| JUDGE RULES
VETERANS' CLAIMS OVER CIA EXPERIMENTATION SURVIVE
Vets say the CIA prevented roughly
7,000 human subjects from getting medical care after they were
subjected to experiments on mind control, implantation of
electronics and the effects of exotic drugs.
NOTE from
Larry Scott, VA Watchdog dot Org
... Use our search engine for more about human experimentation ...
here ...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sessearch.php?q
=human+experimentation&op=ph
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Vets' Claims Over CIA
Experiments Survive
By JAMIE ROSS
http://www.courthousenews.com/2010/01/20/23839.htm
(CN) - A federal judge in San Francisco has given the green light
to an action by Vietnam vets saying the CIA prevented roughly
7,000 human subjects from getting medical care after they were
subjected to experiments on mind control, implantation of
electronics and the effects of exotic drugs.
U.S. District Judge Claudia
Wilken allowed a challenge to the consent forms signed by
individual plaintiffs involved in the experiments, to the extent
that they required an oath of secrecy.
At
the same time, she dismissed the challenge to the legality of the
CIA's human testing program of the 1950s and '60s
But the plaintiffs, Vietnam
Veterans of America, may seek a declaration concerning the
lawfulness of consent forms provided to the individual plaintiffs,
since the extent of their potential injuries was not fully
disclosed and the forms required them to take a secrecy oath.
Plaintiffs, who also include the
group Swords to Plowshares, allege that the oaths cause ongoing
harm because they prohibit individuals from seeking treatment and
counseling for the harm caused by the experiments.
The court also denied the CIA's
motion for judgment that the plaintiffs' claims are time-barred
and that the court lacks jurisdiction because the plaintiffs'
medical care "has been wrongfully withheld," causing them injury
due to the agency's failure to act.
The CIA and the U.S. Army
experimented on human subjects in the 1950s. The experiments
included exposing subjects to "various chemicals, drugs and/or the
implantation of electronic devices" and "developing mind-control
methods."
About 7,800 armed services
volunteers participated, but were not fully informed of the
potential risks of the procedures.
In dismissing that plaintiff's
legal challenge to the overall program, Judge Wilken ruled that
the plaintiff Vietnam Veterans of America lacked standing to seek
"a declaration on the lawfulness of the testing and the associated
consent forms" because such relief would not fix their alleged
injuries and the individual plaintiffs are no longer members of
the armed forces and will not be subjected to experiments by the
CIA in the future.
Individual plaintiffs include
Bruce Price, Franklin D. Rochelle, Larry Meirow, Eric P. Muth,
David C. Dufrane, and Wray C. Forrest.
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