Dr. Colin Ross, a psychiatrist specializing in dissociative identity disorder, conducted one of the most comprehensive investigations into the CIA’s MKUltra program. In 1992, Ross physically traveled to a classified reading room in northern Virginia, where he passed through keyed submarine doors and secure corridors staffed by uniformed military personnel. He spent a full day reviewing all 149 MKUltra subprojects and ordered all 15,000 pages of documentation.
Ross’s meticulous research methodology set a new standard for documentation of the program. Working in the pre-internet era, he cross-referenced every named researcher against published medical journals, pulling papers from library shelves one volume at a time. This exhaustive process resulted in his book CIA Doctors, which stands as one of the most thoroughly sourced works on mind control ever written.
Beyond his MKUltra research, Ross has also presented new research on human electromagnetic extramission with potential implications for medicine, agriculture, and surveillance applications. His work bridges declassified historical documentation with contemporary scientific inquiry into electromagnetic phenomena.
Given that Ross had direct access to all 149 MKUltra subprojects in a classified facility, what specific findings from those 15,000 pages do you believe remain most relevant to understanding intelligence operations today?
Source: Jesse Michels
