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$4.1m For Man Left In DEA Cell

vta

Active member
Veteran
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Author: Tony Perry

U.S. TO PAY $4.1 MILLION TO STUDENT

Daniel Chong, 25, Was Mistakenly Left in a Locked Room at a DEA Facility for Five Days Without Food or Water.

SAN DIEGO - A college student mistakenly left in a Drug Enforcement Administration interrogation room for five days without food or water will receive $4.1 million from the federal government to settle his claim for maltreatment.

The settlement, approved by the Department of Justice, was announced Tuesday in San Diego by the student, Daniel Chong, 25, and his lawyer, Eugene Iredale.

"It was an accident, a really, really bad, horrible accident," Chong said.

Iredale said Chong has undergone intensive psychotherapy and been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder.

What happened to Chong, Iredale said, "should never happen to any human being on the face of the planet."

The bizarre event began on the afternoon of April 20, 2012 - a traditional counterculture day of celebration for smoking pot. Chong, then an engineering student at UC San Diego, went to a house near campus to smoke marijuana with friends and found himself swept up in a DEA raid.

Officers from several police agencies raided the house and found large quantities of ecstasy pills and hallucinogenic mushrooms, plus weapons and ammunition, according to court documents. Unknown to Chong, the house had been under surveillance for days.

Chong and eight suspects were taken into custody for interrogation. After being questioned brief ly at the DEA facility in San Diego, he was told he would soon be released.

But, for reasons that remain unclear, Chong was left for five days in a 5-by-10-foot windowless room without food, water or toilet facilities. He quickly lost weight and was able to slip out of a pair of handcuffs.

He suffered hallucinations. He tried to break a fire sprinkler to get water but failed. Instead he said he had to drink his own urine to survive. He screamed for help but soon became too weak. For the final two days, Chong was in the dark, Iredale said.

Fearing that he would die, Chong broke his glasses and scrawled the message, "Sorry, mom," on his arm.

When he was discovered by DEA employees, Chong was covered in his own feces and severely dehydrated. He was rushed to a hospital, close to kidney failure and breathing with difficulty. He spent five days in the hospital.

The Department of Justice's Office of Inspector General is investigating the incident.

Several theories have been advanced on how Chong could have been forgotten. One is that the officer who questioned him that Friday afternoon was not from the DEA but another agency. When that officer left at day's end, he thought that someone else would release Chong.

The next two days were Saturday and Sunday, when fewer employees are on duty. By Monday, Chong's cries may have been too weak to be heard through the thick door of the interrogation cell, located down a narrow hallway and isolated from the rest of the DEA facility.

Chong said that he did not scream at first, believing that he would soon be released. "It seemed impossible for them to forget me," he said.

He remembers the shocked look on the faces of employees who finally opened the door and saw him, exhausted, starving, possibly near death. His body, he said, was shutting down.

Days later, a top DEA official apologized to Chong and ordered an "extensive review" of DEA procedures.

"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," said William R. Sherman, who was then acting special agent in charge of the DEA's San Diego Division.

No charges were filed against Chong. Iredale filed a claim with the agency, usually the first step toward a lawsuit. But in this case, officials immediately began negotiating a settlement and listened to a local psychologist who said that Chong was in worse shape than many combat veterans he has treated, Iredale said.

The DEA review of its procedures for interrogations is not yet complete, a spokesman for the agency said Friday.

Iredale said he is confident that the agency has taken steps to ensure that nothing similar happens at any of its 21 field stations. The government has "recognized the profound suffering that David underwent and the damages they caused."

Chong still receives therapy and has returned to finish his degree at UCSD. He has changed his major to economics. He said he is glad to have his life "back to normal."

Neither the DEA nor the Department of Justice had a comment on the settlement.
 

k-s-p

Well-known member
Veteran
I'm kind of surprised the guy settled so quickly. I think he basically could have written his own check and in the process completely eviscerated the DEA and SD Police. $4.1 million seems like chump change given the circumstances.
 

tehmaster

Member
This was terrible, i saw it on the news some time ago.I'm glad he pulled through what must've been unimaginably hopeless.
 
S

Seal-Clubber

"It was an accident, a really, really bad, horrible accident," Chong said.




He should file attempted murder charges against the DEA. If the DEA is going to do this to American citizens, American citizens have the right to defend themselves. I am surprised the DEA is not being attacked by people who wish to defend their own lives.

Message to the DEA, keep this up and you are going to have a bloodbath on your hands. I dont see the sense in DEA killing innocent Americans and Americans killing DEA in self defense. It will make world news, is that what you want DEA? Do you want a war on law abiding, American citizens? Some American citizens think you are nothing more than a hit-squad, paid to murder innocent Americans who follow state Medical Marijuana laws.

Americans have the right to defend themselves, even against a rogue force who wished to murder the innocent citizens of this country. The people SHOULD and WILL have their day in court after the dust settles.


-Be careful you don`t let it be taken that far, slow your roll.



Want to do your job? Arrest illegal hispanics who used state-federal land to grow 100s of cannabis plants for organized crime. You should be shot in self defense if you point a gun at a law abiding Medical Marijuana patient who is following the LAW. It is proven an American Citizen is NOT safe in your custody, you are breaking Habeas Corpus laws and this gives Americans the right to defend against you.


I follow state law and I`ll be damned if I let you come to my house and shoot my pregnant wife in the head while she is sleeping in our bed. We don`t sell cannabis, we just grow a few plants in the yard.
 

Holdin'

Moon-grass farmer
Veteran
For anybody that has been left alone for hours in an interrogation room (and didn't turn into a snitch) - this would by far be worst-nightmare scenario. That poor fucking kid.

I hope you treat yourself with that $4.1 million buddy.
 
Poor bastard, and lucky guy.... Might have come down to who found him, support staff, he lives..... One of the stformtroopers, not so good.... normally they'd stage it up as a suicide.

Pigs
 

Cannfucious

Member
Too bad he will likely only get half of that money and his lawyer will get the other half. I would not be surprised if they hit him for taxes on that income too, there goes like a 1/3 of it.

5 days is pretty bad but how many of us would say no to 5 days in a cube to be a millionaire afterwards? What probably made it worse is not knowing if he would ever be let out and I'd guess he was totally baked to begin with so that would not make it any easier! Very fucked up though, and likely not a total accident on their part. At least he is alive still and that's more than some dea victims can say unfortunately.
 
S

Seal-Clubber

5 days is pretty bad but how many of us would say no to 5 days in a cube to be a millionaire afterwards?



5 days without food and water = 20% survival rate.. 6 days is like 10%, 7 days is like 5%..

Good luck with the money when you are dead. Fast and Furious FBI + DEA is killing children. Bring these fucking criminals with a badge down and arrest them!


That would be cool to be a police officer and go around arresting DEA and FBI agents left and right. Fuck You too! I want to put the DEA in handcuffs with Bubba the Buttfucker, and lock them up together while I medicate marijuana in their face.
 

wantaknow

ruger 500
Veteran
not bad for a weeks work,where i live the jailers broke a guys neck left him for 5 days ,and he died ,nobody got fired ,just a paid time off,sorry ass county law
 

LayedBack

Member
Poor kid. Honestly if this happened to me I'd fucking take that agency for a lot more than 4.1 million, thats chump change compared to what they get every year. I'd have taken so much they would have to start selling all of their damn military grade weapons (i'd be surprised if they didn't have napalm by now) to pay me off without having to fire every last one of the ignorant power hungry pieces of inhuman garbage that work for the DEA to pay me.
 

tehmaster

Member
Poor kid. Honestly if this happened to me I'd fucking take that agency for a lot more than 4.1 million, thats chump change compared to what they get every year. I'd have taken so much they would have to start selling all of their damn military grade weapons (i'd be surprised if they didn't have napalm by now) to pay me off without having to fire every last one of the ignorant power hungry pieces of inhuman garbage that work for the DEA to pay me.

You could TRY to do that, or you could HAVE 4 M no sweat.

But any college kid will take that guaranteed 4 MILLION {! } and not want to try to get more.
I mean now he's mental and almost died.
But he's young and you don't say no to the 4 million bro, you just don't.
 

Holdin'

Moon-grass farmer
Veteran
If someone offered me $4 million to be locked in a box for 5 days with no food and water.... I don't think I would do it. I think only those in near perfect health would survive that. I'm sure he only is going to end up with a fraction - lawyer's cut, then taxes. Maybe even less than a million, who knows.

I do believe he could've gotten more... but put yourself in that position. Most of us would just take the money and try to put it behind us.
 

LayedBack

Member
Well half the reason I wouldn't settle that easily is because I just plain hate the DEA enough and come on, the kid nearly died going through an experience that is scientifically proven to be extremely dangerous and would kill a high percentage of those who undergo it not to mention PTSD. What the heck is the DEA gonna say to that? They fucked up big time and shoulda gotten fucked up big time in return.

What I'm trying to say here is that he fought it there is no freaking way he would have gotten less than 4 million either way simply because they already offered it and his case would be a very sympathetic and easy win.
 

ICbuds

Member
Veteran
I think there may have been more to the story. I'm just the glad the guy made it out alive and cashed out. 4 mil less the DEA has to enforce their bullshit
 
K

K.O.Genetics

more like 4.1 mill taken from dispensary owner.. given to this dude.
 
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