Defendant Dario Sanchez’s experiences in jail and after release on bond

Read more about Dario Sanchez here.

At first, my incarceration was the same as everyone else’s. Isolation, in a dirty cell. After my bond was lowered and I was released, they pull a bait & switch at a hearing to add conditions to my release. They indicted me on a second charge and sent me to jail for labor day weekend.

While I was in booking for two days, I heard a young, disabled man in an isolated cell scream and beg for his parents for hours at a time. I can still feel the thump of his body against the door and walls because it shook my cell too. When I went to make a phone call, I watched a guard spark up his taser and joke about hurting that boy. Eventually, the guards agreed to put him in our holding cell if he calmed down. I had to take the lead and comfort him, talking to him about his loved ones while trying not cry, because I knew that if I couldn’t keep him calm, they’d hurt him again. Guards would taunt and laugh at him or crack jokes, and I couldn’t bear to see it happen again. Hours later they housed me in gen-pop and I hoped he made it home.

My third arrest was a clown-show. My local PD followed me halfway to Johnson County where I was called in for a random piss test. They boxed me in and drew guns on me, ordered me out, and cuffed me before cussing each other out because one guy didn’t properly execute their tactical twink capture.

Later, at the jail, they got the cuffs stuck on me because the guard bought his key off of Amazon and it got stuck. Fifteen minutes later, they popped it free and put me in stripes. All of this happened because my bond officer saw me search for how to replace my Gameboy Advance SP battery, then he apparently searched up how to use that battery to make “trigger devices” and passed it off to the DA who then said I searched that up. When my lawyers showed them proof that I never did that, they had to back off immediately.

Between now and the end of my trial I cannot look at anything anti-government or violent, not even movies or music. My phone is monitored by spyware that logs all my activity.

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2 responses to “Defendant Dario Sanchez’s experiences in jail and after release on bond”

  1. […] were added at a pre-trial hearing. This second, unexpected arrest is where Dario witnessed the horrific abuse of another prisoner. Weeks after being released on bond, prosecutors had Dario arrested a third time, at gunpoint, […]

  2. […] conditions. After he made online searches for how to replace his Gameboy Advance SP battery, his bond officer searched up how to use that very battery to make “trigger devices” and shared it wi… — alleging it was the defendant who had made those searches. He was released from custody after […]