• MKUltra: The Files They Burned
    May 18 2026

    What if the CIA destroyed evidence of one of the most controversial intelligence programs in American history, and only fragments survived the fire?

    In 1973, outgoing CIA Director Richard Helms ordered MKUltra’s records destroyed. But thousands of forgotten documents hidden inside budget archives later resurfaced… revealing experiments involving LSD, psychological manipulation, sensory deprivation, and covert testing on unwitting subjects across the United States.

    In this episode of The Unlisted Report, we trace the surviving evidence behind MKUltra, from Sidney Gottlieb and Operation Midnight Climax… to the Allan Memorial Institute experiments in Canada and the mysterious death of Army scientist Frank Olson.

    ARCHIVE FILE 002 explores:

    • The Cold War origins of MKUltra

    • CIA mind control and behavioral experiments

    • LSD testing without consent

    • Operation Midnight Climax safe houses

    • The Allan Memorial Institute experiments

    • Frank Olson’s death and later forensic findings

    • The Church Committee investigations

    • The destruction and recovery of MKUltra files

    • Declassified CIA documents and intelligence history

    If you enjoy declassified intelligence history, Cold War archives, CIA programs, and documentary-style investigations into hidden government operations, subscribe and keep the archive open.

    🎧 Follow The Unlisted Report for more archive files covering Project Stargate, Gateway Process, Operation Paperclip, COINTELPRO, and other declassified programs history tried to bury.

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    12 mins
  • The CIA Funded Psychic Spies for 20 Years — Project Stargate
    May 12 2026

    The U.S. government spent two decades funding a secret program to weaponize the human mind. These are the declassified files they didn't expect anyone to read.

    In 1973, the CIA began funding one of the most unusual intelligence programs in American history. Not a weapons program. Not a surveillance network. Not a signals operation.

    They wanted to know if the human mind could spy on distant locations without physical presence.

    What followed was more than two decades of classified research, sealed session transcripts, and results that analysts could neither fully explain nor reliably reproduce.

    This was Project Stargate.

    The program began at the Stanford Research Institute in California, where physicists Harold Puthoff and Russell Targ were studying whether human consciousness could detect information at a distance. Their work changed when a man named Ingo Swann entered the program, an artist who claimed he could perceive distant locations without using his eyes.

    In one session, Swann was given only coordinates and asked to describe what he perceived. He described a ring system around Jupiter before science had confirmed one existed. In 1979, Voyager 1 confirmed the rings were real.

    No widely accepted explanation has been established for what he described.

    Participants sat alone in isolated rooms. No windows. No communication. No sensory input. Given only numerical coordinates, they were asked to describe whatever existed at that location. Every session recorded. Every statement transcribed. Every sketch archived.

    Pat Price, a former police officer, described the interior of a Soviet nuclear research facility in specific detail, structures and equipment he should not have known existed. Satellite imagery later appeared to confirm aspects of his description.

    Joseph McMoneagle, designated Remote Viewer 001, described a massive Soviet construction project from coordinates alone. Months later, satellite imagery confirmed it, the Typhoon class submarine, the largest ever built.

    Remote viewers were eventually assigned real intelligence targets. During the Iran hostage crisis, viewers were tasked with locating where the hostages were being held.

    In 1995, an independent evaluation found the data exceeded what probability alone could explain. That finding has never been formally retracted. But a second conclusion proved decisive, the results were too inconsistent to function as reliable intelligence.

    Project Stargate was officially terminated. Not because fraud was proven. But because the phenomenon could not be controlled.

    Thousands of pages became publicly accessible. But large sections remain redacted. Referenced annexes were never released.

    The final reports did not declare remote viewing impossible. Only that it lacked reliability.

    The records were released. The explanation was not.

    All topics are based on publicly available documents, declassified files, and official records.

    ARCHIVE FILE 001 — PROJECT STARGATE

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    15 mins