This page lists articles from technology publications which show how these technologies are being marketed in commercial form, and have also been and are being used to harass covert weapons testing victims:
The reader is asked to remember that ANNOUNCED inventions with potential for "national security" use are ALWAYS already in use covertly when announced. The SR-71 "Blackbird" surveillance aircraft was in use almost 20 years before the public saw it.
This page lists articles from technology publications
which show how these technologies are being used to
harass covert weapons testing victims, and are now
coming out in commercial form, or have been announced
to the public:
1. Aviation Week & Space Technology, March 10, 1997
"Radar Warns Birds of Impending Aircraft"
This article by Bruce Nordwall (Washington
bureau) describes research being carried on by
the USAF Wright Laboratory at Dayton Ohio.
The article describes the use of MODULATED
radar signals to produce AUDIBLE SOUND within
the brains of birds near airport runways to
cause them to fly away and avoid collisions
with landing aircraft.
Other references on work with animals or humans
with "audible microwaves":
Science, vol. 181, 27 July 73, page 356
Nature, vol. 216, DEC 16 1967, page 1139
Nature, vol. 210, May 7 1966, page 636
Journal Acoustical Society of America,
June 1982, page 1321
Bioelectromagnetics conference, 1992,
13:323-328 (pages 323-328)
This list was furnished by the lab at Wright-
Patterson Air Force Base where this type of
unclassified development is now in progress.
** The transmission via MODULATED microwave
pulses carrying voices to selected weapons
testing victims has been carried on for more
than two decades, as reported by the victims.
There has been little published about this
phenomenon, and since direct-to-skull voice
transmissions are consistently mis-interpreted
by psychiatrists as 'schizophrenia', getting
this information to the public needs concerted
attention.
Below is a DOD project along the same line:
(http://es.epa.gov/ncerqa_abstracts/sbir/other/monana/kohn.html,
updated Nov. 17, 1997, or
local copy of text only: v2s-kohn.htm)
Communicating Via the Microwave Auditory Effect
Awarding Agency: US Department of Defense
SBIR Contract Number: F41624-95-C-9007
Principal Investigator: Mr. Brian Kohn
Company Name:
Science & Engineering Assoc, Inc.
6100 Uptown Blvd NE
Albuquerque, NM 87110
Telephone Number: 505-884-2300 (project)
Information 411: 505-424-6955
Project Amount: $739,995
Research Category: Monitoring/Analytical
Description:
An innovative and revolutionary technology is described
that offers a means of low-probability-of-intercept
Radio frequency (RF) communications. The feasibility of
the concept has been established using both a low
intensity laboratory system and a high power RF
transmitter. Numerous military applications exist in
areas of search and rescue, security and special
operations.
See also: http://www.seabase.com
2. Electronic Business Today, February 1997
"Business Trends" section, page 20
See: How it works
Inventor Elwood Norris, and his small company,
(American Technology Corp., Poway CA)
have designed a market ready device called an
"acoustical heterodyne".
This device sends out two sound signals in the
ultrasonic (above-human-hearing) range which,
when they impact a surface, which may be a
living creature, then and only then produce a
sound at a frequency equal to the DIFFERENCE
("heterodyne") of the two ultrasound frequencies.
** This technology has been used extensively by
harassers who follow a walking or driving victim
and bounce raucous, unnatural bird calls and
other strange sounds off surfaces near the
victim. This type of sound is tape recordable.
ATC Corporate Headquarters
13114 Evening Creek Dr. S.
San Diego, CA 92128
(800)41-RADIO (417-2346)
(619)679-2114
(619)679-0545 FAX
atc-info@atcsd.com
http://www.atcsd.com
3. New York Times, April 7, 1997, "Devices May
Let Police Find Hidden Guns on Street" article
Current site: http://www.millivision.com
AP article: ..about airport usage, March '99
This article, with photos supplied by Millitech
Corporation, describes recently unclassified
"millimeter wave" cameras (and some other see-
thru technologies less well developed.)
These units operate like camcorders, giving
the user a real-time thru-clothing, thru-
luggage image for detecting weapons and drugs.
Technology like this does not just pop out of
nowhere overnight, and it probably has its
roots in the 1960's classified microwave weapon
"renaissance" - about the same time as the U.S.
embassy staff in Moscow discovered they were
being bathed in Soviet microwave signals.
Electronic weapon Roy Bercaw, Boston MA, reports:
Boston Herald reports Oct 13 '98 "police used a
ground radar device to investigate whether the
newly painted basement floor had been disturbed."
I called to that police department today. I was
referred to the state police crime scene
services. The state police Lt. is said to have
"hired the guy" who used that equipment. It is
for hire? Who wants to rent one? I'll try to
get the name of the manufacturer and maybe some
specifications.
------------------------------------------------
See also: Millitech Corp.
article titled "Frisking from Afar" from the
October 1995 issue of Popular Mechanics.
See also: http://www.millivision.com
the manufacturer who took over this product line
from Millitech.
------------------------------------------------
OEM Magazine, February 1997, page 20
"Electronic Dipstick" article
This article describes "micropower impulse radar"
or "MIR" radar, developed at Lawrence Livermore
Lab in California, and licensed to several large
companies for consumer products. Basically, this
radar uses the highest radio frequencies and does
not require the supporting hardware like rotary
antennas which 'conventional' radar does.
Uses include vehicle blind-spot sensors, traffic
control sensors, heart muscle response monitors,
and see thru plaster stud finders.
------------------------------------------------
New York Times, National Section, May 5, 1995
page A19, title: "In Search of Security: Radar
Scanners That 'Undress' People", Malcolm W.
Browne
This article pre-dates the Millitech articles
above, and references the Pacific Northwest
Laboratory in Richland WA, operated by the U.S.
Department of Energy. The National Institute of
Justice has expressed interest in radar units
which can scan for weapons at a distance of 12'.
Douglas L. McMakin says he has demonstrated that
this is technically feasible.
Ira Glasser, executive director of the ACLU,
referred to the project as a "looney tunes scheme".
------------------------------------------------
** Thru the wall radar has been covertly used
for a number of years on weapons testing victims.
One common use has been to detect where the
victim is standing or walking in their apartment,
and 'follow' the victim's position by rapping
floor, walls, or ceiling from an adjacent apt.
This is designed to let the victim know he/she
is under constant surveillance.
Bulletin received August 99:
"Hey look Vinnie. We're on 'Cops'!"
Cops Have Eyes On X-Ray Vision
APB Online
Three high-tech labs are in the final stages
of developing a new form of radar device that
can see through walls by broadcasting radio
signals across broad bands of the spectrum to
pinpoint a hidden suspect. Based on military
technology, the products still need
government approval and won't go on the
market for at least a few more months. But
police who have tried various versions of the
new radar scanners like what they see and
what the product developers are telling them.
http://www.apbonline.com/
behindthebadge/1999/06/04/radar0604_01.html
?s=WallsGlasses_247
--------------------------------------------
4. Defense Electronics, July 1993, page 17
DOD, INTEL AGENCIES LOOK AT RUSSIAN MIND CONTROL
CLAIMS
Federal law enforcement officials considered
testing a Russian scientist's acoustic mind
control device on cultist David Koresh a few
weeks before the fiery conflagration that killed
the Branch Davidian leader and 70 of his followers
in Waco, Texas, DEFENSE ELECTRONICS has learned.
In a series of closed meetings beginning March
17 in suburban northern Virginia with Dr. Igor
Smirnov of the Moscow Medical Academy, FBI
officials were briefed on the Russian's decade-
long research on a computerized acoustic device
allegedly capable of implanting thoughts in a
person's mind without that person being aware
of the source of the thought.
...
His account of the meetings was confirmed by
Psychotechnologies Corp., a Richmond, Virginia
based firm that owns the American rights to the
Russian technology.
...
[Not necessarily unclassified, but at least
made known to a limited segment of the public]
5. Associated Press, date obsucred on library
photocopy but is Soviet-era
Title: Russian Machine That Tranquilizes People
Dr. Ross Adey, chief of research at Loma Linda
Veterans Hospital, tests a LIDA machine, which
uses a radio signal to perform the same function
as chemical tranquilizers.
PROOF POSITIVE that radio signals can alter
the functioning of the human mind.
See: The full text of the original article.
6. Dan Rather's CBS Evening News, Dec. 9, 1997
Police helicopters were the topic, and one of
the features soon to be added to police heli-
copters was "an electromagnetic ray gun which
can stop speeding cars dead."
While this is primitive technology compared
with that used to manipulate the minds and
nervous systems of e-weapons victims of the
1990's, it does demonstrate quite clearly
that government is putting substantial re-
sources into electromagnetic weapons devel-
opment.
7. Canadian version, Discovery Channel, "Invention"
segment, Thursday December 25, 1997
During part of the show, it was stated that
the current development of polygraphs (lie
detectors) using massive computer-aided database
comparisons was now a reality and these machines
were making substantial progress towards near-
perfect accuracy.
The final statement in that segment was: It is
expected that the next stage in polygraph devel-
opment will be REMOTE MICROWAVE detection of
bodily functions, which will mean the polygraph
can then be used SECRETLY, at a distance.
8. Associated Press: (Dec. 2, 1997)
TOKYO - Tired of reaching for the remote
control every time you surf the channels?
Help is on the way - at a price. A
Japanese company plans to market a device
that changes television channels and
activates household appliances at the
flicker of a brain wave. The price:
roughly 600,000 yen ($4,800). The product,
called the Mind Control Tool Operating
System, or MCTOS, is the result of a
collaboration between the Technos Japan
Co. and the Himeji Institute of Technology
in southwestern Japan.
Say you want to turn on the air
conditioner. Simply focus on that icon on
the MCTOS computer display menu while
wearing a pair of beta-wave trapping
goggles. Then, according to Technos
spokesman Sadahiro Ushitani, say something
like "Ei!!" inside your head. Soon your
air conditioner will be pumping cool air
into the room.
MCTOS is scheduled to go on sale in
April, 1998.
9. On Jan. 19 the Washington Post had an article
about a device for remotely detecting
heartbeats by detecting the electromagnetic
pulses emitted by beating hearts.
URL:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/
1998-01/19/017l-011998-idx.html
See also this article posted on this site:
Picture of an actual
"radar flashlight" device.
An excerpt:
"The pumping of the human heart is controlled
by electrical signals, which doctors measure in
electrocardiograms. The heart's activity
generates an irregular, ultralow-frequency
electric field that extends in a circle around
the body.
"The field is faint, but it can pass through
almost any physical barrier. The LifeGuard can
pick up on the strongest part of the field, the
heart, through barriers including concrete
walls, heavy foliage and rocks. Company
officials say the LifeGuard can detect a person
in less than five seconds and can pinpoint his
or her location with a high degree of
accuracy."
The company is marketing the device for
potentially locating people in need of rescue,
or detecting where individuals are located
inside a building.
-- submitted by:
Allen L. Barker
http://www.cs.virginia.edu/~alb
Here is more info on this type of device:
69. VSE - Life Assesment Detector System DATE 020597
93% (Nasdaq: VSEC) LIFE ASSESMENT DECTECTOR SYSTEM
(LADS) Patent Pending The Life Assessment Detector
System (LADS), a microwave Doppler movement
measuring device, can detect human body surface
motion, including heartbeat and respiration,
at ranges up.. http://www.vsecorp.com/lads.htm,
3296 bytes, 08Feb97
--
10. Nature magazine, Vol 391, January 22, 1998, page 316,
"Advances in neuroscience may threaten human rights"
by Declan Butler
(PARIS - Pasteur Institute - Speech by Chairman of
the French national bioethics committee Jean-Pierre
Changeaux)
"But neuroscience also poses potential risks, arguing
that advances in cerebral imaging make the scope for
invasion of privacy immense.
"Although the equipment needed is still highly spec-
ialized, it will become commonplace and capable of
being used at a distance, he predicted. That will
open the way for abuses such as invasion of personal
liberty, control of behaviour, and brainwashing."
"These are far from being science-fiction concerns,
said Changeaux, and constitute a serious risk to
society."
Also in that article:
"Denis LeBihan, a researcher at the French Atomic
Energy Commission, told the meeting that the use of
imaging techniques has reached the stage where
we can almost read people's thoughts."
NOTE: These scientists are speaking ONLY about the
UNCLASSIFIED scientific arena. Classified technology
can always be assumed well ahead of unclassified.
11. Dan Rather's CBS Evening News, October 7, 1998
Demonstrated the "TCMS" device, or "Trans Cerebral
Magnetic Stimulator", which is used as a substitute
for conventional conductive electrode psychiatric
shock treatment.
Of interest to electronic neuro-influence weapons
victims was the demonstration where the magnetic
coil array was placed on a test subject's forearm.
Each pulse triggered involuntary movement of the
subject's fingers, very similar to what e-weapons
victims experience repeatedly.
12. silsoun2.htm, partly
unclassified system where ultrasound carrier signals
carry hypnotic commands to the enemy. Used by the
U.S. Army during the gulf war. Considerable detail
on that page - call it up for printing - it's
worth the read!
13. thotuncl.htm, unclass-
ified devices which are beginning to catch up to the
full blown classified thought readers.
ratrobot.htm, unclass-
ified experiment in Philadelphia in which implanted
rats "command by thinking they are thirsty" a robotic
water dispenser.
Includes the Cyberlink Mind Mouse, and the brain
implant thought pointer for the totally paralyzed.
See the above pages for details.