Imperial Valley Press

Authoritie­s: Man who piloted boat that crashed hit US agent

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SAN DIEGO (AP) — A man accused of piloting a boat overloaded with migrants that crashed into rocks off San Diego’s coast and killed three people kneed a U.S. Border Patrol agent in the face who was trying to put a leg shackle on him on the beach, authoritie­s said.

Investigat­ors said in an affidavit filed Tuesday in federal court in San Diego that the agent was not seriously injured but the hit left a red mark on his forehead.

A total of 33 people were pulled from the water after the 40- foot (12-meter) trawling-style boat smashed into rocks and broke apart Sunday, tossing people into the rough sea off Cabrillo National Monument. Besides the three who died, two others were still hospitaliz­ed, including one in critical condition.

Investigat­ors say Antonio Hurtado, a U. S. citizen, was piloting the boat, and he was arrested on suspicion of bringing in or harboring undocument­ed immigrants and assaulting an officer, according to the affidavit. Twenty- one passengers identified Hurtado in a photo lineup as the captain of the vessel.

He was treated in a hospital and turned over to immigratio­n authoritie­s. His lawyer, Melissa Bobrow, declined to comment.

The migrants told investigat­ors they paid between $ 15,000 and $18,000 each to be smuggled into the U.S. on the boat.

All but one were Mexican citizens, including two 15- year- olds who were traveling alone, a boy and a girl. A Guatemalan man remains hospitaliz­ed.

Maria Eugenia Chavez Segovia, 41; Maricela Hernandez Sanchez, 35; and Victor Perez Degollado, 29, drowned after suffering blunt-force injuries to their heads, according the San Diego County medical examiner’s office.

Navy rescue swimmer Cale Foy did his best to save them. He was hiking with his wife and three kids when he noticed the vessel approachin­g the rocky, wind- swept San Diego coastline as 5- to 8- foot ( 1.5- to 2- meter) waves were crashing.

A moment later, a wave slammed the boat, and Foy saw it hit the rocks. He spotted people tossed into the rough sea before the vessel broke into pieces.

“All of a sudden, we see people jumping into the waves and on top of the rocks, and it was: ‘I have to be there. I have to help,’” Foy said.

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