The Harvard trial of the young Kaczynski may have shaped the crimes of the UNbomber: Scholar

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In the years before Ted Kaczynski’s name began to be recognized with his title as the “Unbobomber,” he captured a profound psychological test that left experts with his questions about two of his results as a terrible thief.
Kaczynski was just 16 years old when he enrolled at Harvard University in 1958, marking a milestone in the young man’s life. However, it was at a prestigious university that he was selected to attend a three-year psychology course that may have changed the course of his life.
After the investigators revealed that Kaczynski was the mastermind behind the series that killed three people and injured 23, they focused on the examination of psychologist Henry A. Murray at Henry A. Murray studied at Harvard, according to Comlando.com.
“[Kaczynski] They are in great danger because of his age and all, “PRON ANON Wolbert Burgess, a pioneer of the FBI’s scientific unit of the FBI, told FOX News Digital.” So I think it will affect him. I think it touched him. “
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Theodore “TED” Kaczynski is surrounded by Federal Agents as he is led from the courthouse in Helena, Montana on April 4, 1996. (Photo / John Thembibear, File)
At the time, Murray had reportedly recruited 22 students to participate in his study of the Human Psyche – a popular point during the cold war. A group of Ivy leaguers were recruited by writing a comprehensive essay that reflected their personal philosophies, beliefs and worldviews in the first part of the study.
However, the experiment quickly expanded.
When each student submits their essay, they are fitted with electrodes and sit in front of bright lights, according to Homcy.com. Murray will then instruct his team to narrow down each student’s goals, while taking them through what he describes as interrogations.
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The screenshot shows a Senior Yearbook photo of Ted Kaczynski from Evergreen, Illinois in 1958. (WBBM-TV / AFP via Getty Images)
The participants were reportedly not fully briefed by Murray regarding the nature of the test, which was to learn techniques for monitoring uncles that could be used by national security agents and other law enforcement officials while in the field.
“Obviously it wasn’t bad to research and not to tell people, and especially to do research where they got them to the electrodes,” Burgess said. “I mean, now I understand what they were trying to do to see if heart rate, blood pressure and everything would increase.
Burgess also added that Murray did not treat his subjects well during the examination, in violation of modern moral standards.
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Ted KACYNSKI poses outside the University of California at Berkeley, June 1968. (Sygma / Sygma via Getty Images)
“One of the absolute points is that you can’t do research that doesn’t pay in some way to compensate someone in some way,” Burgess told fox digital news. “You don’t have to pay them, but you can compensate them in some other way – so that always has to be part of the exchange.”
However, Murray’s research did not violate any of the codes that governed psychological research at the time, according to Homcy.com. His studies reportedly fell under the Nuremberg code of conduct, which was not legally established at the end of World War II at the Nuremberg trials.
Despite the lack of Healical Guardrali, the burgess emphasizes the nature of the experiment was harmful to its participants.
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Ted Kaczynski is escorted by armed marshals outside the Federal courthouse in Sacramento, California on Jan. 8, 1998. (Rich Pedorcelli/AFP via Getty Images)
“[Studies] It won’t be dangerous, “said Burgern.” You can never get hurt, and certainly what Murray and his crew did was hurt. “
“Calling them names, insulting names, or saying that their work was inappropriate – these were educated.
Harvard University did not respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.
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Ted KACYYNSKI sits and smiles during an interview in the visiting room at the Federal Adx Supermax prison in Florence, Colorado on August 30, 1999. (Stephen J. Dubner/Getty Images)
When investigators worked to break Kaczynski’s life, his arrest led to Murray’s notoriety for detailing the unorthodox experiment conducted three decades earlier. However, despite Murray’s death in 1988, his research reportedly continues to be popular in psychology.
Czynsski was later diagnosed with Schizophrenia, and in 1998, he pleaded guilty to a 17-year-old conviction. He died inside his cell at a prison medical center in Butner, North Carolina in 2023, in what was ultimately ruled a suicide, according to the Associated Press.
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However, the question of Kacyzyski’s in-depth examination in a way that pushed him to commit almost twenty crimes of such negative effects on the old study of young, fragile.
“Does something affect him?” Burgess said. “Obviously, his defense attorneys at trial want to make the argument that this affected his thinking – and that’s great.”
The accompanying device contributed to this report.



