News
Release
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
September 27, 2004
DEA
Survivors Benefit Fund Supports Families of Our Heroes with Scholarships
and Grants

Left
to right: Dr. Sam Torres, Mrs. Margie Montoya, Mr. John Montoya,
SAC Steve Delgado and DEASBF Board Member Brian Wammack. |
Los Angeles, CA- On August
25, 2004, on behalf of the DEA Survivors Benefit Fund, Special Agent
in Charge Steve Delgado of the Los Angeles
Field Division presented a check for $25,000 to the California State
University Long Beach School of Criminal Justice. The endowment was presented
to the DEA Special Agent George Montoya Scholarship Fund. The check was
accepted by Special Agent Montoya’s parents, John and Margie, and
Dr. Samuel Torres, Chairman of the Criminal Justice Program.
The funds will be used to help qualified criminal justice students in
need of financial assistance to pursue a criminal justice degree. California
State Long Beach is the alma mater of Special Agent Montoya who graduated
in 1976. S/A Montoya was killed in the line of duty on February 5th,
1988 while conducting an undercover operation in Los Angeles. In addition
to the George Montoya Scholarship, the DEA Survivors Benefit Fund has
provided financial assistance to scholarship funds in the name of Special
Agents Rick Finley, Meredith Thompson, Becky Dwojeski and Frank Wallace.
To date, the DEA survivors
Benefit Fund has expended over $857,000 on behalf of DEA employees
worldwide to support the memory of our employees
killed in the line of duty, provide line of duty death benefits within
24 hours and provide higher education assistance to the family members
of those employees killed in the line of duty. In addition to supporting
college scholarships, the DEA Survivors Benefit Fund has also been able
to provide substantial education assistance to the children of Special
Agents William Ramos, Enrique Camarena, Everett Hatcher, Alan Winn and
Richard Fass. At the present time, there are thirty-one (31) children
of employees killed in the line who will potentially be in need of educational
assistance in the future. The DEA Survivors Benefit Fund, on behalf of
DEA employees, has committed to provide any needed educational assistance
to these children. Some of these children are only one year old and won’t
enter college until 2021. With the generous support of DEA employees,
the Survivors Benefit Fund will assure that our heroes and their families
are “Never to be Forgotten.”
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