-Caveat Lector-

Dear list,

Forwarded with permission.

Sincerely,  Neil Brick

PS These may be heavy for survivors of ra/mc to read.


LSD "guinea pig" wins key court victories

By JIM BRONSKILL and MIKE BLANCHFIELD
Southam Newspapers
OTTAWA - The federal government and a former prison psychologist have
confessed to battery and negligence for giving LSD to a teenaged inmate in
the 1960s.
The admission by the government and psychologist Mark Eveson in Ontario's
Superior Court of Justice is a key victory for former prisoner Dorothy
Proctor in her three-year battle for compensation.
A total of 23 female inmates were administered LSD as part of a 1961 study
at the now-defunct federal Prison for Women in Kingston, Ont.
At 18 and serving a three-year robbery sentence, Proctor received at least
one dose of the powerful hallucinogen in a 1.5-metre-by-2.5-metre windowless
basement segregation cell, lit by a single bulb with only a mattress and a
hole in which to pass bodily waste.
In 1998, Proctor sued the government and former Correctional Service of
Canada (CSC) officials for giving her the drug, saying it has caused brain
damage and terrifying hallucinations.
The lawsuit touched off a protracted court fight over the nature of the LSD
tests, the ethics of using prisoners in the drug program and whether
officials breached a duty of care to the prisoners in their charge.
The case focuses on events during the early history of the fabled
psychedelic drug, a pre-hippie era when LSD was known primarily to academic
researchers and scientists, including some who investigated the drug for the
U.S. Central Intelligence Agency as part of its quest to explore the human
mind.
Among the correspondence filed with the court by Proctor's lawyers is a 1953
letter to the federal prison service from Dr. Ewen Cameron of Montreal, who
would later undertake mind-control research funded by the CIA.
The Canadian government argues LSD was administered to female prisoners with
the aim of "promoting the health of individuals" - not for experimental
reasons.
However, the government concedes there is no record of Proctor having
consented to receiving the hallucinogen among the thousands of pages of
prison documents that have surfaced in the case during the past three years.
The government and Eveson admitted April 30 to assault and negligence,
declarations that were accepted by the court in early May.
Proctor is suing for $5 million, though the court has not yet addressed the
issue of damages.
A primary point of contention in Proctor's suit remains unsettled because
the government does not allow that officials were responsible for a
fundamental lapse in care toward her.
In an amended statement of claim filed in May, Proctor has asked Master
Robert Beaudoin, the court official presiding over the case, to rule in her
favour Aug. 28 on the final point, without a trial, on the weight of the
evidence presented to date.
She argues the defendants owed her a duty, "as a vulnerable minor and as an
inmate," to protect her from harm and safeguard her well-being.
In particular, she contends that Eveson, who ran the LSD program, and Dr.
George Scott, the prison psychiatrist who oversaw the tests, were "placed in
a position of trust" with her, to the point where she "saw them as father
figures."
Proctor claims the men, in counselling her to take the drug, were primarily
motivated by their desire to use her for experimental purposes, as opposed
to promotion of health and wellness.
In early 1998, a Correctional Service board of inquiry recommended that
Proctor receive compensation and a formal apology.
However, the government referred the matter to the McGill University Centre
for Medicine, Ethics and Law. Proctor, who had run out of patience, went to
court.
A subsequent investigation by the Ottawa Citizen and Southam News showed
that hundreds of federal inmates were used as test subjects in scientific
experiments during the 1960s and '70s. Prisoners took part in trials of
untested pharmaceuticals such as penicillin and anti-stress pills, spent
days in dark cells during sensory-deprivation research and received painful
shocks in studies of cigarette smokers.
In a report released in May of last year, the McGill centre recommended the
government stop stalling and agree to compensate prisoners who were
subjected to "unethical" experiments behind bars.
The authors suggested the prison service establish an independent committee
to review the claims of federal inmates used as scientific guinea pigs in
research.
However, the prison service seems unprepared to deal with the
recommendations while Proctor's suit is before the courts, indicates a
briefing note obtained under the Access to Information Act. "Because of
current litigation (Proctor), CSC cannot make specific comments with respect
to the observations that pertain to compensation of inmates in the report."

________
(Southam News and Ottawa Citizen)


Lawsuit paints LSD experiment as journey to the mind's frontier

By JIM BRONSKILL and MIKE BLANCHFIELD
Southam Newspapers
OTTAWA - To Dr. Ewen Cameron, Canada's prisons seemed like a logical place
to conduct experiments on what strange new drugs could do to the human mind.
In 1953, the McGill University psychiatrist wrote to the second in command
of Canada's prison service to see if he had any insights into "the
pharmacological, psychological and surgical suppression or obliteration of
certain functions of behaviour as a research tool." Cameron was putting
together a psychiatric conference and he figured that Dr. Louis Gendreau,
deputy commissioner of the penitentiary service and head of medical
services, might have some insights.
It's not known whether Gendreau took Cameron up on his offer. What is known
is that Cameron went on to become the closest thing Canada has produced to a
real-life mad scientist.
In the late 1950s and early '60s, Cameron tried to reprogram the behaviour
of his patients at McGill University's Allan Memorial Institute using a
combination of drugs, sensory deprivation, intensive electroshock and
repetition of taped messages.
Cameron's research was financed from 1957 through 1960 by a New York-based
society that turned out to be a covert front for the U.S. Central
Intelligence Agency. It was revealed in the late 1970s that the McGill
experiments were part of the CIA's MKULTRA program to explore the boundaries
of the human mind.
Nine former patients of the late psychiatrist sued the CIA. The legal battle
resulted in a 1988 settlement of $750,000 US, shared by the plaintiffs. The
Canadian government, which funded Cameron's later work, made payments of
$100,000 to dozens of former patients on compassionate grounds.
Now, Cameron's chilling mind-control legacy is coming back to haunt the
Canadian government - and taxpayers - once again, as another large
settlement looms in a case with overtones of government-sanctioned mind
control.
Former prison inmate Dorothy Proctor won a partial, but stunning, victory in
her three-year-old legal fight against the Canadian government last month.
Federal lawyers admitted Proctor had been the victim of battery and that the
prison service was negligent for giving her LSD in the early 1960s. Proctor
was then a rebellious 18-year-old inmate, and the highly experimental
hallucinogenic drug was seen as a means to break down her defences and help
mend her anti-social ways.
Gendreau consented to using Canada's prison population as subjects in a wide
array of experiments - everything from testing unlicensed drugs to sensory
deprivation studies.
The Aug. 2, 1953, letter from Cameron to Gendreau is among dozens of
exhibits Proctor's lawyers have filed in support of their lawsuit. It is one
of several pieces of evidence that attempts to forge links between Allied
counterintelligence efforts during the Second World War, covert CIA
mind-control experiments and the dank, cave-like prison cell in the basement
of the Kingston, Ont., prison where the teenage Proctor swallowed a little
blue pill and watched the bars of her cell transform into slithering,
menacing snakes.
Federal lawyers refuse to concede the lawsuit in its entirety. While the
government and former prison psychologist Mark Eveson have confessed to
negligence for the battery Proctor suffered, they maintain the action did
not constitute a breach of trust - that it was not a violation of the
time-honoured tradition that jailers should not abuse their prisoners under
any circumstances.
Far from being reckless experimentation, LSD was given to inmates with the
aim of "promoting the health of individuals," insists the government.
A federally commissioned review of the case completed last year by the
McGill University Centre for Medicine, Ethics and the Law concluded it was
"unethical" for inmates to be subjected to such experiments and that the
government should stop stalling and settle the case.
Proctor is suing for $5 million, though the court has yet to address the
question of damages.
On Aug. 28, Proctor's lawyers will ask Ontario's Superior Court of Justice
for summary judgment on the breach of trust issue - essentially to declare
them the winner of the lawsuit without a trial.
Years before LSD entered the hippie culture of flower power and free love,
Proctor was the subject of a federal prison service experiment into what LSD
could do to the human mind.
The 1961 experiment, which involved 23 female inmates at Kingston's Prison
for Women, wasn't widely publicized until 37 years later when the Ottawa
Citizen obtained a board of inquiry report by the Correctional Service of
Canada. The March 1998 report characterized the LSD tests as "a risky
undertaking." Six months later, an Ottawa Citizen-Southam News investigation
uncovered widespread evidence that Canadian prisoners had donated their
bodies to science in a host of experiments ranging from sensory deprivation
to the testing of unlicensed drugs.
Proctor's lawyers are now alleging a much broader backdrop for the LSD
experiment.
An affidavit sworn by a member of Proctor's team turns back the clock to
1939, when Gendreau was believed to be a member of the Associate Committee
on Naval Medical Research, an organization that later evolved into the
Defence Research Board.
"Dr. Gendreau's interest in human experimentation appears as early as the
Second World War," the affidavit alleges. "It would appear that the Allies,
during and following (the war), shared medical intelligence information
through the Canadian Medical Intelligence Division, Ottawa."
During the 1950s, the DRB exchanged intelligence with its British and
American counterparts, including the CIA. "The DRB, along with the CIA, were
concerned about the state of communist Russia's knowledge in such areas as
bacterial warfare (BW), chemical warfare (CW), virology, hallucinating
drugs," says the affidavit.
The document also alleges that Gendreau, who has since died, developed his
interest in human experimentation before moving on to become deputy head of
the Canadian prison service in the 1950s.
Under Gendreau's watch, Canada's prisons became laboratories for numerous
experiments on the inmate population. Inquiries into genetic makeup involved
studying the chromosomes of prisoners. Drugs including penicillin products,
sedatives and anti-bacterial agents were tested on inmates. Some prisoners
spent days in dark cells to determine the effects of isolation.
The lawsuit alleges that Eveson, the prison psychologist who gave Proctor
LSD, became caught up in this milieu.
In August 1961, Proctor was sent to solitary confinement, known as the
"hole," after her second prison escape in a year. Embarrassed by Proctor's
antics, the prison warden was furious, warning her to co-operate "100 per
cent."
Eveson, then 32, had forged a strong patient-doctor bond with Proctor,
described in one court document as "a benevolent father-cum-mother image."
Eveson was keen to use LSD on Proctor. He hoped the new, experimental drug
might erode Proctor's defences and help speed a psychological breakthrough.
Though he has denied it under oath, documents suggest Eveson was intrigued
by the "psychic driving" experiments of Cameron in Montreal.
The unorthodox methods involved the continuous playing of taped messages for
patients. Some listened through speakers under their pillows. Others
wandered about the Allan Memorial wearing football helmets outfitted with
earphones.
"Techniques derived from Dr. Cameron's concept of psychic driving" could be
incorporated into the treatment of drug-addicted inmates, Eveson wrote to
the head of the prison service in 1961.
Though he was not allowed to prescribe medication, Eveson administered LSD
to Proctor while in solitary confinement. The result was, quite simply, a
bad acid trip, filled with horrifying hallucinations.
Bureaucrats in Ottawa, including Gendreau, were informed of the LSD
experiment in writing.
During depositions for the lawsuit, Eveson admitted he never received
written consent from Proctor or any of the other women involved in the LSD
trials. He also admitted to not having "any game plan about who should do
what, and what should be done to investigate LSD before using it."
George Scott, a retired prison psychiatrist and co-defendant in the suit,
testified during depositions that he knew some fellow Kingston psychiatrists
who went to Montreal to try LSD with Cameron in the late 1950s.
After taking a hit of LSD, one psychiatrist attempted to jump out of a
window at the Allan Institute. Scott would later say "he felt that using LSD
was like trying to land a four-engine plane in someone's backyard."
The LSD experiments were quietly abandoned sometime in late 1962, as
Parliament considered banning a series of harmful drugs, including
thalidomide, which caused numerous deformities in newborns after it was
prescribed to pregnant women.
In 1968, the government again became curious about LSD because of reports of
an unusual shoplifting case. Ruth Bauman, a former Kingston inmate, was
charged in 1967 with stealing a sweater. She pleaded not guilty, saying she
was in a state of "non-insane automatism" at the time - a result of having
been given LSD in prison in 1961.
As it turned out, Bauman was the first of the 23 women to receive LSD as
part of the Kingston experiment. Proctor had been among the first five.
Bauman was acquitted after a psychiatrist testified that LSD exposure could
have long-term negative effects.
The case caught the eye of Ottawa officials.
On Jan. 25, 1968, the Commissioner of Penitentiaries asked what followup had
been done on the women involved in the LSD study.
Gendreau responded that "the Penitentiary Service does not have the staff
available" to look into the matter.
Indeed, there was no followup for almost 30 years, when the Correctional
Service board of inquiry began delving into the LSD experiment as a result
of a complaint by Proctor about continuing flashbacks from receiving the
drug in Kingston.
Two investigators began an exhaustive search of prison archives, turning up
documents that supported Proctor's very unusual claim.
Months later, she filed suit against the Canadian government, Eveson and
Scott alleging she was the victim of "callous and reckless" treatment.
Proctor, now in her 50s, firmly disputes the notion the prison service had
her best interests at heart.
Shortly after filing the lawsuit, she bluntly summed up her exposure to LSD
decades earlier.
"I was reduced to a lab rat," she said, "a monkey in a cage."

_____
(Southam News and Ottawa Citizen)

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