Man Abandoned In U.S. Jail For Five Days Wins $4.1 Million

@AFP
Man Abandoned In U.S. Jail For Five Days Wins $4.1 Million

LOS ANGELES (AFP) – A man forgotten for five days in a U.S. jail without food or water has won a $4.1 million (3.1 million euro) settlement from the U.S. government, news reports said Wednesday.

Daniel Chong, 25, survived by drinking his own urine, after his jailers from the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) failed to remember he was being held in their facility.

Chong, a college student in the southern California city of San Diego had been smoking marijuana in April last year at the home of a friend, when he and several others were swept up in a DEA raid, the Los Angeles Times reported.

Chong was taken into custody, questioned briefly at the DEA facility in San Diego then assured he would soon be released.

Instead, officials apparently forgot about him and did not return to free him from the windowless, five-foot by 10-foot (1.5 meter by three-meter) room for five days.

Chong quickly lost weight and was able to wriggle out of a set of handcuffs, the Times reported.

But he was unable to escape the cell and his cries for help went unanswered.

Chong had to drink his own urine to stave off dehydration, and began to suffer hallucinations.

Fearing he would die before help arrived, he broke his eyeglasses and began to carve the message, “Sorry, mom,” into his arm, the newspaper said.

When he finally was discovered, 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 needed five days in the hospital to recover, according to the daily.

“It was an accident, a really, really bad, horrible accident,” Chong said at a press conference on Tuesday.

The settlement, reportedly was approved by the Department of Justice, which would not comment to the newspaper about the out-of-court agreement.

His attorney said Chong has had to undergo intensive psychotherapy and suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder since the ordeal, which “should never happen to any human being on the face of the planet”.

Photo Credit: AFP/Timothy A. Clary

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