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He went to Abu Dhabi for a work trip and ended up in a desert prison

Matty Gonzales is home after a work trip from hell
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Matty Gonzales’ clear, blue eyes looked straight ahead as he told the story. Even before he allowed himself to share the more horrific details, the torment swimming in those eyes was apparent. The popular Milwaukee musician went to hell and back last year.

 

Gonzales traveled to Abu Dhabi last April to do IT work on a cruise ship bound for Singapore and Spain. It was work to be done whils ship was at sea. With a wide range of technical skills, Gonzales has done similar work in ports of call across the globe. The assignment wasn’t expected to be any more or less exciting than his previous journeys.

He was only supposed to be in Abu Dhabi for six hours. That illusion vanished, though, when officers at the security entry point found the prescribed pain medicine Tramadol in his bag.

“Next thing I know, I'm being transported in a paddy wagon ,basically,” he said with a look of disbelief. “It was just a van, but we were shackled. I was like, ‘this isn’t good.’”

Soon, Gonzales found himself in a jail.

“As soon as we got to the jail, I was freaking out,” he said.

It was there in the lockup that his captors presented him with a document scrawled entirely in Arabic that they asked him to sign.

“As far as I was concerned, they were trying to get me to confess to smuggling twenty pounds of heroin or something so they could execute me. Like, I didn’t know,” he said.

Gonzales made a vow. 

“I’m not signing that. I’m just not,” he said.

That’s when Gonzales ended up in a dark room, beneath intense lights, surrounded by men wearing surgical masks. He says he was subjected to electrical shocks and waterboarding.

“It’s a lot worse than I ever imagined actually. You’re drowning,” Gonzales said of the waterboarding. “Maybe it was ignorance, but I just always thought, ‘well that’s not quite torture.’”

Gonzales didn’t find out until later, the document his captors wanted him to sign was merely an acknowledgment of the charges against him.

Gonzales was moved from jail to a desert prison. He shared a cell designed for five prisoners with 19 others. Daytime temperatures  were often well above 100 degrees.

And the prisoners weren’t the only inhabitants of the desert dungeon.

“The bugs, the rats,” he said. “I woke up the first night with a rat on my forehead, and the bugs ... they’re just crawling all over you constantly. That’s when I would scream.”

As Gonzales remained locked up, his sister launched an aggressive social media campaign to free her brother. Denil reached out to U.S. Senators Tammy Baldwin (D) Wisconsin and Marco Rubio (R) Florida.

She also made countless trips to the Middle East to participate in court hearings in the hopes of obtaining her brother’s freedom. Despite her efforts, Gonzales was sentenced to two years in the desert prison.

To call the experience hellish isn’t an overstatement. Case in point, one of Gonzales's cellmates was a Type 1, insulin-dependent diabetic. He had been in the prison for over a year, and guards were well aware of his needs. Despite that fact, Gonzales says the guards arbitrarily decided to deny the man his insulin for an extended period of time.

“Died right in front of us,” Gonzales said. “The next morning, as if to prove their indifference to our humanity, they handcuffed his corpse and dragged him, just dragged him out, head bouncing down the concrete steps.”

Gonzales still isn’t sure what happened that ultimately resulted in his freedom. He mentioned the efforts of Rubio and Baldwin. Denil's social media campaign was also successful in attracting the attention of media outlets.

“Mr. Gonzales’ family contacted our office for help, so we reached out to the Trump Administration to bring this case to their attention and express concerns,” read a statement from Baldwin’s office Thursday. “Senator Baldwin is pleased that her office could play a role in his safe return home to his friends and family.”

However it happened, in late June, Gonzales arrived at Chicago’s O’Hare Airport to a warm embrace from his sister. That was followed a few days later by a big celebration and fundraiser at the Nomad World Pub downtown. Denil and Gonzales estimate the court costs, lawyer fees and travel expenses incurred exceeded $120,000.

Gonzales has no intention of abandoning his wanderlust. He has been a world traveler for much of his adult life. He is, however, crossing Abu Dhabi off his list.

“I don’t know,” he said thoughtfully. “I’m hesitant to say just don’t go there, but don’t go there.”