>>7310544 (pb)
https://vault.fbi.gov/silas-boston/silas-boston-part-01-of-01/view#document/p1
Forgot the original link
>>7310544 (pb)
https://vault.fbi.gov/silas-boston/silas-boston-part-01-of-01/view#document/p1
Forgot the original link
KEK. Indeed.
Frank Olsen
https://vault.fbi.gov/frank-olson/frank-olson-part-01-of-01/view
Ex‐C.I.A. Aide Says Scientist Who Died Knew About Experiments With LSD
https://www.nytimes.com/1975/07/18/archives/excia-aide-says-scientist-who-died-knew-about-experiments-with-lsd.html
==Meet Sidney Gottlieb – CIA dirty trickster
Read more at https://www.wnd.com/1998/11/3426/#llFXpArZJRET8Cc2.99==
https://www.wnd.com/1998/11/3426/
"Glickman’s case isn’t the only one where the CIA and Gottlieb will be called
to account. A grand jury in New York is looking into the strange death of Dr. Frank Olson, a top-level army biochemist from Fort Detrick.
About a week before Thanksgiving 1953, Olson left his home in Frederick, Maryland, for a three-day retreat with colleagues in a remote part of the state. Olson, 43, was a specialist in biological warfare, specifically the delivery of airborne diseases; he had a Q clearance — the highest security level. Twice a year, CIA scientists from the chemical division of the technical services staff and their Army counterparts from the Army Chemical Corps’ Special Operations Division at Fort Detrick met at these top-secret retreats for seminars and to swap information in an informal setting.
Olson never came back from the retreat. Not really. Not the man his family had known. That Frank Olson had been gregarious, fun-loving and devoted to his wife and their three children. “Remarkably stable,” is how his wife, Alice, described him. The man who returned seemed disturbed and withdrawn.
Read more at https://www.wnd.com/1998/11/3426/#llFXpArZJRET8Cc2.99"
"Nine days later, he was dead — having plunged to his death from a window of a room on the 13th floor of the Statler Hotel in Manhattan where he had been taken by Vincent Ruwet, his boss in Army Special Operations, and Robert Lashbrook, Gottlieb’s deputy.
Read more at https://www.wnd.com/1998/11/3426/#llFXpArZJRET8Cc2.99"
Sorry about the formatting errors.
Frank Olsen
https://vault.fbi.gov/frank-olson/frank-olson-part-01-of-01/view
Ex‐C.I.A. Aide Says Scientist Who Died Knew About Experiments With LSD
https://www.nytimes.com/1975/07/18/archives/excia-aide-says-scientist-who-died-knew-about-experiments-with-lsd.html
Meet Sidney Gottlieb – CIA dirty trickster
https://www.wnd.com/1998/11/3426/
"Glickman’s case isn’t the only one where the CIA and Gottlieb will be called
to account. A grand jury in New York is looking into the strange death of Dr. Frank Olson, a top-level army biochemist from Fort Detrick.
About a week before Thanksgiving 1953, Olson left his home in Frederick, Maryland, for a three-day retreat with colleagues in a remote part of the state. Olson, 43, was a specialist in biological warfare, specifically the delivery of airborne diseases; he had a Q clearance — the highest security level. Twice a year, CIA scientists from the chemical division of the technical services staff and their Army counterparts from the Army Chemical Corps’ Special Operations Division at Fort Detrick met at these top-secret retreats for seminars and to swap information in an informal setting.
Olson never came back from the retreat. Not really. Not the man his family had known. That Frank Olson had been gregarious, fun-loving and devoted to his wife and their three children. “Remarkably stable,” is how his wife, Alice, described him. The man who returned seemed disturbed and withdrawn.
"Nine days later, he was dead — having plunged to his death from a window of a room on the 13th floor of the Statler Hotel in Manhattan where he had been taken by Vincent Ruwet, his boss in Army Special Operations, and Robert Lashbrook, Gottlieb’s deputy.