Posted on 05/03/2012 5:06:17 AM PDT by Shane
SAN DIEGO A California engineering student says he was left alone in a federal holding cell for four days with no food or water, apparently forgotten by the federal drug agents who detained him.
Daniel Chong, a senior at the University of California at San Diego, said he was swept up in a Drug Enforcement Administration raid near campus and was taken to a detention facility. After questioning, he was told he would be released.
Then the DEA left him locked inside a 5-by-10-foot windowless cell.
He screamed. He kicked madly at the door. He cried like a baby.
Soon, nothing made sense, said Chong, 23. He could hear agents chatting among themselves on the other side of the heavy door and other detainees coming and going from holding tanks nearby.
Days crawled by. No food. No water. No bathroom. He remembers biting his eyeglasses and using the broken shards to scrawl a note onto his left arm.
"Sorry Mom," he tried to write. He stopped after the "S,'' too weak to continue.
On Wednesday, the top federal drug agent in San Diego issued an apology.
"I am deeply troubled by the incident that occurred here last week," the statement said, without mentioning Chong by name. "I extend my deepest apologies to the young man and want to express that this event is not indicative of the high standards that I hold my employees to. I have personally ordered an extensive review of our policies and procedures," said the statement attributed to William R. Sherman, acting special agent in charge.
The DEA acknowledged Monday that agents had left someone in a cell after a raid on April 21 until they found him and had to call paramedics. The San Diego Fire-Rescue Department said that medical call came on April 25.
At the raid, DEA officials said, they apprehended nine suspects and netted 18,000 ecstasy pills, three weapons and other drugs.
"Seven suspects were brought to county detention after processing, one was released and the individual in question was accidentally left in one of the cells," spokeswoman Amy Roderick said.
Chong told the Associated Press the ordeal began hours after he went to some friends' house on April 20 to get high. Early the next morning, drug agents executing a search warrant burst through the door and eventually took nine people into custody.
Chong said he was handcuffed and left in a holding cell for about four hours. He was then moved to an interview room, where he was told he had been in the wrong place at the wrong time and would be released shortly. One agent even promised to drive him home.
He was returned to a holding cell to await his release. The door swung closed sometime April 21 and didn't open again until April 25. Chong said he was in one of the middle cells, with no toilet, no water.
He said he urinated on the cell's only furniture a metal bench to be able to drink the fluid. He stacked a blanket, his pants and shoes on top of the bench to try to climb up and trigger a fire sprinkler on the ceiling, but failed.
The lights went out at one point and stayed off for several days, he said. All the while, Chong said, he could hear occasional footsteps and doors opening and closing, even from the cell next door.
He tried everything he could think of to get someone's attention. He lay on the floor and squinted through a tiny crack beneath the door. He could see shadows and hear muffled voices. No one came.
"It's impossible to describe hallucinations like these," he said. "I was completely insane."
In utter confusion, Chong said, he ate some of the broken glass he had used to slice his arm. He also ingested a white powdery substance the DEA said had been left in the cell inadvertently.
Suddenly, the door swung open. Chong, badly dehydrated, cramped and likely hours from death, said it took him some time to realize he was being saved.
San Diego Fire-Rescue said paramedics were summoned to the center to transport a patient who was suspected of ingesting a white powder substance. The DEA said the substance tested positive for methamphetamine.
Chong was rushed to a nearby hospital where he spent five more days recovering from problems including kidney failure, dehydration and a perforated esophagus that was the result of swallowing the broken glass.
He was not charged with any crimes. In the statement Monday, the DEA defended the raid and said the unidentified suspect was at the house to use drugs. Chong admitted smoking marijuana but said he did not know of ecstasy or weapons at the home.
Chong's attorneys filed a $20 million claim against the DEA on Wednesday, saying his treatment constitutes torture under U.S. and international law.
The five-page notice, a precursor to a lawsuit, cites damages for pain and suffering, future medical and psychiatric treatment and loss of future earnings.
"He nearly died," said Chong's lawyer, Eugene Iredale. "If he had been there another 12 to 24 hours, he probably would have died."
Information from the Associated Press was used in this report.
This was no accident.
He pissed some cop off somewhere down the line.
President Bush signed this act as well.
I'll see your $1000 and raise you $5 million. The guy goes and smokes some pot at a party and the government comes in, locks him up in a hole, and forgets about him? This isn't the way I want my government to operate.
Maybe you don't think its a big deal because he was at a bust. But, in other countries, police abuse has had a way of escalating. How'd you like something like that to happen to you over something other than drugs... maybe a weapons charge (wrong size magazine in a restrictive state)... maybe a minor fight?
Medical costs will be more than $1000.
What is the review that is needed?
Fire the jack-holes that put him in there an then walked away immediately. They then should be brought up on charges of attempted murder. If ever there was an example of “cruel and unusual punishment” this is it.
And the DEA better warm up the checkbook.
Well, you need to punish the DEA somehow.
A lesson needs to be given somehow about this behavior.
I don’t know if the kid deserves $20M, but I know I want the DEA to be sent a message.
$1,000 is way too low for the student, though.
Four days with no water and no food is worth a Hell of a lot more than $1,000. He really could have died because of this treatment.
Lawsuit or no lawsuit, this will become more commonplace.
Why I don't feel outraged?
20 million is a drop in the bucket for DEA’s budget, and considering how much they seize in drug money and other assets, it really is nothing.
Here’s a good message for the DEA. You’re fired, all of you. Top to bottom.
I agree I hate the whole concept of police being exempt from being sued. Why should the government pay a day because some idiot dropped the ball. The idiot that forgot him should pay!
Obviously an oversite screw up, the kind of thing that leads you a child running into a bathroom and drowning in a tub or toilet.
And the government must pay, dearly, for this guy’s suffering and change its procedures such that this can never happen again - much like “miranda”.
Otherwise, if it only cost a couple million dollars, wouldn’t YOU potentially throw an evil man, say a suspected Guantanimo terroist or your loser brother-in-law adulterer in a cell and not return until he “accidentally” died 5 days later? This should not ever happen again.
“Whoops, you’re dead.”
“Accidentally” leaving folks locked up in trucks or containers etc is a good way to kill more at a time.
Every official involved should be tried and imprisoned. This is a typical story of government bureaucracy that came out of the Soviet Union. Government workers in general are congenitally inept and lazy and are only interested in cashing their checks until filing for their fat retirement.
I wish I could be on this young man’s jury.
Oh please. He’s just an engineering student that smoked some pot. All the most talented ones did when I was in school.
Everyone responsible should be locked in a cell just like him.
Who leaves meth lying around a cell? Who ingests supposedly unknown white powdery substances? Neither he nor DEA are accidental tourists in this.
Not cool. Don’t enable police states.
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