DOCUMENT INDEX
66 CASE FILES ON RECORD
- COINTELPRO Appeals and Post-Conviction Relief: Documented Cases with Conviction Reversals or Sentence Reductions
COINTELPRO was a documented FBI counterintelligence program (1956–1971) conducting infiltration and disruption of domestic political organizations via informants and provocateurs, exposed publicly in 1971. The specific question addressed he…
- COINTELPRO-Era Convictions: Brady Violations, Entrapment, and Vacaturs—Quantitative Assessment
COINTELPRO was a covert FBI counterintelligence program (1956–1971) that deployed informants and provocateurs against domestic political organizations, resulting in numerous prosecutions. The specific question—how many convictions from COIN…
- COINTELPRO Convictions: Precise Count of Federal and State Prosecutions Based on Infiltration Evidence (1956–1985)
COINTELPRO was a covert FBI counterintelligence program operating from 1956 to 1971 (publicly exposed in 1971), targeting domestic organizations deemed subversive or radical. The Church Committee's 1976 Senate Report 94-755 (https://www.int…
- FBI Legal Liability for Deaths: Sealed Cases, Settlements, and Civil Judgments
This investigation examines documented cases in which families of victims, or victims themselves, have obtained civil judgments, settlements, or depositions establishing legal findings of FBI responsibility for deaths. The lead originates f…
- FBI Infiltration and Violent Incidents in Targeted Organizations: Statistical Correlation and Causation Analysis
This investigation examines whether FBI infiltration of targeted domestic organizations correlates with increases or decreases in violent incidents within those organizations, and whether statistical analysis can establish causation. The qu…
- COINTELPRO Informant Involvement in Armed Actions: Explosive Devices, Weapons Use, and FBI Direction
COINTELPRO (1956–1971) was a covert FBI counterintelligence program targeting domestic political organizations through infiltration, surveillance, and disruption tactics. The Church Committee's 1976 investigation (Senate Report 94-755) and …
- FBI Field Office Approval of Infiltrator-Provoked Violence: Documented Authorization and Declassified Orders
This investigation concerns the specific question of whether FBI field offices and supervisory personnel issued documented, declassified orders explicitly authorizing operations known to involve infiltrator-provoked violence. The broader co…
- COINTELPRO Deaths: Documented FBI Attribution vs. Speculative Causation
COINTELPRO was a covert FBI counterintelligence program (1956–1971) that used infiltration, provocation, and disruption against domestic political organizations. The Church Committee's 1976 investigation (Senate Report 94-755, https://www.i…
- FBI Assistant Directors and Associate Deputy Directors: Oversight and Approval Role in COINTELPRO (1956–1971)
COINTELPRO was a covert FBI counterintelligence program formally initiated in 1956 and exposed publicly in March 1971 following the burglary of the FBI's Media, Pennsylvania field office. The core question addressed in this dossier concerns…
- COINTELPRO Authorization and Operational Files: Separation and Declassification Status
COINTELPRO was a covert FBI counterintelligence program formally launched in 1956 and publicly exposed in 1971 after documents were stolen from an FBI field office in Media, Pennsylvania. The program targeted domestic political organization…
- COINTELPRO Field Office Resistance: Absence of Documented Agent Refusals and Institutional Implications
COINTELPRO (1956–1971) was a systematic FBI counterintelligence program targeting domestic political organizations, formally exposed following the March 8, 1971 Media, Pennsylvania field office burglary (https://home.heinonline.org/blog/202…
- COINTELPRO Authorization Chain: Field Office Autonomy vs. Headquarters Approval Requirements
COINTELPRO was a covert FBI counterintelligence program operating from 1956 to 1971, targeting domestic political organizations deemed radical or subversive. A critical operational question concerns the approval structure: how many individu…
- COINTELPRO Directive Documents: Complete Text, Authorization Protocol, and Classification Status (1956–1971)
COINTELPRO (Counter Intelligence Program) was a covert FBI counterintelligence initiative formally launched in 1956 and publicly exposed following the March 8, 1971 Media, Pennsylvania field office burglary, which yielded over 1,000 classif…
- Tuskegee Syphilis Study: Pre-Exposure Physician and Public Health Official Objections
The Tuskegee Syphilis Study, conducted by the U.S. Public Health Service (USPHS) from 1932 to 1972 on African American men in Alabama, operated for four decades before public exposure. The central historical question is whether any physicia…
- Tuskegee Syphilis Study: Institutional Knowledge and Chain of Command (1932–1972)
The Tuskegee Syphilis Study was conducted by the U.S. Public Health Service (USPHS) from 1932 to 1972 in Macon County, Alabama, enrolling approximately 600 African American men who were told they were receiving free medical care for 'bad bl…
- Tuskegee Syphilis Study: Documented Mortality, Causes of Death, and Study Duration (1932–1972)
The U.S. Public Health Service (USPHS) conducted an untreated syphilis study on approximately 600 African American sharecroppers in Macon County, Alabama, beginning in 1932 and continuing until its public exposure in 1972—a 40-year period. …
- USPHS Internal Memos on Tuskegee Study Ethics (1945–1972): Documented Discussion and Justifications
This investigation seeks to establish whether the U.S. Public Health Service generated internal memoranda, meeting notes, or communications between 1945 and 1972 that explicitly discuss the ethical implications of the Tuskegee syphilis stud…
- USPHS Withholding of Penicillin Treatment in Tuskegee Study: Archival Documentation and Decision Records
The Tuskegee syphilis study conducted by the U.S. Public Health Service from 1932 to 1972 deliberately withheld penicillin treatment from African American participants despite penicillin becoming available and established as an effective sy…
- Reagan NSC Authorization: Implicit vs. Explicit Orders and Legal Scrutiny in Iran-Contra Context
This dossier addresses a specific legal and historical question that emerged during and after the Iran-Contra investigations (1985–1987 operations, exposed 1986–1987): whether Reagan administration NSC officials testified or left records su…
- Iran-Contra Document Destruction and Authorization Chain
The Iran-Contra affair involved covert arms sales to Iran and funding for Contra rebels in Nicaragua during 1985–1987, exposed in October–November 1986. A central investigative question concerns the scope and authorization of document destr…
- U.S. Arms Transfers: Foreign Intelligence Facilitation and Declassified Records Corroboration
This investigation concerns the extent to which foreign intelligence services and intermediaries have facilitated U.S. arms transfers, and whether declassified foreign government records corroborate or contradict official U.S. accounts of t…
- Reagan's Personal Knowledge of Contra Funding and Boland Amendment Violations: NSC Correspondence and Declassified Records
The Iran-Contra affair (1985–1987) involved secret arms sales to Iran and the diversion of profits to fund Contra rebels in Nicaragua, in violation of the Boland Amendment (1984–1988), which explicitly prohibited military assistance to the …
- Reagan Administration Authorization Records for Iran Arms Sales and Contra Diversion
The Iran-Contra affair involved two covert operations conducted by Reagan administration officials during 1985–1987 and exposed publicly in October–November 1986: secret arms sales to Iran (under U.S. embargo) ostensibly to secure American …
- Tonkin Gulf Resolution 1964: Congressional Speed, Political Pressure, and Contemporaneous Doubt
The Gulf of Tonkin Resolution was passed by Congress on August 7, 1964, merely three days after the reported second attack on USS Maddox on August 4. The resolution granted President Lyndon B. Johnson broad authority to wage war in Vietnam …
- Gulf of Tonkin Incident: NSA Declassified Intercepts and the August 4, 1964 Second Attack
The Gulf of Tonkin incident of August 1964 is the historical trigger for expanded U.S. military involvement in Vietnam. The first engagement on August 2, 1964, between USS Maddox and North Vietnamese patrol boats is well-documented and unco…
- Gulf of Tonkin Sonar and Radar Recordings: Chain of Custody, Analysis, and Document Preservation (1964–Present)
The Gulf of Tonkin incident of August 1964 consisted of two alleged naval engagements involving USS Maddox and the U.S. Navy in the Gulf of Tonkin, Vietnam. The first engagement on August 2 is well-documented; the second on August 4 remains…
- Gulf of Tonkin Second Attack: Official Acknowledgment of Misattribution by DOD/CIA Officials
The Gulf of Tonkin incident in August 1964 consisted of two claimed attacks on USS Maddox by North Vietnamese patrol boats. The first attack on August 2, 1964, is well-documented and verified. The second alleged attack on August 4, 1964, re…
- North Vietnamese Military Archives on August 4, 1964 Gulf of Tonkin Patrol Boat Activity
The Gulf of Tonkin incident in August 1964 occurred when USS Maddox allegedly encountered North Vietnamese patrol boats. The August 2 engagement is well-documented and corroborated by both U.S. and later North Vietnamese sources. The August…
- Soviet Recruitment of German Scientists and U.S. Operation Paperclip Decision-Making: Cold War Competition or Post-Hoc Justification?
Operation Paperclip was a documented U.S. intelligence program (1945–1956) that recruited approximately 1,600 German scientists and engineers into American military, aerospace, and weapons research, circumventing or subordinating denazifica…
- Operation Paperclip: German Scientists with Weapons Development and Nazi Affiliation—Differential Treatment and Vetting
Operation Paperclip was a covert U.S. intelligence program initiated after World War II to recruit German scientists and engineers into American military, aerospace, and weapons development programs. The program recruited hundreds of German…
- Operation Paperclip Scientists and Human Radiation Experiments at Brooks Air Force Base: Authorization Chain and Institutional Links
Operation Paperclip was a documented U.S. intelligence program recruiting German scientists and engineers—including some with Nazi Party affiliations—into American military and aerospace research after World War II. The Air Force School of …
- Operation Paperclip: Record Alteration and Nazi Affiliation Concealment Claims
Operation Paperclip was a covert U.S. intelligence program (1945–1956) that recruited approximately 1,600 German scientists and engineers into American military, aerospace, and weapons research, documented in declassified government records…
- Operation Paperclip: Nazi Party Membership Scope Among Recruited Scientists and Vetting Thoroughness
Operation Paperclip was a covert U.S. intelligence program initiated shortly after V-E Day in 1945 that recruited over 1,600 German scientists and engineers into American military, aerospace, and research programs (https://digitalcommons.ch…
- CIA Journalist Relationships and Story Suppression During Vietnam War, Watergate, and Cold War
The relationship between the CIA and American journalists during the Cold War, particularly regarding story suppression and propaganda, centers on the alleged Operation Mockingbird program and broader patterns of agency influence over media…
- CIA Journalist Recruitment Programs: Declassified Assessments and Lessons Learned (1970s–1980s)
The investigation seeks declassified CIA internal reviews or 'lessons learned' documents from the 1970s–1980s specifically assessing the success or failure of journalist recruitment programs. The Senate Intelligence Committee held a public …
- CIA Relationships with Major U.S. News Organizations: Operational Scale and Editorial Influence
The question of CIA relationships with American journalists and news media organizations emerged as a public policy matter beginning in the 1970s, when congressional investigations and declassified documents revealed the scope of the agency…
- Operation Mockingbird: CIA Media Influence Program and Charter/Directive Post-1962
Operation Mockingbird refers to alleged CIA efforts to influence American media and journalists during the Cold War. The term originated in declassified CIA documents dated to early 1962, specifically referencing a wiretapping operation aut…
- CIA Journalists and Media Assets Named in Church Committee Records
The Church Committee (Senate Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities, 1975–1976) investigated CIA domestic operations, including the agency's relationships with journalists and clergy. The t…
- Declassifications and Remaining Classification Restrictions on NATO Stay-Behind Networks: Italy, France, Belgium, and UK (1990–Present)
Operation Gladio and related NATO stay-behind networks across Western Europe were first publicly exposed in Italy in 1990 following the Andreotti admission, triggering subsequent parliamentary inquiries and partial declassifications across …
- Gladio Survivor Testimonies and Oral Histories: Existence and Accessibility of Operational Accounts (1960–1990)
This investigation examines whether surviving oral history, confessional testimony, or family interviews from deceased or living members of Operation Gladio networks document actual operational activities conducted between 1960 and 1990. Op…
- Italian Gladio Cases and Years of Lead: Judicial Evidence Standards for Perpetrator Attribution
Between 1978 and 1990, Italy experienced the Years of Lead (Anni di Piombo), a period of intense left-wing and right-wing political violence that killed over 400 people and wounded over 1,000 (Wikipedia, Years of Lead). Simultaneously, Oper…
- NATO Stay-Behind Networks and Domestic Political Authorization: Declassified Documentation vs. Public Allegations
Operation Gladio and related NATO stay-behind networks have been documented by declassified records, parliamentary inquiries, and journalistic investigation as Cold War-era clandestine military structures ostensibly designed to resist Sovie…
- Gladio Command Structure and Declassified Operational Directives: NATO-CIA Reporting Chain and Orders
Operation Gladio was a documented NATO-coordinated stay-behind network established across Western Europe during the Cold War, ostensibly to resist Soviet invasion or communist takeover. The program is confirmed in declassified records, offi…
- Jeffrey Epstein Intelligence Community Connections: Documented Evidence vs. Speculation
The question of whether Jeffrey Epstein had formal or informal connections to U.S. or Israeli intelligence agencies emerged prominently following the release of legal documents and investigative journalism in 2024–2025. The claim originates…
- Havana Syndrome: Anomalous Health Incidents Intelligence Community Assessments and Disputes
Beginning in 2016, U.S. diplomats and intelligence officers stationed in Havana, Cuba reported experiencing unexplained neurological symptoms including hearing loss, cognitive difficulties, and balance problems. The incidents were initially…
- Study 329: Paroxetine Clinical Trial Data Suppression and Publication Bias
Study 329 was an eight-week, placebo-controlled, double-blind randomized clinical trial of paroxetine (Paxil/Seroxat) in adolescents with depression, conducted in the late 1990s and published in 2001. The original publication in the Journal…
- Government Purchase of Commercial Location Data: Warrantless Surveillance Via Data Broker Loophole
Beginning in 2020, public reporting documented that multiple U.S. government agencies—including the FBI, DHS, and other federal offices—have purchased location data from commercial data brokers without warrants. Legal scholars, notably Dori…
- David Grusch UAP Whistleblower Claims and Pentagon AARO Responses
David Grusch, a former U.S. Air Force officer and intelligence official, made public claims beginning in 2023 that the U.S. government possesses recovered non-human vehicles and biologics related to unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAP). G…
- Soviet KGB and Chinese Intelligence Mind-Control Research vs. CIA MKUltra: Comparative Capabilities and Findings
During the Cold War, the Soviet Union, China, and the United States each developed parallel behavioral modification and mind-control research programs. The CIA's MKUltra program (1950s–1970s) is extensively documented through declassified r…
- MKUltra Records Destruction by Richard Helms: 1975–1976 Document Inventory and Reconstruction
In 1975–1976, shortly after MKUltra's exposure by journalist Seymour Hersh in a December 1974 New York Times investigation, CIA Director Richard Helms authorized the destruction of numerous MKUltra documents. The Church Committee's subseque…
- MKUltra Victims: Documented Psychological Harm, Legal Claims, and Settlements
Project MKUltra was a covert CIA behavioral modification program operating from approximately 1950 to the early 1970s, involving LSD and other psychoactive drugs administered to unwitting human subjects (Seymour Hersh, New York Times, 1975;…
- MKUltra University and Medical Institution Funding: Disclosure and Institutional Review
Project MKUltra was a covert CIA behavioral modification research program operating from approximately 1950 to the early 1970s, involving LSD and other drugs administered to human subjects (Seymour Hersh, New York Times, 1975). The program …
- MKUltra Victim Count: Exact Numbers of Confirmed Unwitting Subjects
Project MKUltra was a covert CIA behavioral modification program spanning approximately 1950–1973, involving LSD and other drugs administered to unwitting human subjects. The program, disclosed publicly in 1975 by journalist Seymour Hersh a…
- COINTELPRO Target Organizations: Criminal Activity vs. Legal Political Organizing
COINTELPRO was a covert FBI counterintelligence program operating from 1956 to 1971, targeting domestic organizations deemed radical or subversive (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/COINTELPRO, https://www.ebsco.com/research-starters/history/co…
- FBI Informants in Targeted Organizations: Intelligence Collection vs. Incitement to Illegal Activity
Federal law enforcement agencies, particularly the FBI, have used confidential informants (CIs) as a standard intelligence and investigation tool for decades. The operational question concerns the boundary between lawful intelligence gather…
- Prosecutions Based on COINTELPRO Infiltration: Convictions, Reversals, and Entrapment Claims
COINTELPRO was a covert FBI counterintelligence program (1956–1971) that infiltrated and disrupted domestic political organizations, deploying informants and provocateurs. A specific quantitative question—how many individuals were prosecute…
- COINTELPRO Violent Outcomes: Direct Attribution vs. Organizational Disruption
COINTELPRO (Counter Intelligence Program) was a covert FBI initiative operating from 1956 to 1971, targeting domestic political organizations through surveillance, infiltration, and disruption tactics (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/COINTELP…
- COINTELPRO Authorization Chain and Bureaucratic Approval Mechanisms
COINTELPRO was a covert FBI counterintelligence program formally initiated in 1956 and exposed publicly in 1971, targeting domestic political organizations deemed subversive. The Church Committee's 1976 investigation (Senate Report 94-755) …
- Tuskegee Syphilis Study: Government Medical Experimentation and 1972 Exposure
The U.S. Public Health Service (USPHS) conducted an untreated syphilis study on African American men in Tuskegee, Alabama, beginning in 1932 and continuing until 1972. The study enrolled approximately 600 sharecroppers, telling them they we…
- Iran-Contra Affair: Covert Arms Sales to Iran and Contra Funding (1985–1987)
The Iran-Contra affair was a documented covert operation conducted by Reagan administration officials during 1985–1987, exposed publicly in October–November 1986. The operation involved two distinct but related activities: secret arms sales…
- Gulf of Tonkin Incident 1964: NSA Study Debunks Second Attack Claim
The Gulf of Tonkin incident occurred in August 1964 when USS Maddox allegedly encountered North Vietnamese patrol boats. The first engagement on August 2 is well-documented; the second attack claimed for August 4 remains contested. For deca…
- Operation Paperclip: U.S. Recruitment of German Scientists After World War II
Operation Paperclip was a covert U.S. intelligence program that recruited German scientists and engineers—including some with Nazi Party affiliations—into American military and aerospace research programs following World War II. The program…
- Operation Mockingbird: CIA Media Influence Program and Church Committee Findings
Operation Mockingbird is a purported CIA program alleged to have recruited American journalists and news media organizations to disseminate propaganda and suppress reporting unfavorable to U.S. intelligence interests during the Cold War. Th…
- Operation Gladio: NATO Stay-Behind Networks in Western Europe and the Andreotti Admission (1990)
Operation Gladio refers to a network of clandestine, NATO-coordinated stay-behind military and intelligence assets established across Western Europe during the Cold War, ostensibly to resist potential Soviet invasion or communist takeover. …
- Project MKUltra: CIA Behavioral Modification Research Program (1950s–1970s)
Project MKUltra was a covert CIA research program in behavioral modification, primarily involving LSD and interrogation techniques, that operated from approximately 1950 to the early 1970s. The program was first publicly exposed by journali…
- COINTELPRO: FBI Counterintelligence Program Against Domestic Groups (1956–1971)
COINTELPRO was a covert FBI initiative formally launched in 1956 and publicly exposed in 1971, designed to surveil, infiltrate, and disrupt domestic political organizations deemed radical or subversive. Initially targeting the Communist Par…