0.02
(distorted voice, like a radio newscast)
Frederick/Maryland. More than 40 years after his death, the body of former
CIA scientist Dr. Frank Olson has been exhumed. Olsons son Eric
is convinced his father was murdered by agents of the American government
because he wanted to leave the CIA. Dr. Frank Olson was an expert for
anthrax and other biological weapons and had top security clearance. Forensic
pathologists at George Washington University performed an autopsy and
concluded that Olson probably was the victim of a violent crime.
00.50 Voice of Eric
Olson
I was strongly identifying with him, I loved him. And I am sure
that's why in the end I came to take on this task trying to figure out
what had become of him.
Title: Code Name: Aartichoke.
1.36
It has been eight years since the exhumation. Eric Olson is still searching
for the reasons behind his fathers death in November of 1953. Eric
was nine years old at the time. Its a quest he inherited as the
oldest of three children. To solve the mystery of their fathers
death.
2.01 Voice of Eric
Olson
My real memories of my father are not very many or very clear, because
the trauma of his death really darkened a lot of these memories. His death
was so dark and so unmentionable. After he died, it was a subject one
couldn't really go near.
2.25
Eric Olson has returned to live in the house his father built for the
family in Frederick in 1950. Back then, Olson senior was one of the biochemists
responsible for the biological weapons center the U.S. army ran nearby.
The anthrax letters that killed five and caused illness to several others
have haunted Eric ever since. Could there be a connection between his
fathers death five decades ago and the acts of terror taking place
today? (3.00)
3.15
The deadly disease that frightened America after the terrorist attacks
on September 11th seems to have come from the same US Army Laboratory
in Frederick where Olson had worked: Fort Detrick.
3.31
The biological weapons lab was founded in 1943. At the time, the Americans
feared Hitler might attack the allied troops with a virus or bacteria.
They quickly produced gas masks and anthrax weapons, in order to be able
to strike back in kind.
3.58
Dr. Frank Olson, an army captain and one of the first scientists at Fort
Detrick, worked together with Norman Cournoyer. The two became good friends.
Their first sons were born within a few days of each other in 1944.
4.18 Voice of Norman
Cournoyer/Friend of Frank Olson:
We worked about five months in this thing called aerosols to see
if we could test gas masks and impregnated clothing to see how good they
were. And then one day he was transferred to working on hot agents. He
said: 'Norm, how about working for me in the hot stuff?' That's how we
always referred to it. N was Anthrax, X was botulism and so forth.
(4.53)
4.55
Christmas 1947. The war is finally over. Norman and his family celebrate
together with Alice and Frank Olson and their children.
5.07 Voice of Norman
Cournoyer/Friend of Frank Olson:
Were we close? Yes! Very, very close, every day of the week for
two and a half years. You are going to expect us to be close.
5.17
Among the things his father left behind, Eric Olson found some home movies
and slides. At first he didnt pay them much attention. But today,
he sees that material from a different point of view. Might it contain
any indication of the secret anthrax research his father was doing after
the war?
5.35
Frank Olson made a hobby of home movies. These scenes reveal nothing of
his secret task involving deadly weapons. They show the perfect world
of a young father, captured with the latest 8-mm camera to hit the market.
5.49
Frank Olson also used photography. He brought home a lot of slides from
his many travels. His photographs also primarily show private moments.
6.02
Frank with his wife Alice and son Eric in 1945. Both in 1947 with son
Eric and daughter Lisa. Christmas 1949 in a tuxedo. Alice had given birth
to their third child, Nils, in the meantime.
6.19 Voice of Eric
Olson:
The whole subject of the relationship between a wife and a husband
who is doing top secret, classified work is a subject one could discuss
at some length. The wife develops uncanny kind of intuitions, about all
the things that are not being said and she knows the limits of what she
can ask. And for quite a long time, possibly ever since my father began
working at Detrick, the whole business about the monkey dying was a very
delicate matter for him.
When he would come
home for lunch and have a certain kind of expression, she would immediately
know that this meant that this morning all the monkeys had died, which
meant that the experiment had been a success.
7.06
Arthur Vidich is Frank Olsons brother-in-law. Their families regularly
spent their summer vacation together. Vidich remembers Frank Olson as
an American patriot, who was enthusiastic about working for the Armys
biological weapons program.
7.22 Voice of Arthur
Vidich/Brother-in-law of Frank Olson
He was a person who believed in what he was doing, who felt the
work that he was doing at the Center in Frederick was important for the
United States. He considered himself a terribly loyal and patriotic person.
That kind of an attitude of loyalty was one way of expressing your Americanism.
7.58
Dr. Frank Olson had worked for the US Armys biological weapons laboratory
for exactly ten years when he died in New York in the wee hours of November
28, 1953. He spent the night at the Hotel Pennsylvania, along with a CIA
agent who was there to guard him. That night, Frank Olson plunged to his
death from his room on the hotels thirteenth floor. Through a closed
window, it was said.
8.31
Army Bacteriologist Dies In Plunge From New York Hotel.
Nils, the youngest of Olsons three children, scribbled on the clipping
with a crayon.
8.43 Voice of Eric
Olson:
I was simply told that Your father has had an accident,
and that he has died. The only detail that I was then given
was that he had fallen or jumped out of a window. I remember quite clearly
just being quite stupefied by this.
As a nine-year-old
I was old enough to have some idea of cause and effect. And I had no idea
what does it mean to fall out of a window. How you fall out of a window
in the middle of the night. What is that?
9.20
Eric didnt understand.
And for his mother,
the subject of his fathers death became a taboo.
9.33
The search for the circumstances surrounding the mysterious death of Dr.
Frank Olson begins in 1945, with the liberation of the concentration camp
at Dachau, Germany. American troops discovered the corpses of hundreds
of prisoners who had been murdered or starved to death. Many of the survivors
told US doctors about cruel experiments the camps doctors carried
out using disease germs and various drugs.
9.59
A few weeks later, at Kransberg Castle north of Frankfurt, the scientific
elite of Nazi Germany is arrested and questioned by American officers.
The name of the project is Operation Dustbin. The American
military hopes to evaluate and exploit the findings German researchers
made during the war. Among the prisoners at Kransberg Castle is rocket
scientist Professor Hermann Oberth, who collects autographs from his colleagues.
10.33
Also at Kransberg Castle: Some of the leading scientific experts in Nazi
Germany had been involved in biological warfare, testing the effects of
deadly germs on human beings in Dachau and other concentration camps.
One of them was Professor Kurt Blome. Blome was the Third Reichs
Deputy Surgeon General and the man behind German research into biological
weapons.
10.55
Blome will be among those charged in the case against concentration camp
doctors brought before the military tribunal in Nuremberg. He will face
the death penalty.
11.07
In spite of the fact that there is enough evidence against him, Kurt Blome
will be acquitted in Nuremberg. The Americans have other plans for him.
11.21 Voice of Professor
Kurt Blome: Untertitel // Subtitles
1) I stated publicly and openly that I was a conscientious National Socialist
2) and a follower
of Adolf Hitler.
11.29 Voice of Norman
Cournoyer
We were interested in anyone who did work in biological warfare.
Did they want to use that? The Nazis? Yes, absolutely! They wanted to
use anything that killed people. Anything!
11.48
The Americans save Kurt Blome, seen here on the left, from death by hanging.
In turn, he provides them with information about the Nazi biological weapons
program. One of the specialists interrogating Blome is Donald Falconer,
a friend and colleague of Frank Olson. Falconer is responsible for developing
anthrax bombs.
12.12
Today, more than 50 years later, Donald Falconer lives in a convalescent
home not far from Frederick.
12.22
Eric Olson has visited Falconer several times, hoping his fathers
old friend might one day confide a crucial secret in him. But Falconer
refuses to say anything, feeling bound by his military oath, and doesnt
want to be interviewed.
12.45
In one of his father films, immediately following images of his
grandfather, Eric discovers a sequence that seems to show secret crop-dusting
flights that took place in 1947. Using the findings of Blome and other
Nazi scientists, the Americans experimented with artificial diseases capable
of destroying crops.
13.07
After this short clip, more family pictures of the children.
13.15
Meanwhile, in Fort Detrick, a massive arms program is taking place with
bacteriological weapons, primarily anthrax spores, which have proven to
be highly resistant and therefore suitable for biological warfare.
13.29
Anthrax was cultivated in this building, then placed in bombs. The Americans
are concerned about the Soviets biological arsenal. If the cold
war should ever turn hot, deadly bacteria might be used as weapons. The
army demands ample weapons at the ready.
13.50
Frank Olson often uses the Air Force to test germ warfare in the field,
for example on the Caribbean island of Antigua. These tests are carried
out to monitor the spread of diseases under realistic conditions. Most
of the tests Olsons team carries out in the Caribbean and on the
Alaskan tundra deal with relatively harmless bacteria, but some tests
are conducted using actual pathogens called hot stuff.
14.20 Voice of Norman
Cournoyer:
We did
not use anthrax, we used bacillus globigii which is very similar a spore
as Anthrax is. So to that extent we did do something that was not kosher.
We picked it up all over. It was picked up months after it.
14.50
Its an easy-going life they lead, but they have a secret mission.
In California, Olson and his team drive up the Pacific coast in a yellow
convertible to prepare an experiment to take place over San Francisco
Bay. Spores will be released in order to test the citys vulnerability
to an act of Russian sabotage. Frank Olson loves life and has little interest
in following rules. His unconventional manner seems inconsistent with
his job working for the army.
15.21
In October of 1949, Olson is suspected of disclosing government secrets.
He is interrogated by military intelligence.
15.30
(visual texts) Olson was mildly impatient with the questioning conducted
during the course of this interview. This attitude is regarded as typical
by persons at Detrick who are acquainted with him."
Olson is violently
opposed to control of scientific research, either
military or otherwise, and opposes supervision of his work. He does not
follow orders, and has had numerous altercations with MP's (...)
15.52 Voice of Norman
Cournoyer/Friend of Frank Olson:
He was very, very open and not scared to say what he thought. For
that matter to the contrary. He did not give a damn. Frank Olson pulled
no punches at any time. And I dont know. Thats what they were
scared of, I am sure. He did speak up any time he wanted to. Was he gonna
be caught on this? Could be. Could be.
16.22
As the scientist responsible for biological warfare experiments, Frank
Olson was among the most important holders of confidential information
during the Cold War.
November 1953. Four
years after he was suspected for disclosing secrets an accusation
that was never proved: During a trip to New York, Olson is accompanied
by a CIA agent who watches him constantly, never leaving his side. Olson
and the CIA agent take a room in the famous Hotel Pennsylvania. So, what
are they doing in New York?
17.00
Armand Pastore is the manager of the hotel. He is on duty that night,
when Frank Olson falls from the 13th floor, landing on the sidewalk in
front of the hotel.
17.12 Voice of Armand
Pastore/Former hotel manager:
He was laying there looking at me, trying to speak to me, very earnest
look in his eyes, wide open .... but there was blood everywhere: blood
from his nose, blood from his eyes, blood from his ears, there was a bone
protruding from his left arm, sticking straight out. And I kept trying
to speak to him, but we were not really communicating, because I could
not understand anything he was saying, and then finally he died.
17.48
Pastore notifies the police and accompanies them to the 13th floor. In
the meantime, he has determined that Olson must have fallen to his death
from 1018A, and that there was probably another person in the room at
the time.
18.03 Voice of Armand
Pastore/Former hotel manager:
'Wait a minute', I said, it is possible that there is somebody
in there'. Then they became alert and they pulled their guns out and said:
You open the door and we'll go in.' I opened the door with my key
and they rushed in. Here this guy was sitting in the commode with the
hands on his knees, his hands up to his head. The cops said what
happened' he said: I don't know, I just heard a crash of glass and
I then I see, that Frank Olson is out of the window. And he is down on
the street.'
18.50
The CIA shadow testifies that he was fast asleep and didnt hear
Olson get out of bed. He can offer no explanation for the suicide. He
has nothing else to say. He makes no statement regarding the reason the
two were visiting New York. The case is closed quickly. No one is interested
in the telephone call that was made from Olsons room immediately
following his death.
19.15 Voice of Armand Pastore/Former hotel manager:
The operator said, yes there was one call out of that room'.
So I said What was the conversation?' She said the man in the room
called this number out in Long Island and said Well, he's gone'
and the man on the other end said Well, that's too bad' and they
both hung up.
19.39
Was that the CIA agent reporting that he had solved the Frank Olson
problem in the Hotel Pennsylvania?
19.50
Eric Olson in New York. For years now, he has been searching for witnesses
who might know something about his fathers death, which he considers
to be a murder perpetrated by the CIA. He wants to know the motive. Was
the government afraid Frank Olson might reveal state secrets? The recent
terror attacks involving anthrax were a shock to Eric.
20.28
Eric finds himself wondering about a lot of things. Was the anthrax terrorist
one of our own? Is that the reason he hasnt been caught? Because
he knows something no one else should find out about? A secret his father
knew, too?
20.44
In a suburb of New York, Eric Olson meets long-time CIA veteran Ike Feldman.
In the fifties, he worked in drug enforcement. At least, that was the
official version. Although Feldman never met Erics father personally,
he discovered some information about the circumstances of his death.
21.07 Voice of Ira
(Ike) Feldman/Former CIA agent:
The source that I have was the New York City Police Department,
the Bureau of Narcotics Agents and the CIA Agents themselves. They all
say the same thing: that he was pushed out of the window and that he did
not jump.
People who wanted
him out of the way said he talked too much and he was telling people about
the things he had done which is American secret. If you work on a top
government secret, a city secret, a state secret, and it spills out to
people who should not know, there is only one way to do it: kill him.
21.46
In April of 1950, Dr. Frank Olson received a diplomatic passport, unusual
for an army scientist. Did he have a new job? In the following years,
he traveled often to Europe, including making several trips to Germany.
22.00 Voice of Norman Cournoyer/Friend of Frank Olson:
He was a member of the CIA. I only found this out after he told
me about it. To me he was a Captain. That's all I knew about it at first.
It turned out that he was a CIA agent. And stayed on, right on through
to 1953.
22.28
Pictures taken in Frankfurt and Heidelberg will later turn up among Olsons
slides. These cities were home to the US Armys most important facilities
in Germany. There is also a picture of the top secret CIA headquarters
in Germany, located in the building of IG Farben in the heart of Frankfurt.
22.56
What is Olsons new assignment? He is now working in an area that
has nothing to do with biological weapons. Here, in the German offices
of the CIA, the biochemist is conducting important conversations with
US intelligence officers.
23.17
Increasingly, he can be found in the company of other CIA agents, including
a certain John McNulty. It has to do with a top secret project to use
chemicals, drugs and torture on human beings in order to break their will
and make them submissive. Brainwashing.
23.35
The code name for this operation: Artichoke.
23.43
(Visual text!)
The
(...) team would enjoy the opportunity of applying
Artichoke techniques to individuals of dubious loyalty, suspected
agents or plants and subjects having known reasons for deception.
23.56
In Oberursel, in the Taunus hills north of Frankfurt, hidden in old half-timbered
houses, the US Army led a quiet interrogation center: Camp King.
It was primarily Soviet agents and defectors from East Germany who were
kept here, people the CIA considered to be communist spies. Special teams,
the so-called rough boys, interrogated the prisoners.
24.23
Former SS member Franz Gajdosch was hired just after the war by the Americans
to tend the bar in the officers mess at Camp King. Sometime in the
year of 1952, in the top secret interrogation center, Gajdosch runs across
another German: Professor Kurt Blome.
24.42 Voice of Franz Gajdosch-dt./ Former barkeeper at Camp King:
For a long time, Blome was a doctor at Camp King, he also ran the
clinic. He was a protégé of the Americans, and had been
a concentration camp doctor. He conducted experiments.
25.03
The American officers who lived the good life at Camp King arent
disturbed about Blomes past. Was the former concentration camp doctor
expected to lend his experience for their own planned experiments on human
beings? A CIA consultant began planning the Artichoke experiments as early
as September of 1951.
25.24
(Visual text!)
The conversations
at Oberursel pointed up (...) signs
and symptoms of drugs that might be used (...) We should look into the
use of amnesia-producing drugs.
25.34 Voice of Franz
Gajdosch-dt./ Former barkeeper at "Camp King":
Of course their methods were not humane, they exerted a lot of pressure.
There are ways of breaking people. At Camp King, they were notorious,
the rough boys anything somebody didnt want to
reveal, they would try to get it out of them.
26.01
There are many indications that the cruel experiments involving human
beings Operation Artichoke took place in this
isolated CIA safe house near Camp King, at the edge of a town called Kronberg.
26.17
The former Schuster Villa, now called Haus Waldhof",
was built shortly after the turn of the century as the summer residence
of a Jewish banking family from Frankfurt. The Nazis confiscated it in
1934, and the Americans took it over after the war.
26.33 Voice of Franz
Gajdosch-dt./Former bartender at Camp King:
The neighbors, the community didnt know who it was, what this
place was, because the military personnel going in and out of the house
werent in uniform, they wore civilian clothing. The vehicles had
no license tags, so the community wasnt even aware it was an American
facility.
26.58
At House Waldhof, in June 1952, the CIA begins conducting
brain-washing experiments, using various drugs, hypnosis, and probably
torture. One of the top secret protocols documents a Russian agent being
pumped full of medication.
27.19
The goal of the experiments is to manipulate the human mind in order to
extract secrets from its subjects. And then to erase their memory, so
they cant remember what happened to them.
27.38
Dr. Frank Olson arrived in Frankfurt on June 12, 1952, from Hendon Military
Airport near London. He left the Rhine-Main region three days later, on
June 15.
27.53
On June 13, experiments are conducted with Patient No. 2,
a suspected Soviet double-agent.
28.03 Voice of Norm
Cournoyer
He was troubled after he came back from Germany one time. He came
back and told me and he said Norm, I tell you right now you and I never
talked about this, but we were both grown-ups and this was rough. He said
Norm, you would be stunned by the techniques that they used.
They made people
talk! They
brainwashed people! They used all kinds of drugs, they used all kinds
of torture.
28.32
The CIAs unscrupulous experiments on human beings continued the
Nazi drug experiments they learned of during the liberation of the Dachau
concentration camp.
28.43 Voice of Norman
Cournoyer
They were using Nazis, they were using prisoners, they were using
Russians, and they didn't care whether they got out of that or not.
29.17
Meanwhile, the US army was conducting extensive experiments with a new
miracle drug: LSD. Here, for example, a soldier was expected to assemble
a rifle while under the influence of the hallucinogen.
29.35
The armys LSD experiments took place on the campus of the Chemical
Corps in Edgewood Arsenal. The scientists who worked in these laboratories
in the early fifties, and who collaborated closely with Frank Olson, were
looking for new hallucinogenic substances. They hoped to find a way to
use the drugs on the battle ground.
30.04
Dr. Fritz Hoffmann, a chemist from former Nazi Germany, had been hired
a few years earlier to spur the search for new behavior-modifying substances.
Immediately after the war he courted the Americans, seeking to ensure
a job in the United States.
30:21 Voice of Bennie
E. Hackley/Chemical Corps US Army:
There was an interest in the U.S. during that time in looking at
mood-altering drugs from LSD to BZ and other possible mood-altering drugs.
Fritz was interested in that area as well.
30.50
After its experiments on soldiers, the army saw potential in using LSD
and other drugs to sedate and dope enemy troops. In short
order, it would be possible to conquer territory without a fight.
31.15
A short time later, the CIA begins conducting its own LSD experiments
in the bohemian New York neighborhood of Greenwich Village, on Bedford
Street. But unlike the army experiments, the subjects of these tests,
which took place in an apartment disguised as a brothel, would not be
informed. The CIA hired prostitutes to pour LSD into their customers
drinks. And then lure them into revealing secrets.
31.41 Voice of Ira
(Ike) Feldman/Former CIA agent
My purpose was to see that we got guys up there we wanted to talk
and through other people we got prostitutes to talk to these guys and
each prostitutes would put something - which I found out later was LSD
- into their drink and made them talk. Either they wanted to talk about
narcotics, security or crime. This was all part of the CIA experiments.
They called it dirty tricks'.
32.08
LSD, it was soon learned, was a much more effective way to loosen the
tongue than alcohol was.
32.24
Deep Creek Lake in western Maryland, a three-hour drive from Washington.
In an isolated vacation house at the edge of the lake, the CIAs
dirty tricks department converged here for a meeting with
ten of its scientists in November 1953.
32.43
The meeting is about Artichoke. According to the invitation, it was a
conference for sports journalists. But in reality, the participants, one
of them Frank Olson, were to be placed under the influence of LSD.
32.58
One of the drinks has been spiked. Later, it will be said the CIA was
conducting a kind of self test but without the knowledge of the
participants.
33.07 Voice of Ira
(Ike) Feldman/Former CIA agent:
I do not think again from what I heard, that he was drugged because
he was a security agent. He was drugged because he talked too much.
33.19
When Frank Olson was later briefed about the LSD experiment, he knew immediately
what it meant: They had interrogated him with Artichoke techniques.
33.30 Voice of Eric
Olson:
Friday evening he came home and spent the weekend in this house
with my mother, my brother and sister and me and during much of the weekend
they sat on the sofa which was just over here. It was a foggy November
weekend, as she described it, and they sat here, holding hands and staring
out of this big window into the fog, and he described having made something
he referred to as a terrible mistake.
34.01
The CIA brings Olson, accompanied by an agent, to New York. In the hotel
they are joined by a doctor working for the secret service, who administers
medication. Frank Olson has become a security risk. But it seems the CIA
has already found a solution.
34.24
Forty years later, at the Institute for Forensic Sciences at George Washington
University. The body of Dr. Frank Olson has been exhumed and is undergoing
an autopsy. Eric wants clarity, once and for all. And as it turns out,
the results of the first autopsy in 1953 in New York were manipulated.
34.52 Voice of Prof.
James Starrs/George Washington University:
The report from New York City, from the Medical Examiner's office
which I had before me was totally inaccurate in some very important respects.
It talks about lacerations, cuts of the flesh that in all probability
might have been caused by glass in the course of his fall.
There were no lacerations.
They were not there, totally non-existent.
We also noticed immediately
that he had a hemorrhage, which we call a hematoma, which is under the
skull by the frontal bone. That is only reasonably explainable as having
occurred by reason of his being shall we say silenced, being rendered
unable to defend himself, so that he could be tossed out of the window.
35.54
Starrs arranges to visit the Pennsylvania Hotel with Armand Pastore, the
hotel manager who found Frank Olson that night. Afterwards, he makes his
judgment:
36.05 Voice of Prof.
James Starrs/George Washington University:
It is my view and a number of my team members, not all of them,
that it was homicide.
36.16
That would mean Frank Olson was first knocked out by a targeted blow and
then thrown out of the open hotel window. Just a few months before the
murder took place, the CIA had this Study of Assassination
prepared, a how-to book for agents, on how to kill people without leaving
any clues. In this report, it says:
36.37
(Visual text!)
The most efficient accident, in simple assassination, is a fall
of 75 feet or more onto a hard surface. (...) In some cases it will be
necessary to stun or drug the subject before dropping him.
36.49 Voice of Prof.
James Starrs/George Washington University:
What was spelled out in that Assassination Manual was
almost letter for letter what happened to Doctor Olson and it was a protocol,
as we call it, for an assassination, which fit like the fingers in a glove.
37.10
So was it in fact murder? But for what reason? Why did Olson speak of
a terrible mistake he had made?
37.24 Voice of Norman
Cournoyer/Friend of Frank Olson:
There is a piece missing and I am not sure that I am the one to
give it to you. What happened was, that he just got involved in it in
a way he was unhappy about it. But there was nothing he could do about
it. He was CIA and they took it to the end.
37.49
Summer 1953. Frank Olson and his father-in-law cut down a tree. Then the
family goes to Tupper Lake on vacation. Just like every year. With Arthur
Vidich, his wife and their children. Everything seems the same as always.
But that appearance is deceiving. Frank is troubled by something. And
he makes an attempt to confide in his brother-in-law Art.
38:16 Voice of Arthur
Vidich/Brother-in-law of Frank Olson:
I had never had a conversation with him about anything that might
have involved moral values. What had startled me about it was that he
had mentioned the Bible and that he was struggling with something. I knew
that there was a problem that he was attempting to confront. But what
that problem was, I did not know. I can visualize his face actually: It
was drawn, in a way I had never seen it before.
38.58
While the family enjoys summertime at the lake, Frank retreats into his
own world.
39:03 Voice of Eric
Olson:
My mother also recalled that my father was short-tempered during
that last summer. She knew that he had been going through some kind of
crisis. She knew he had not been sleeping well, she knew he wasn't really
at peace. He had been agitated and worried about something and from time
to time discussed leaving Detrick, leaving his job and retraining himself
as a dentist. She had encouraged him to do this if that is what he wanted
to do.
39.37
In Asia, at that time, a bitter war was going on between allied US troops
against the North Koreans and Chinese. It had already been going on for
three years. It was the first, long-awaited and long-feared battle between
the West and Communism. Could the Korean War have anything to do with
Franks personal problems?
40.05
He still has an office here in Fort Detrick, in the US armys center
for biological weapons. At the same time, he is working for the CIA. Among
the tasks of the dirty tricks department in Building 1412 are brainwashing,
drugs and torture, as well as murder by means of poisons and bacteria.
40.27
On July 17, 1953, Olson celebrates his 43rd birthday with friends. A few
days later, he leaves for the last trip he will ever take. He took his
movie camera.
40.42
First stop: London. First objects filmed: Big Ben and a parade on the
Mall.
40.52
Then on to Paris. Near the Eiffel Tower, his two CIA colleagues sit in
a sidewalk café and watch pretty French girls go by, on the left
is John McNulty.
41.07
Paris, London, Stockholm, Frank will later write on the packaging.
His son Eric is seeing his fathers last film consciously for the
first time.
41.18
Then, suddenly, a picture of the ruins of the Reichstag and Brandenburg
Gate. The Soviet Memorial for the Victims of the Second World War. So
Frank Olson was also in Berlin early in August 1953.
41.38
In Zehlendorf he photographs the headquarters of the American army.
Is Frank Olson on a secret Artichoke mission? Several top-level communist
agents were being interrogated in Berlin at the time. It was a time of
intense political and military tension in the divided city, just weeks
after the civilian uprising in the Soviet sector. At the army headquarters
in Berlin, Olson apparently witnessed brutal interrogation methods.
42.19 Voice of Norman
Cournoyer/Friend of Frank Olson
After he came back from Germany the last time he sounded different.
When he talked to me he said, I can probably tell you things, that I cant
tell other people, because they are still in top secret material. The
people he saw in Germany went to the extreme. He said: Norm, did
you ever see a man die?
I said No.
He said, Well,
I did.
Yes, they did die.
Some of the people they interrogated died. So you can imagine the amount
of work they did on these people.
43.10 Voice of Norman
Cournoyer/Friend of Frank Olson
He said, that he was going to leave. He told me that. He said, I
am getting out of that CIA. Period.
43.19
In Korea, its just a matter of days before the first American prisoners
of war will be released. Some of them will face charges of high treason,
because they accused their own country of conducting biological warfare.
43.31 Voice of US
Air Force Pilot (Prisoner of War in North Korea):
If my son asked me what I did, what I did in Korea, how can I tell
him that I came over here and dropped germ bombs on people destroying,
and bringing death and destruction. How can I go back and face my family?
43.48
Are their accusations accurate? Or are they themselves the victims of
communist brainwashing? One thing is for certain: Back home, in freedom,
the soldiers making these confessions will be interrogated again, using
drugs and torture by their own people!
(Visual text!)
All hands agreed that (...) among the returning POWs
from Korea (...) the hard core group and those who had been
successfully indoctrinated were excellent subjects for Artichoke work.
44.19
The American soldiers who claimed to have committed biological warfare
were apparently manipulated using Artichoke techniques. This is documented
in CIA papers. And indeed, all discredited their confessions.
44.30 Voice of US
Air Force-Pilot (after his return):
I did sign a confession, relating to germ warfare. The statements
contained in this confession were false they were obtained under duress
from Chinese communists. When making these statements I deliberately attempted
to put in much as was false and ridiculous that I could possibly get away
with.
44.57 Voice of Norman
Cournoyer/Friend of Frank Olson
I took an oath when I left the Army that I would not talk about
that. I am sorry.
45.05
The Korean War Memorial in Washington honors the Americans who died in
that fight. Of those who returned, some were interrogated by the CIA using
cruel methods, and forced to rescind their confessions. But were the confessions
the truth? Did the Americans in fact use biological weapons in the Korean
War? As a test? And was this the secret Frank Olson knew, and might disclose?
45.34 Voice of Eric
Olson
This fits with what my mother had always said: Korea really bothered
your father.
Finally when one
my father's colleagues within the past year only told me that my father
had come to understand that Korea was the key thing and that they were
using biological warfare methods in Korea.
And then I preceded
to ask him about the germ warfare confessions, this was alleged to be
by the American government, these confessions made by the American servicemen
were immediately discredited by the U.S. government under the idea that
these were manipulated and produced only by the effect of brainwashing.
And at that point
my father's colleague looked at me as if to say read-my-lips:
it wasn't all brainwashing.
46.24
Would this colleague, Norman Cournoyer, repeat this statement in front
of the camera? He has never made a public statement. Neither about Frank
Olson, nor about biological warfare in the Korean War. Will he, now in
his 80s, pay last respects to his old friend Frank Olson? And to Franks
son Eric, who takes part in this conversation?
46.46 Voice of Norman
Cournoyer/Friend of Frank Olson
I took an oath when I left the United States Army that I would never
divulge that stuff.
You divulged it to me.
You cannot
prove it, can you?
I can assert it. You told me.
Hearsay!
So you don't
want to say it?
No .... I don't
want to say it. But, there were people who had biological weapons and
they used them. I won't say anything more than that. They
used them.
47:24 Voice of Norman
Cournoyer/Friend of Frank Olson:
Was there a reason for your Dad being killed by the CIA? Probably
so.
47.44
Around Frederick, Maryland, where Frank Olson lived while working for
both the US Armys secret biological warfare program and the CIA,
the FBI is still looking for the anthrax terrorist.
For months, the largest
investigation in the history of American criminal justice has been underway.
Should the perpetrator be accused and the case come to court, the government
in Washington might be forced to reveal what Eric Olson believes is top
secret information about illegal research on biological weapons, about
the use of anthrax in the Korean War and about his fathers
murder.
48.30
Eric wants to tell his friend Bruce about the latest evidence. Bruce has
been at his side throughout his years of research. Once, in the summer
of 1975, the American government didnt hesitate to see to it that
the truth was not made known.
48.43
The conspiracy originated at the top, in the White House, initiated by
Donald Rumsfeld and Richard Cheney. It had just been learned that the
CIA allegedly drugged its employee Frank Olson with LSD before his supposed
suicide.
Rumsfeld and Cheney,
heads of the White House chiefs of staff, at the time recommended to President
Gerald Ford that he apologize to the family in the name of the government,
and to support retribution. In order to prevent worse things from happening.
Thats the content of this White House memo:
49.21
There (is...) the possibility that it might be necessary to disclose
highly classified national security information in connection with any
court suit or legislative hearings.
49.38
Ten days later, Ford hosted the Olson family and apologized. This allowed
him to remain silent about state secrets and the true reasons for
Frank Olsons death.
49.52 Voice of Eric
Olson
What this means for me is that a national security homicide is not
only a possibility, but really it is a necessity, when you have a certain
number of ingredients together.
If you are doing
top secret work that is immoral, arguably immoral, especially in the post-Nuremberg
period, and arguably illegal, and at odds with the kind of high moral
position you are trying to maintain in the world, then you have to have
a mechanism of security which is going to include murder.
50.26
The two politicians who collaborated in the conspiracy in 1975, Rumsfeld
and Cheney, are back in power. As vice president and secretary of defense
of the government of the United States. The Frank Olson case, it seems,
is far from being closed, even 50 years later. That, at least, is one
thing of which Olsons son is now certain.
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