The Untold Story: Triplets, Adoption, and a Secret Experiment

The Untold Story: Triplets, Adoption, and a Secret Experiment



In the summer of 1961, an American college student gave birth to triplets from an illegitimate relationship. Unable to keep them, they were put up for adoption through a renowned adoption agency, unaware that her children were to be part of a secret scientific experiment run by a group of researchers led by psychologist Peter Neubart.


Seeking to understand the influence of environment and upbringing versus genetics, they deliberately separated the triplets and placed each child in a family of a different social class. Years passed until two of the brothers met by chance in 1980 at Sullivan College in New York. The third brother was introduced to them through the media, completing the surprise. The meeting became a national event, capturing the attention of newspapers and television.














The brothers lived together and opened a successful restaurant. But behind this fame lay accumulating pain, especially for Eddy Galland, who took his own life in 1995 at the age of 33. Later, the brothers discovered that this was no coincidence, but rather a deliberate experiment targeting twin children to separate them and track the effects of different environments on them without the families' knowledge.


It was revealed that other twins underwent the same horrific experience, and the original documents remain withheld to this day by order of the study's administrators. The two surviving siblings are demanding full disclosure, a formal apology, and compensation from the adoption agency's board.

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