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Geschickter Fund for Medical Research

CIA funding conduit operated by Dr. Charles Geschickter that channeled approximately $2.1 million to MKULTRA researchers, including a $375,000 contribution toward a Georgetown University Hospital research building with CIA-reserved patient beds.

Location Washington, D.C. Mentions 8 Tags OrganizationCIAMKULTRACIAFrontGeorgetown

The Geschickter Fund for Medical Research was a family foundation operated by Dr. Charles Geschickter that served as a CIA funding conduit. About $2.1 million flowed through the tightly controlled foundation to other researchers. In all, the Agency put $655,000 into Geschickter's own research on knockout drugs, stress-producing chemicals, and mind-altering substances at Georgetown University Hospital in Washington, D.C.1

The Georgetown Hospital Deal

In 1955, Geschickter convinced Agency officials to contribute $375,000 in secret funds toward construction of a new research building at Georgetown University Hospital. Since this money appeared to come from private sources, unwitting Federal bureaucrats doubled it under the matching grant program for hospital construction. The Agency had a clear understanding with Geschickter that in return, he would ensure they received use of one-sixth of the beds and total space for their own "hospital safehouse," providing a ready source of "human patients and volunteers for experimental use." The arrangement would provide cover for up to three TSS staff members. Allen Dulles personally approved the contribution and then took it to President Eisenhower's special committee to review covert operations, which also gave assent. This was the only time in a quarter-century of behavioral control activities when documents show CIA officials went to the White House for approval.1

Continued Operations

Under MKSEARCH, Geschickter continued to provide TSS with a means to assess drugs rapidly. He branched into trying to knock out monkeys with radar waves to the head, a technique that worked but risked frying vital parts of the brain. The Fund remained available as a conduit until 1967, when President Johnson forbade CIA support of foundations. The Agency simply transferred funding from the foundation to a private company of which Geschickter's son was secretary-treasurer.1

  1. John D. Marks, The Search for the Manchurian Candidate, Chapter 12.

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