U.S. argues for immunity in MK-ULTRA mind-control case before Quebec Court of Appeal
MONTREAL — A lawyer for the United States government told Quebec’s highest court today that the country should be immune from prosecution for the infamous brainwashing experiments at McGill University from the 1940s to the 1960s.
The U.S. government says it cannot be sued for the project known as MK-ULTRA — allegedly funded by the Canadian government and the CIA — because foreign states had absolute immunity from lawsuits in Canada during that period.
The court case stems from a class-action lawsuit filed against McGill University, Montreal’s Royal Victoria Hospital and the Canadian and U.S. governments after Montrealers were allegedly given experimental drugs, rounds of electroshocks, and deprived of sleep for weeks.
Last August, the Quebec Superior Court granted a request from the United States government to be dismissed from the case, and survivors and their families appealed that decision.