TextSearch

The CIA’s Top-Secret “Heart Attack Gun” | The Internet Says it's True

In 1975, The CIA revealed that it had developed a top-secret weapon for the purpose of giving its target a heart-attack - in some cases without even knowing they'd been hit with anything. In this episode, we talk about the Church Commission hearings that led to this discovery and others, then play the quick quiz with "Evolution of Dance" sensation, Judson Laipply!

· archived 5/21/2026, 6:19:38 AMscreenshotcached html
The CIA’s Top-Secret “Heart Attack Gun” | The Internet Says it's True
Home » The CIA’s Top-Secret “Heart Attack Gun”January 24, 2022UncategorizedThe CIA’s Top-Secret “Heart Attack Gun” In 1975, The CIA revealed that it had developed a top-secret weapon for the purpose of giving its target a heart-attack – in some cases without even knowing they’d been hit with anything. In this episode, we talk about the Church Commission hearings that led to this discovery and others, then play the quick quiz with “Evolution of Dance” sensation, Judson Laipply! September 16, 1975. CIA Director William Colby appeared sweaty and nervous, but was up-front and spoke matter-of-factly with a special Senate Select Committee. He detailed, piece by piece some of the things he had found upon taking the reins as CIA director. Maybe he already knew some of these things, after all, he had spent most of his professional career in the CIA. It was unusual that the Agency’s Director would testify in a public hearing like this. But there were going to be some serious violations revealed, and this was the first time America would hear about it. As Colby presented the committee with a gun for them to examine, the entire room came alive with murmuring and surprise. But let’s go back in time 5 years. In 1970, a whistleblower had published some accounts in the Washington Monthly that there was a nationwide domestic intelligence program that had been running for at least a decade. Its focus was monitoring American political dissent to foreign policies. This led North Carolina Senator Sam Irvin to chart a Senate committee to look into those allegations. It was the same Senator Irvin that led the Watergate Commission 2 years later that ended up revealing the wrongdoing that caused President Nixon to resign the Presidency. Part of what came out of the Watergate hearings was the report of Project Shamrock, a government program that had ordered the viewing of telegrams sent between Americans somewhere between times of World War II and the Cold War that – at it’s height, was reading 150,000 private messages a month. On December 22, 1974 Journalist, Seymour Hersh wrote a scathing expose that ran on the front page of the New York Times. It’s opening sentence: “The Central Intelligence Agency, directly violating its charter, conducted a massive, illegal domestic intelligence operation during the Nixon Administration against the antiwar movement.” For the next month, Hersh provided more and more inside information about the program in his articles. What would follow has been dubbed the “Year of Intelligence.” For the first time, a rift started to divide the United States Congress and the country’s intelligence community. And this led to a special Senate committee with a lengthy title: The “Senate Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities.” It was headed up by Idaho Senator Frank Church. An 18-year member of the Senate and a former intelligence officer himself, he had recently been very critical of both U.S. foreign policy and the Intelligence community. The special select committee would become known as “The Church Committee.” It was made up of a bipartisan group of senators, some of whom had run on and become elected to the Senate on the promise to clean up Washington after Watergate. The Vice Chair was Senator John Tower from Texas. He saw his role on the committee as keeping the hearings to the facts and to keep them from being too much of a media spectacle. But he didn’t know what they were about to find out. Previous CIA director James Schlesinger had asked CIA operatives to internally report on any new programs that could be considered questionable or unethical. This report became known as the CIA’s “Family Jewels.” New CIA Director, William Colby provided the Family Jewels report to the Church Committee, which read like a list of unconstitutional activities. Colby was concerned about pressure from the public and the government, and thought that giving up this information would help repair the rift with Congress and help to restore trust with the American people. He saw it as necessary for the preservation of the future of their office. The results of these hearings read like a list of crazy conspiracy theories proven true. Most of the worst stuff you’ve ever heard about American Intelligence Agencies was revealed through the Church Committee. For example, you may have heard the word “COintelpro.” This was name for the shameful program that targeted members of the Black Panther Party, Martin Luther King Jr., The American Indian Movement, anti-war protesters and others. Or maybe you’ve heard of MK Ultra. Project MKUltra was an illegal human experimentation program that used human guinea pigs to test psychodelic drugs, electroshocks, sensory deprivation, isolation, and other forms of serious abuse. Part of MK Ultra was Operation Midnight Climax. The CIA hired prostitutes to lure men to safe houses where they gave them LSD and got down to business while agents secretly watch...