Radio host Long John Nebel found his wife, Candy Jones, very moody, sometimes very angry and her voice changed.

However, after passing anger, Jones does not remember anything. Nebel became suspicious after Jones explained that she occasionally worked for the US government and needed to be away from home.

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Candy Jones in the 1940s Photo: Yank

Fearful of her adultery, Nebel suggested helping Jones treat chronic insomnia through hypnosis. He discovered that Jones had no other man but a different personality - an aggressive woman named Arlene.

Nebel argues that Jones was a victim of CIA's mind control program that began in the early 1950s and lasted nearly two decades, in which experts used various methods to influence mental state. and change brain function. These include the use of drugs, hypnosis, isolation and even torture.

Candy Jones was born on December 31, 1925, having a nightmare childhood. Her mother abused her and often locked her in a dark room. In response, Jones creates imaginary friends. While these characters disappear when she grows up, Arlene, fastidious, authoritarian still "survived". Jones started her modeling career after high school and is considered the most successful model in the United States in the 1940s. She appeared on the cover of 11 major magazines for a month in 1943.

While visiting military bases with the non-governmental organization USO, which specialized in the performance of the US Army's musical program, in 1945, Candy fell ill from malaria and was hospitalized in the Philippines. There, she met Dr. Gilbert Jensen and the meeting changed her life forever.

In the early 1960s, after the first marriage broke down, Jones opened a model school and acted as a postman for the FBI at the request of an old acquaintance, retired army general. She thought that this act demonstrated patriotism.

Jones was asked by the US government to deliver a letter to a man in San Francisco. This person is Jensen, a doctor from the Philippines. When the two had dinner in San Francisco on November 16, 1960, he revealed to her that he was managing a group of secret agents for the CIA through mind control experiments. Jones, who was short of money at the time, agreed to join.

In 1972, Jones married his second husband, Nebel after only a month of dating. Jones later co-hosted the late-night talk show on Nebel's popular radio, often discussing paranormal topics.

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Candy Jones in the 1940s Photo: Yank

Nebel and Jones think that Jensen has become her controller. While Jones was hypnotized by injecting hallucinogenic drugs such as LSD, Jensen discovered Arlene. Jensen helps make this personality stronger than the original so that Arlene can control her body and put her on missions.

In this way, Jensen has created a perfect messenger, one who cannot reveal anything about the mission even under torture. She was trained to use explosives, fight with weapons and kill people with bare hands. She was also taught to disguise, communicate secretly, and how to cope with pain.

From the recording of words Jones said when hypnotized, Nebel discovered creepy details like Jensen had placed a burning candle in Jones' private parts without pain or fear. Jensen demonstrated this to 24 doctors in an auditorium at the CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia.

When Arlene controlled her body, she visited many secret training camps, military bases and medical facilities throughout the United States. She is said to carry a passport called Arlene Grant, with a photo of Jones wearing dark wigs and dark makeup. However, Jones said that she has no memory of passport photography.

Many people are skeptical of Nebel and Jones's narration. Some see it as a hoax of radio host to attract public opinion. But Jones's story became more credible when the US government admitted in 1977 that the CIA conducted human mind control tests in a program called Project MKUltra.

"The people she contacted really had military and intelligence relationships," psychiatrist Colin A. Ross said. "But I don't think she was turned into a multi-personality personality by the experimental doctors, but the doctors took advantage of the multiple personality disorder she had since her childhood."

Jones died of cancer on January 18, 1990 at Lenox Hill Hospital at the age of 64. CIA historians did not respond to requests for comment on Jones, but Ross wrote in 2016 that based on 15,000 pages. Data obtained from the CIA through the Freedom of Information Act, "American psychiatrists have committed systematic and sweeping human rights violations over the past 65 years."