šØMK Ultra Hearing AnnouncedšØ
Representative Anna Paulina Luna (R-FL), Chair of the Task Force on the Declassification of Federal Secrets, has announced that the Oversight Committee will hold a hearing on MK Ultra on May 13.
https://www.kptv.com/2026/04/30/congresswoman-anna-paulina-luna-announces-house-hearing-mk-ultra-next-month/
MKULTRA was a covert Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) program launched in 1953 under the direction of Sidney Gottlieb, intended to investigate methods of psychological manipulation, behavioral control, and advanced interrogation techniques during the Cold War.
Over approximately two decades, MKULTRA encompassed more than 140 subprojects exploring the use of psychoactive substances, hypnosis, sensory deprivation, isolation, and memory manipulation. Experiments were frequently conducted on unwitting civilians, prisoners, military personnel, and psychiatric patients without informed consent, violating fundamental ethical and legal standards.
Among the most notorious subprojects was Operation Midnight Climax, in which LSD was administered without subjectsā knowledge at CIA-controlled locations, with behavioral responses covertly observed.
As public scrutiny of intelligence activities increased in the early 1970s, CIA Director Richard Helms ordered the destruction of MKULTRAās operational files in 1973. This action ensured that the full scope of the program would remain concealed, with only fragmentary documentation and limited testimony surviving for later congressional investigation when the Church Committee, named after Senator Frank Church (D-ID) and officially known as the U.S. Senate Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities, began investigating a wide array of abuses in 1975.
The Church Committeeās investigation revealed systemic misconduct, including illegal mind control experimentation and deliberate efforts to mislead oversight bodies. However, public disclosures strategically framed MKULTRA as a misguided or ineffective endeavor that produced little actionable intelligence value, thereby minimizing its significance and shielding the CIA from broader institutional accountability for human rights violations.
The management of information surrounding MKULTRA provides a clear example of disinformation techniques applied to protect sensitive research; first, secrecy and destruction of records insulated the program from external review; second, public minimization recast serious ethical violations as minor misjudgments; and third, the discrediting of certain research areas, such as consciousness manipulation and non-traditional interrogation methods, framed legitimate scientific inquiry as fringe or pseudoscientific. These tactics did not merely conceal specific projects; they shaped the boundaries of acceptable public discourse concerning the capabilities and limits of psychological research.
The suppression strategies employed in MKULTRA are instructive for examining how UAP and NHI-related research has been handled historically. In both contexts, programs of potentially profound significance have been shielded behind classification barriers, and SAPs are often inaccessible even to congressional oversight.
Public narratives surrounding UAP, like those concerning MKULTRA, have been carefully managed through selective disclosure, ridicule of witnesses and researchers, and the stigmatization of unconventional scientific lines of inquiry. Whistleblower reports, including those by David Grusch, suggest that knowledge relating to crash retrievals, reverse engineering efforts, and advanced propulsion systems may similarly be concealed within SAPs.47
MKULTRAās research of altered states of consciousness and perception also parallels aspects of contemporary UAP studies, where cognitive and perceptual anomalies, including memory disturbances, altered awareness, and neurological effects, are frequently reported in close-encounter cases.
Such phenomena have been documented in a Defense Intelligence Agency-sponsored study of biological effects associated with UAP encounters and in independent research by Stanford professor Dr. Garry Nolan, who identified distinctive neurological changes among individuals reporting anomalous experiences.49
The disinformation techniques refined during MKULTRA ā secrecy, strategic destruction of evidence, minimization of misconduct, and control over public narratives ā remain relevant to understanding how information about UAP, NHI, and advanced scientific research continues to be suppressed today.