Government Accidentally Releases Documents on "Psycho-Electric" Weapons
NEXUS MAGAZINE
The government has all kinds of secrets,
but only a true conspiracy theorist might suspect that "psycho-electric
weapons" are one of them. So it's odd that MuckRock, a news organization
that specializes in filing Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests with
state and federal government bodies, received mysterious documents about
mind control, seemingly by accident.
Journalist Curtis Waltman was writing to the Washington
State Fusion Center (WSFC), a joint operation between Washington State law
enforcement and the federal government to request information about Antifa and white supremacist
groups. He got responses to the questions he asked, but also a file
titled “EM effects on human body.zip.” Inside, where documents like
this:
Documents
held by the Washington State Fusion Center.
And these:
Remote
mind control AND remote brain mapping.
Human
brain waves as described in documents held by the government for some reason.
At least some of the images appear to be part of an article in Nexus magazine describing
a 1992 lawsuit brought by one John St. Clair Akewi against the NSA. Akewi
claimed that the NSA had the "ability to assassinate US citizens covertly
or run covert psychological control operations to cause subjects to be
diagnosed with ill mental health" and was documenting their alleged
methods.
Nexus was, and still is, an Australian
magazine focused on the unexplained, conspiracy theories, alternative medicine
and the like. It covered Akewi's case in 1996 but was unable to get Akewi to
discuss it further: "I tried ringing Mr Akwei to find out what was the
out-come, if any, of his court case. He firmly but kindly told me that he could
not speak about anything to do with the case over the phone and hung up,"
reads an editor's note at the end of the article.
The federal government has absolutely experimented with mind control in
a variety of methods, but the documents here do not appear to be official.
Waltman had no idea why these documents were included in
his request and isn't sure why the government is holding them. The WSFC did not
respond to requests for more information.
Source: MuckRock
David Grossman writes for PopularMechanics.com. He's previously written for The Verge, Rolling Stone, The New Republic and several other publications. He's based out of Brooklyn.
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