered by the hosts are their own opinions and do not constitute statements of established fact or legal conclusions. Any third-party names and trademarks remain the property of their respective owners and are referenced under fair use for purposes of commentary, criticism, and reporting. Nothing in this episode constitutes medical, psychological, or legal advice. Send us your theories [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2513350/fan_mail/new] Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2513350/support] 🎧 Subscribe on Apple Podcasts or Spotify so you never miss an episode. ⭐ Loved this one? Leave us a review on Apple Podcasts — it's the fastest way to help us grow. 📸 Follow us on TikTok [https://www.tiktok.com/@mugshotmysteriespodcast] and Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/mugshotmysteriespodcast/]for mugshots, mysteries, paranormal, conspiracies, and everything Gabriel said that didn't make the final cut. Stay curious. Stay suspicious.
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