U. of Albany NY Suspends Implant Research

Albany Times-Union

Wednesday, August 25, 1999


This article was sent in by Thomas Savona, a prisoner in the N.Y. State Correctional system. Being both a prisoner and a victim, Mr. Savone would appreciate anyone willing to become a pen pal. His mailing address is:

THOMAS SALVATORE SAVONA
ID # 88A3148
135 State Street
Auburn Correctional Facility
Auburn, New York
USA 13024

While implants are often older, unclassified technology, this article shows that some groups at least, probably those without access to current-day perp technology, are using them. The reader should remember that a large number of current-day psycho-electronic victims claim they have no implants, and that small implants using conventional radio signals have severe power and range limits for tracking and two way communication with a target's brain and nervous system.


UALBANY SUSPENDS IMPLANTS RESEARCH

Albany Times Union, August 25, 1999

Professor whose work is at issue has focussed on surgically inserted mind
control devices.

By:  Andrew Bronstein, Staff Writer

The University of Albany has shut down the research of a psychology 
professor probing the "X-Files" world of government surveillance and 
mind control.

At conferences, in papers over two semesters, professor Kathryn Kelley 
explored claims of those who say they were surgically implanted with 
communications devices to read their thoughts.

According to colleagues, Kelley has privately claimed the university is 
violating her academic freedom.  She declined to discuss this matter with a
reporter.

Kelley's research and the controversy surrounding it echoes the experience
of John Mack, a renowned Harvard psychiatrist.

[snip]

According to three sources -- two faculty members and a graduate student --
the school's Institutional Review Board, which monitors human research, 
closed the project when a student complained late last spring.  The student,
sources said, was NOT ALLOWED TO LEAVE A LECTURE THAT WAS PART OF KELLY'S
EXPERIMENT.  Refusal to allow a subject to leave an experiment violates 
National Science Foundation guidelines.

Despite the inquiry, Kelley, a fully tenured professor who earned $67,000
last year, is slated to teach two graduate courses in the fall.

The department became aware of Kelley's theories as early as the spring of
1998, when a note on her office door announced a lecture called "The 
Psychology of Invading the Self".

The note described implant research funded by the National Security Agency
and the Department of Defense with an annual budget of $2 BIllion.  The
"UNINFORMED, UNCONSENTING SUBJECTS" of these devices were typically
"FEDERAL PRISONERS AND POLITICAL DISSIDENTS," the note said.

At the same time, Kelley won approval from the review board to conduct 
research on "advances in technology that affect interpersonal communication."
In a 16 page outline to the board, Kelley said she wanted to look at the 
USES OF TECHNOLOGY FOR "MONITORING AND CONTROL."  She proposed presenting
a lecture to research subjects and then having them respond to 60 questions
about how the case study she would describe affected their views.

[snip]

Gregory George, a graduate student who has since left the university, said
he was part of a research team assigned to lay the factual foundation for
the implants research.

To his astonishment, he found several firms had developed "trans-tympanic
transducers," instruments that function as mini-telpehones, sending voice 
messages to the inner ear.  Companies decided to market the product for 
fear of bad transmissions causing deafness, he said.

[snip]

In a more detailed treatment she gave at a conference earlier this month
in Orlando, Fla., Kelley lent more credence to the phenomenon.  She 
described how a subject be implanted with the device during anesthesia,
perhaps leaving tiny stitches visible in the ear.  She called the devices
RAATs, short for RADIOWAVE, AUDITOR, ASSAULTIVE, TRANSMITTING IMPLANTS.

"When short-wave operators transmit to or scan [receive from] RAAT implants
in victims, THEY CAN TALK TO THE VICTIMS REMOTELY AND ANONYMOUSLY, AND 
HEART HE VICTIM'S SPEECH AND THOUGHTS,", Kelley wrote.

[EW:  There would be SEVERE limits on distance and unshielded line of sight
requirements for this to work using unclassified technology.]

The perp noted that the National Institutes of Health denied any govern-
mental role in such research.

[snip]

The current investigation into Kelley's work is considered highly 
sensitive at the university, coming four years after A GUNMAN WHO CLAIMED
THE GOVERNMENT PLANTED MICROCHIPS IN HIS BODY HELD A CLASS OF 37 STUDENTS
HOSTAGE AND SHOT ONE DURING A STRUGGLE.  Ralph Tortorici, the gunman,
recently hanged himself in his state prison cell.

Without commenting on specifics, sociology professor David Wagner, 
outgoing chair of the review board, said that shutting down a professor's
research was "quite rare".

Some faculty members said the last time they remember the board making
such a move was in the early 1970s.