DOE Releases Classified Human Subjects Research After 7-Year Delay

KEY FACTS:

  • Department of Energy disclosed previously classified human subjects research (HSR) programs after a seven-year wait
  • Programs included operations codenamed "Blue Dragon" and "Woodstock"
  • Research involved direct data collection from living individuals, including physical interventions and behavioral testing
  • Details on scope, duration, and number of subjects remain unclear from initial release
  • Programs governed by ethical and legal framework, though classification delay raises questions about oversight

DEVELOPING:

The Black Vault, which specializes in declassified document analysis, published the release. Full details of what these programs entailed—and why they required classification—have not yet been disclosed. The seven-year delay between declassification request and release suggests either bureaucratic processing or sensitive content requiring redaction.

The use of operational codenames for human research programs echoes historical patterns within U.S. government science. Whether this represents routine energy research with human participants or something more controversial remains unclear.

No statement from DOE available at time of publication.

Source: The Black Vault


This is a developing story. Details are limited pending full document review.