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On May 02 2012 14:30 Sinensis wrote: This is horrible and I wish him the best, but I came into this thread expecting waaaaay worse because of how the title is worded.
"FORCED to drink urine..."
To be honest I don't think it's worse. Forced to drink because you need to survive versus forced by others by abusement.
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Yeah I thought a bunch of guys pissed in his mouth for 5 days : o
Still pretty sick story though
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i like how everyone is more concerned with drinking piss then that he broke his eyeglasses with his teeth and tried to kill himself. im gonna say suicide is worse then piss.
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On May 02 2012 16:18 Rasmudd wrote: Sensationalist title. Saying he was forced implies a person forced him to drink it rather than what actually happened and that was horrible enough. Why do people feel the need to bend the truth just to make things more revolting?
"Detained and was forgotten for 5 day, had to drink his own urine." come on peps.
that's nitpicking at best. your average national media are far more misleading than this.
in actuality, i find the truth more horrible than the other interpretation. presumably he thought that he was going to die, slowly, alone, with nobody even aware of his plight. that's scary as fuck, especially considering that it was the result of a minor crime. suggests serious issues with the system itself, i'd be interested to know how many people were lacking in their responsibility to some extent. personally way more unsettling to me than the idea of some sicko making a person drink their own urine.
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I would drug test the DEA officer tbh. He was probably so messed up on the drugs they seized from the kid that he forgot about him.
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heh, I know everyone is "wooohoooo free money" but the repercussions of this to the kids health is insane. 5 days no water and only methamphetamines? kiss goodbye to your kidneys...
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So this does need to be asked, is this even true? This whole story read as "Chong said". This kid is a durgie. Out of habit I tend to not take what they say at face value. Not to say law enforcement wouldn't abuse/forget about a drugie, in face I find it more likely that they would.
It doesn't change the fact that one shouldn't blindly believe everything this kids says.
EDIT: Found a link that backs up this kids story. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/huff-wires/20120430/us-suspect-forgotten/
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Eat meth left in the cell by a previous occupant? There is no nutritional value in meth, and he wasnt forced to do anything...
Sad story indeed but this title is even more ridiculous than the article that originally reports it.
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isn't it worse to drink pure urine than not drink at all
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Any "settlements" are a ridiculous side factor. Yes he may deserve compensation, but not ludicrous amounts of money. That's just a joke. The more important thing is to make sure things like this don't happen, in both policy and department efficiency. Forgetting about apprehended offenders? Too concerned with rip and runs and house raids of dealers at the bottom end of the chain.
This happened because of an arrest over marijuana and ecstasy.
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On May 02 2012 14:08 General Nuke Em wrote:tl;dr - DEA in San Diego is incompetent, puts a student in a holding cell and forgets about him for 5 days. By virtue of forgetting about him, said student doesn't get food or water and is forced to drink his own urine and eat meth left in the cell by a previous occupant. Given San Diego's proximity to the Mexican border, the staggering incompetence of the local DEA office is more than a little troubling. One can hope that the agents working on preventing cross border drug trafficking aren't the ones going out and busting college student parties. This incident is tangentally related to the larger drug war (if marijuana and ecstacy weren't illegal he wouldn't have been detained) but its seems to me its more about how amazingly bad some people are at their jobs. Show nested quote +A San Diego college student detained for several days in a county detention facility cell is seeking an attorney and may be considering filing a civil lawsuit sources tell NBCSanDiego.
The 24-year old UCSD engineering student was left in the cell for five days without food or water, seemingly forgotten by the federal authorities who detained him.
He was one of seven people detained after a Drug Enforcement Administration ecstasy raid in University City on April 21, according to a DEA statement.
"The individual was at the house by his own admission," the DEA confirmed Monday.
During the raid, authorities confiscated ecstasy, marijuana, prescription medication, hallucinogenic mushrooms, and a white powdery substance that was described as a synthetic hallucinogen. They also seized numerous weapons including a Russian rifle, handguns and thousands of rounds of ammunition.
"Seven suspects were brought back to county detention." One was released, but "accidentally left in one of the cells," a statement from the DEA read.
The defendants were brought back to the DEA office after the raid and processed. The suspects were moved around the five cells at the detention facility during the proceeding. None were strip or body cavity searched, the DEA stated.
A law enforcement source told NBC 7 that the student was handcuffed and held in a room no larger than the average bathroom.
Sources say a worker at the DEA discovered the man by chance about five days later after hearing strange noises coming from the holding cells.
When authorities with the DEA discovered that the student was still in the cell, they immediately called emergency medical services.
In the cell, the detainee told authorities he found a white powdery substance, which he took, the statement said.
Later testing revealed the substance was methamphetamine.
Sources close to the student say he nearly died of kidney failure in Sharp hospital due to the dehydration he experienced. He was treated for several days and released.
He is not currently under arrest, authorities with the DEA said.
San Diego defense attorney Gretchen Von Helms says the victim could get millions if he files a lawsuit.
"In all my years of practice I've never heard of the DEA or any Federal government employee simply forgetting about someone that they have in their care," she said.
"There has to be repercussions if people do not follow the safety and the care when they have a human being in their custody."
Former federal prosecutor John Kirby said he’s familiar with the holding cells at the DEA office. He told NBC 7 San Diego that the rooms have no bathrooms and the suspect likely went without food or water.
Given his familiarity with the DEA, Kirby said this incident is “inconceivable” because every detainee is processed, and it would be hard to get lost in the shuffle.
“You talk about whether they might have done it intentionally, No way because somebody's career is done over this,” added Kirby. http://www.nbcsandiego.com/news/local/DEA-Detainee-Found-White-Powdery-Substance-in-Cell-149596435.html
5 days in a bathroom sized room, with no food and water and only meth.
story of my life
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USA USA USA !
User was warned for this post
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Heard drinking your own urine is somewhat healthy for you! Wish I had something equally positive to say about meth.. oh well.
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On May 02 2012 20:35 zomgE wrote: isn't it worse to drink pure urine than not drink at all
you can drink urine to a certain point until it becomes toxic
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On May 02 2012 14:57 PassionFruit wrote: Story seems kind of iffy to me...\ To be honest, it almost seems like he was fishing for a lawsuit by hiding quietly in the cell or something...And he's likely lying about the meth, my guess is he brought it with him + other substances (given no strip search).
Actually, he probably was brought in, took drugs, blacked out, then the guards didn't see him when checking the cell, and there ya go...
Whole thing still reeks of a planned civil suit, but he'll win anyhow via settlement. Good plan. I lold.
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Horrible things people do. I wonder how this whole situation plays out in court eventually.
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On May 02 2012 14:13 goswser wrote: I don't think its right to give millions of dollars to some kid who was just arrested for drug possession and carrying illegal weapons. I mean sure it sucks that he got left in there for a week, but the administration who messed up should be punished - if he wins the lawsuit it will be taxpayer dollars going to a criminal. If you read the story, when he was 'forgotten' it had already been decided to release him without charge. Even criminals and terrorists are entitled to compensation in the developed world if they are subjected to torture. And this was certainly torture.
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On May 02 2012 15:47 dark_dragoon10 wrote: Haha this guy goes to my school
Yeah "haha" thats really funny
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now, imagine if he had died. we would have never known.
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"Forced to eat meth"
Are you kidding me?
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