WaPo: Daniel Chong is the entirely predictable result of dehumanizing drug offenders

WaPo: Daniel Chong is the entirely predictable result of dehumanizing drug offenders by Radley Balko:

“Drug people are the very vermin of humanity.”
– Myles Ambrose, director of the Office of Drug Abuse Law Enforcement during the Nixon Administration.

The Justice Department’s Office of the Inspector General has just released part of its report on the awful case of Daniel Chong. Here’s some background from the San Diego Union-Tribune:

Chong was a 24-year-old engineering student when he was caught up in the drug sweep by a DEA task force two years ago.

On the morning of April 21, 2012, Chong was detained with six other suspects and transported to the DEA field office, where agents determined that he was not involved in the ecstasy ring that was under investigation.

A self-confessed pot smoker, Chong told investigators he had gone to the University City apartment that Friday night to celebrate April 20 — an important day for marijuana users — and spent the night.

After being interviewed at the DEA field office Saturday, agents told Chong he would be released without charges and driven home soon.

But agents forgot about him and Chong spent the next four and half days inside the five-by-10-foot cell without food, water or a toilet. He said his screams for help went unanswered.

Chong was discovered near death on Wednesday afternoon.

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