Los Angeles Times

ARREST IN BORDER CRASH

- By Kristina Davis Davis writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

A resident of Mexicali, Mexico, is held in the March 2 collision in Holtville that left 13 dead.

A man suspected of orchestrat­ing the cross-border breach that ended in a mass-casualty car crash this month near El Centro has been arrested on charges of human smuggling.

The arrest Monday night of Jose Cruz Noguez, a 47year-old resident of Mexicali, Mexico, is the first linked to the March 2 crash that killed 13 Mexican and Guatemalan migrants and injured 12. The suspected driver of the overloaded Ford Expedition was among those killed.

Cruz, a legal permanent U.S. resident, was arrested as he crossed into the U.S. from Mexico at the Calexico port of entry. He pleaded not guilty Thursday in El Centro federal court to charges related to human smuggling.

The investigat­ive trail leading to Cruz began with another smuggler, who was arrested by the Border Patrol two weeks after the crash in an unrelated incident, according to the probable-cause statement filed with the criminal complaint.

The unnamed smuggler, who grew up in Mexicali, told agents he had known Cruz for years and began smuggling for him in the last six months, court records state.

He identified Cruz as an

organizer behind the March 2 breach and told agents that Cruz had repeatedly recruited him to be involved in the operation in various ways, the affidavit says.

The smuggling involved two vehicles: the Expedition and a GMC Yukon, both of which were seen by Border Patrol cameras entering the U.S. through a breach in the fence at 5:23 a.m., near the Gordon’s Well exit off Interstate 8. A 10-foot section of the fence was on the ground nearby.

By 6 a.m., the Yukon had caught on fire, forcing its 19 occupants to f lee into nearby brush. Border Patrol agents put out the fire and apprehende­d the 19 people. At 7 a.m., the Expedition collided with a big rig in the farming community of Holtville.

The unnamed smuggler told investigat­ors that two weeks before the crash, Cruz had tried to recruit him to drive one of the vehicles, which would be loaded with up to 20 migrants and would earn him $1,000 per person, according to the affidavit. Cruz also allegedly asked the smuggler to obtain cutting

tools to deliver to another associate in Mexico. The smuggler said he declined the offer.

Cruz tried again the day before the smuggling was to happen, going to the smuggler’s home in El Centro to ask if he would meet up with the vehicles once they’d crossed and take them to a drop house in Holtville. The smuggler said he would think about it.

The next morning, Cruz was seen on a video doorbell going to the smuggler’s home. The two men didn’t meet, but Cruz called a few hours later asking for help scouting the vehicles on the U.S. side, since he’d lost track of them. The smuggler agreed, but news of the crash broke before he left home.

On Friday, the cooperatin­g smuggler made a recorded call to Cruz, who confirmed that his associates had cut the border fence and that he’d collected money for the smuggling effort, according to the affidavit.

 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ??
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times
 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? CHP investigat­ors work near El Centro after an SUV carrying 25 people collided with a big rig, killing 13.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times CHP investigat­ors work near El Centro after an SUV carrying 25 people collided with a big rig, killing 13.

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