Timothy Leary

Timothy Francis Leary was an American research psychologist who later became an advocate for psychedelic drugs and an important figure in the US counterculture in the late 20th century. He promoted the use of LSD both recreationally and as a psychiatric drug, and was also interested in transhumanism.

Richard Nixon called him "the most dangerous man in America", although Nixon was probably projecting.

Academic career
Armed with a PhD in interpersonal psychology from the University of California Berkeley, in 1959 Leary took an academic position at Harvard University. He teamed up with another Harvard academic, Richard Alpert (later known as ), to start the Harvard Psilocybin Project which administered the mushroom-derived psychedelic to volunteers (graduate students and prisoners) and documented their feelings and experiences. At the time psychedelics such as psilocybin and LSD were legal in the US. It has been suggested that his enthusiasm arose out of personal trauma in the 1950s, including the death of his wife Marianne in 1955 and a mysterious illness he suffered on a trip to Spain.

There had been some earlier research on psychedelics, but mainly by the CIA or military looking to use it as a weapon (e.g., MKULTRA), and by researchers as a way of provoking symptoms similar to psychosis; in contrast the Harvard team were interested in the consciousness-expanding possibilities. One project on inmates at Concord Prison, Massachusetts claimed to find a significant reduction in recidivism among people given psilocybin shortly before their release; however in 1998 a re-analysis of the results revealed that recidivism had not been measured consistently and the effect disappeared if recidivism rates were measured at the same time after release for everyone (rather than an average of 10 months for the psychedelic pioneers and 30 months for the control group).

Another study, the Good Friday Experiment (a.k.a. Marsh Chapel Experiment), involved giving psilocybin to divinity students, who described intense spiritual experiences. However, the researchers suppressed the unwelcome fact that one student had a bad trip and had to be treated with thorazine.

In 1963, Alpert was sacked after giving psilocybin to an undergraduate student outside the proper research and ethical procedures; Alpert later said that the student called it "the most profound educational experience in my life". The Psilocybin Project was closed down and Leary was dismissed for a more mundane reason: a failure to turn up and teach his classes. Because of the project's notoriety and ethical breaches, both men were effectively banned from further academic work.

Millbrook
Leary was able to continue his research alongside Alpert and another ex-Harvard scientist, Ralph Metzner, at Millbrook a 64-room mansion in upstate New York, where they established a new institute of psychedelic research in September 1963. This was thanks to funding from the heirs of, an early 20th century banker, industrialist, and Republican politician, who had the misfortune to be US Secretary of the Treasury at the time of the 1929 stock market crash; Millbrook belonged to Andrew Mellon's nephew William Mellon Hitchcock. The group published a journal, The Psychedelic Review, and a book, The Psychedelic Experience (1964), which became a popular manual for those using recreational psychedelics. More books followed, including High Priest and Politics of Ecstasy (both 1968).

Leary became closely linked with the promotion of psychedelic drugs. Legend has it that Marshall McLuhan suggested he come up with a short, snappy slogan to promote LSD, and soon afterwards Leary came up with the slogan "Turn on, tune in, drop out." in the shower. He administered psychedelic drugs to many famous people including, , , , and.

In the Millbrook era he married twice; his 1967 wedding to his third wife Rosemary Woodruff was directed by cowboy actor Ted Markland, and all the guests were allegedly on LSD.

Meanwhile, LSD was becoming popular in the counterculture, such that the US government made it illegal in 1968. Leary was considered a threat to the nation's morals by the Republican Party, but many on the left were also dismissive, with The New Republic condemning his "patina of phoniness" in 1968. His benefactor Hitchcock was involved in the manufacture of LSD, and its sale centered around a head shop in Laguna Beach in southern California, even after the drug became illegal; in the early 1970s Hitchcock was caught for tax evasion and forced to testify against his partners in crime.

Village Voice reporter Don McNeil, who visited Leary in 1968, found that Leary was not actually taking psychedelic drugs very often, and preferred to supervise others.

In 1968, Leary moved to California; he had become involved with the California-based Brotherhood of Eternal Love, a tax-exempt corporation of which Leary became leader; the Brotherhood had merged with Leary's earlier League for Spiritual Discovery.

On the run
In 1970 he announced plans to run for governor of California but soon after was arrested in the state for marijuana offences and sentenced to ten years in jail; he was also due to stand trial for similar offences in Texas. He escaped from San Luis Obispo prison in daredevil fashion, climbing a telegraph pole, along a cable across the prison yard, and then over barbed wire. He was smuggled out of the US by sympathizers (sometimes said to be members of the Weather Underground although this is unconfirmed) and wound up in Algeria with Black Panther Party member Eldridge Cleaver. Not surprisingly he didn't have a lot in common with Cleaver, and fled via Switzerland to Afghanistan, where he was captured and sent back to the American penal system, serving three years in jail before being released in 1976.

Later years
His autobiography Flashbacks was published in 1983.

In January 1996 he was diagnosed with untreatable cancer, and declared "I'm looking forward to the most fascinating experience in life, which is dying." He got his wish on May 31, 1996.

Conspiracy theories about Leary
Leary is sometimes linked to conspiracy theories about MKULTRA, the CIA's mind-control program, which used psychedelics along with many other drugs. Russ Winter (of Winter Watch: Speaking Truth To Power) formulated a theory that claims to link Leary to the CIA and other secret government figures. Supposedly Paul Mellon, a son of Andrew Mellon, was involved with the OSS (a precursor to the CIA) during World War Two. Lyndon LaRouche claimed that "In the early 60s, Billy Mellon-Hitchock almost singlehandedly bankrolled mass-production and distribution of LSD (which, hardly by coincidence, was at the time the subject of testing by the CIA’s secret MK-ULTRA program) — financing this effort through known CIA fronts like Castle Bank in the Bahamas". Winter also claims Hitchcock was linked to the Hells Angels, who were involved in dealing drugs, laundering Hells Angels money. Winter also points to the lack of legal consequences suffered by Hitchcock and several linked figures despite their links to illegal drug distribution.

It is reported that Nixon associate G. Gordon Liddy while prosecutor for Dutchess County, New York, investigated Hitchcock for illegal drugs, but ended up only levying a nominal fine. Again this suggests conspiracy, but does not prove it.

Leary's autobiography Flashbacks does mention the CIA and their programs such as MKULTRA which were interested in psychedelics and Leary's research; however, Leary saw the government as his enemy and psychedelics as a way of overcoming state control and authoritarian modes of thought. It's not clear that the CIA would need Hitchcock or Leary to get drugs for MKULTRA, which was near its end when LSD became illegal in 1968. Until the late 1960s, LSD was easily available from Switzerland, amongst other sources. The facts of Hitchcock's drugs career are well-known, and he received a suspended sentence after testifying against his former associates. But that does not suggest any US government involvement; and even if they contacted Hitchcock that does not imply that Leary would be involved or supportive of state-sponsored mind control activities.