Doc 0000144678
CIA
This declassified CIA memorandum from October 15, 1954, lists individuals with complete or partial knowledge of a project, including Allen Dulles and Lt. Gen. C.P. Cabell, with several sections redacted.
This is one record. The archive holds the rest — ask it anything across the MKUltra files and every answer is cited to the page.
Ask the archive about this →,-;]\) ) ) ) 195h 15 October I-:E: :Oi:.idlDUll FCR: Cfifu7 , Sil.S/SO SlJ£-,JECT: Pe1·sons Y:.novJlcdseable of 1. The follOl.zing persons have cor.m1ete kno;.z1ed~e of Allen Dulles .,., Lt.r:en. C.P. Cabell ... ; :! l - -. -... .. \ . . .• . . .•.. ,.. -...... . . ... . .. - .. __.." . 2. 111e follm.rinr; persons have 1mo1-r1edc:c cr.ly about the project as it affects their specific particiFa.ticn or support: A ( c onti.nucrl) ·. -· -2- - P>: ~; .. , - ·. - ~ .. -. ... :-.. -
The page features a stylized image of a bank vault door on the left, symbolizing security and hidden information. The title "THE BLACK VAULT" is displayed in a distressed, white font with a blue glow against a dark, textured background. To the right of the vault image, white text explains that the document is from "The Black Vault," an online database of declassified government documents, specifically mentioning the MKULTRA/Mind Control Collection housed by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). The text also provides a URL for the collection. There is no other visual content on the page such as photographs, annotations, stamps, forms, diagrams, tables, redactions, or evidence of experimental procedures.
This document is a declassified memorandum, likely from the CIA, dated October 15, 1954, concerning "Persons Knowledgeable." It includes handwritten annotations on the top right, appearing to be "A/B, 2, 10/9". There are typewritten names, "Allen Dulles" and "Lt. Gen. C.P. Cabell," under section 1, which lists those with "complete knowledge." Section 2 addresses those with partial knowledge regarding a "project." The document contains several blacked-out or redacted areas, obscuring specific information within the text, suggesting sensitive content. There are no photographs, diagrams, or obvious visual evidence of experimental procedures.
The document appears to be a scanned page from a technical report or laboratory notebook, likely related to a scientific experiment. Visually, it contains several black-and-white graphical representations that could be results from assays or experiments. These graphics are labeled with handwritten annotations, including the letters "A" and "G", and a numerical marker "-2-". There are also smudged or obscured areas of black ink, some of which appear to be test results or data points. The bottom of the page features a dense, textured area of what looks like recorded data or a corrupted scan. Overall, the page is a visual record of experimental data presented in graphical form, accompanied by handwritten labels and some redactions.
Original source: view the released document