April 16, 2025

Imagine a teenager, locked in a reformatory for a minor crime, hoping for redemption. Now picture them secretly given LSD, their reality warped without their knowledge or consent. This was no dystopian fantasy but a grim truth for juveniles at the Bordentown Reformatory in New Jersey during Project MKUltra, the CIA’s covert mind-control program from 1953 to 1973. A declassified CIA document from MKUltra Subproject 112 reveals that “juvenile delinquents” were dosed with drugs to twist their minds, part of a reckless bid to outmaneuver Soviet spies. These children, society’s castaways, were betrayed by those meant to guide them, their stories nearly erased by a CIA cover-up. Why were they targeted, and why has justice eluded them?

A Cold War Betrayal

In the grip of Cold War fears, the CIA launched MKUltra to master mind control, terrified of Soviet brainwashing. Subproject 112, detailed in a 1977 declassified document, targeted juveniles at Bordentown, dosing them with LSD and drugs like mescaline to study behavior, led by Dr. Carl Pfeiffer and funded through a CIA front (CIA FOIA Subproject 112). Unlike adults who might choose psychedelics—risking seven years in prison under 1970s drug laws—these teens, aged 14 to 18, had no say. The CIA’s aim wasn’t therapy but coercion, testing how drugs could break young minds for interrogation.

The ethics are gut-wrenching. Juveniles, already punished for petty crimes like theft, were exploited in a detention center where consent was a mirage. The document’s dry notes on dosing hide a stark reality: kids, entrusted to the state, became lab rats for a paranoid agency, their vulnerability weaponized against them.

Teens in the Line of Fire

Subproject 112’s document explicitly names “juvenile delinquents” at Bordentown as subjects, confirming minors’ role in MKUltra’s experiments. Pfeiffer’s team gave LSD doses—50 to 200 micrograms—to induce “transient psychotic states,” observing how teens reacted compared to other drugs (National Security Archive). Similar abuses surfaced elsewhere: Canadian lawsuits claim minors at McGill University endured LSD and electroshock, while rumors linger about orphanages like the Laurel Children’s Center (History Channel).

Picture a 16-year-old, sent to Bordentown for truancy, now facing hallucinations, paranoia, or worse, with no clue why their world’s collapsing. LSD’s effects—intense visions, emotional chaos—can rattle adults; for teens, whose brains are wiring, it risked lifelong scars, from memory issues to anxiety disorders. The document’s silence on these kids’ fates—names, numbers, outcomes—is deafening, a void where their voices should echo.

A Cover-Up That Stole Justice

The CIA buried MKUltra’s sins in 1973 when Director Richard Helms ordered files destroyed, as confirmed in related records (CIA FOIA). Subproject 112’s document survived by fluke, misfiled among 20,000 pages uncovered in 1977. Yet, exposure led nowhere. The 1975 Church Committee revealed horrors, like scientist Frank Olson’s LSD-induced death, but Bordentown’s teens stayed footnotes, their suffering ignored (NPR). No CIA official faced jail, no reformatory was sued.

Compare that to the War on Drugs: in the 1970s, someone with LSD could get seven years, yet the CIA, dosing kids without consent, skated free (DEA). This double standard burns—a system that jails for choice ignored state cruelty. A 1988 Canadian settlement gave nine McGill victims, some minors, $750,000 to split, but Bordentown’s kids got nothing, their lives lost to secrecy (History Channel).

https://www.cia.gov/readingroom/docs/MKULTRA%20SUBPROJECT%20112%20%20%28%5B8144440%5D.pdf

Why We Can’t Forget

MKUltra’s juvenile victims, like those at Bordentown, embody a betrayal—kids in society’s care abused by its most powerful. They weren’t chasing a high; they were prey in a cold experiment, their futures gambled. The CIA’s claim MKUltra ended, doubted by insider Victor Marchetti, feels shaky when secrets stay locked (NPR). Today, distrust thrives—X posts rage at the CIA’s past, seeing it as proof of unchecked power (X post).

This isn’t ancient history. It fuels our skepticism of authority, demanding tighter ethics. The 1974 National Research Act set research safeguards, but CIA loopholes linger, especially for kids (Stat News). From Stranger Things to exposés, MKUltra’s shadow asks: who protects the powerless now? (Newsweek).

A Fight for Their Names

Bordentown’s teens, and others like them, deserve more than silence. We must push for declassified truths, honor their pain, and ensure no agency repeats this wrong. The CIA’s cover doesn’t erase these kids; it dares us to demand justice. What’s your take—can we trust a system that forgets its victims?

Sources


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2 responses to “MKUltra’s Hidden Victims: The Children Left Behind”

  1. How do I start a new case- MK ULTRA Remote Electric Harassment on senior USA citizens? This is illegal and fatal. Monitors are used and auditory implants since the 1950’s. Please help.

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    1. Thanks for your comment. I don’t have any verified information or direct experience with the specific claims you mentioned regarding MK ULTRA or remote electronic harassment targeting seniors.
      If you’re looking to explore this further, I’d recommend starting with declassified government documents (like the CIA’s MK ULTRA files), the Church Committee reports, and FOIA.gov where you can submit formal requests for information from federal agencies.
      If you’re asking me to look into this for a potential story, I appreciate the heads up and I’ll keep it on my radar. I try to stick to cases with documented evidence or first-hand accounts I can verify—but I’m always open to exploring underreported issues. Let me know what direction you were hoping to go with

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