Sgt. Bales’ Lawyer Should Ask If He Was A Secret Drug Guinea Pig


Was Staff Sergeant Robert Bales a secret drug guinea pig in the military’s attempts to chemically enhance warfighter efficiency?

The proof that such a program to develop a “brave pill” existed can be found in these Government Freedom Of Information (FOIA) documents from the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research and in the extensive  factual sections of my book, Perfect Killer.

While the government said it has stopped the tests, Dr. Richard Gabriel said that the program just went “black” after he helped expose it.

Gabriel also believes that the secret drug was tested on some American troops in the First Gulf War and could be responsible for a variation of Gulf War Syndrome.

Dr. Gabriel is professor at the U.S. Army War College, a retired Army Colonel and former intelligence officer, the author of more than 30 books and former consultant to the Department of Combat Psychiatry at Walter Reed Army Medical Center. He believes the secret pharmaceutical program at the heart of Perfect Killer may bring death and casualties on an unprecedented scale.

A more extensive bio of Gabriel can be found at the top of the non-fiction Afterword for Perfect Killer in which he explains why a drug like this — even without side effects — would be more devastating for soldiers that chemical, biological or nuclear weapons.

Bales’s lawyer needs to investigate to see if his client might have been a secret test subject.

The extensive  factual sections of Perfect Killer earn it the right to be found in the non-fiction sections of Amazon and other sellers are the historical background and hard-data that I included in the book. The scenarios of the characters in the book who were affected by military psychopharmacology are based on data from Dr. Gabriel and the FOIA documents.



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