Gulf News

Eight found dead in Texas truck

CHILDREN AMONG VICTIMS DISCOVERED LOCKED IN HOT VEHICLE IN SUSPECTED CASE OF PEOPLE SMUGGLING

- — Washington Post

Children among victims, dozens discovered locked in hot vehicle in suspected case of people smuggling |

SAN ANTONIO O utside a Walmart in San Antonio on Saturday night, police said, they discovered a sweltering tractortra­iler with dozens of people locked inside – eight of them dead and many more with signs of severe dehydratio­n.

Juveniles appeared to be among the dead – numbered and tagged but still unidentifi­ed.

“They discovered an alien smuggling venture gone horribly wrong. Eight immigrants were found dead,” US Attorney Richard Durbin wrote in a statement released by federal immigratio­n authoritie­s yesterday morning. “All were victims of ruthless human smugglers indifferen­t to the well-being of their fragile cargo.”

Police Chief William McManus did not go quite so far when he spoke to reporters gathered before dawn. But he said his homicide detective would work with federal immigratio­n authoritie­s to determine “the origin of this horrific tragedy.”

The truck had no working air conditioni­ng or signs of water as it sat in the Walmart parking lot off Interstate Highway 35 in south San Antonio, about two hours from the border with Mexico, authoritie­s said.

Surveillan­ce footage recorded vehicles pulling up to the truck that night, taking people from the trailer and driving away, McManus said.

Weak, dehydrated

But at least three dozen remained locked inside, Fire Chief Charles Hood told reporters, their hearts beating rapidly and their temperatur­es spiking.

At some point, somehow, one of the passengers got out of the trailer and asked a Walmart employee for water.

The employee “came back with the water, called the police, and we found eight dead in the back of that trailer,” McManus said.

Some of the survivors ran into the surroundin­g trees, the police chief said, evading helicopter­s and foot patrols in the darkness.

But many more remained, badly needing help.

“They were very hot to the touch,” Hood said. “Each one of them had over 130 beats per minutes.”

Twenty people were hospitalis­ed in critical or very serious condition, Hood said, with many suffering from heat stroke and dehydratio­n.

Eight were in better shape but still needed treatment.

“We flooded downtown San Antonio and our critical hospitals with patients tonight,” Hood said.

A hearse pulled into the parking lot later that morning, according to the San Antonio

Express-News. The truck and several police cars still sat outside the store.

The news outlet reported that 17 of those hospitalis­ed had life-threatenin­g injuries and that two 15-year-olds were among the injured.

The names, origins and ages of the dead were not known, but McManus said they appeared to include “some juveniles, some adults in their 20s, 30s”.

At least two in the truck were school-age children, Hood said, without specifying whether they were alive.

McManus said the driver was in custody. While investigat­ors did not yet know where the truck came from, the police chief said human smuggling operations were routine in the area — often going undiscover­ed in the darkness.

“We’re very fortunate there weren’t 38 people that were all locked inside the vehicle, dead,” Hood added.

Here is the statement from Durbin, the US attorney:

“San Antonio firefighte­rs and police responded to a horrific scene this morning on the southwest side of town. They discovered an alien smuggling venture gone horribly wrong.

“Eight immigrants were found dead. At least twenty more were in serious condition. All were victims of ruthless human smugglers indifferen­t to the well-being of their fragile cargo.

“The South Texas heat is punishing this time of year. These people were helpless in the hands of their transporte­rs. Imagine their suffering, trapped in a stifling trailer in 100-plus degree heat.

“The driver is in custody and will be charged. We will work with the Homeland Security Investigat­ions and the local responders to identify those who were responsibl­e for this tragedy.

We got a call from a Walmart employee about a welfare check in a tractortra­iler that was parked on the lot here. He was approached by someone from that truck, who was asking for water. We’re looking at a human traffickin­g crime this evening.” William McManus | San Antonio City police chief

 ?? AP ?? San Antonio police officers investigat­e the scene yesterday, where eight people were found dead in a tractor-trailer loaded with at least 30 others outside a Walmart store in stifling summer heat in what police are calling a horrific human traffickin­g...
AP San Antonio police officers investigat­e the scene yesterday, where eight people were found dead in a tractor-trailer loaded with at least 30 others outside a Walmart store in stifling summer heat in what police are calling a horrific human traffickin­g...

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