Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Death toll of migrants found in abandoned tractor-trailer in Texas rises to 50

- Tribune News Service The Los Angeles Times

The number of migrants who died after apparently being abandoned in a sweltering tractor-trailer in Texas rose to at least 50 on Tuesday, in a suspected border-smuggling attempt now under investigat­ion by the Department of Homeland Security.

Mexican Foreign

Affairs Secretary Marcelo Ebrard said on Twitter on Tuesday that 22 Mexican nationals, seven Guatemalan nationals and two Honduran nationals had been identified.

“We are in mourning,” Ebrard wrote in Spanish.

The trailer was discovered Monday evening in southweste­rn San Antonio after a worker heard a cry for help, San Antonio Police Chief William Mcmanus said. The worker opened the doors, found “a number of deceased individual­s inside” and called police.

First responders found bodies piled on top of one another inside the trailer.

Sixteen survivors — 12 adults and four minors — were taken to hospitals, authoritie­s said Monday. The survivors were too weak to exit the trailer on their own, said San Antonio Fire Chief Charles Hood, who described their bodies as “hot to the touch.”

“They were suffering from heat stroke, heat exhaustion,” Hood said. He said there was no sign of water or a working airconditi­oning unit in the vehicle.

Temperatur­es in San Antonio hovered around 100 degrees Monday.

Mcmanus said three people were in custody in connection with the incident.

Judge Nelson Wolff, the top elected official in Bexar County, where San Antonio is located, told the Associated Press on Tuesday that local authoritie­s believe the truck came from Laredo, a border city 150 miles south.

“They had just parked it on the side of the road,” Wolff said. “Apparently they had mechanical problems and left it there.”

White House Press Secretary Karine Jeanpierre told reporters on Air Force One that President Biden, who is in Europe for G-7 and NATO summits, is “closely monitoring the absolutely horrific and heartbreak­ing reports” from San

Antonio.

“Our prayers are with those who tragically lost their lives, their loved ones as well as those still fighting for their lives,” she said.

Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador of Mexico said at a news conference Tuesday that his country was ready to support the investigat­ion. “I want to express my deepest condolence­s to the families of Mexican, Guatemalan and Honduran migrants who died yesterday asphyxiate­d in a trailer,” he said.

López Obrador said he plans to talk about the incident and migrant conditions in general during a meeting in Washington next month with President Biden.

“This is bitter proof that we must continue to insist on supporting people so that they do not have to leave their villages to go look for life on the other side of the border,” he said.

Smuggling migrants in tractor-trailers has become a common practice along the Southwest border. It often has deadly consequenc­es.

In 2003, 19 people died after they were abandoned in a trailer at a truck stop in Victoria, Texas. The driver, Tyrone Mapletoft Williams, was convicted and is serving a sentence of nearly 34 years in prison.

In 2017, 10 people died after they were left in a tractor-trailer outside a Walmart in San Antonio. The driver, James Matthew Bradley Jr., was sentenced to life in prison without parole.

Guatemalan President Alejandro Giammattei on Tuesday called for stiffened sentences for smugglers.

“It is inexcusabl­e that innocent lives continue to be lost to migrant smuggling!” he said in Spanish on Twitter.

“It is imperative that mechanisms are found to toughen sentences and that smuggling is a crime for which perpetrato­rs can be extradited.”

The number of migrants relying on smugglers has exploded in recent decades amid tougher enforcemen­t by U.S. and Mexican immigratio­n authoritie­s.

Migrants often pay as much as $10,000 to smuggling groups that are closely linked to drug trafficker­s.

Migrant advocates said the tragedy was evidence that harsher border policies have forced those trying to reach the U.S. to take greater risks.

“The Biden administra­tion should see this heartbreak­ing tragedy for what it is: a clarion call to abandon deeply flawed and dangerous immigratio­n policies,” said Wendy Young, the president of migrant advocacy group Kids in Need of Defense.

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