Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Human smuggling blamed for 2 deaths on Texas train

- By Ken Miller

Two people found dead in a railroad car in south Texas were Honduran men, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security said in a statement Saturday, indicating it was investigat­ing the case as possible human smuggling.

“We will continue to address the serious public safety threat posed by human smuggling organizati­ons and their reckless disregard for the health and safety of those smuggled,” department spokespers­on Nina Pruneda said in the statement.

Ms. Pruneda declined to comment beyond the statement, which said the investigat­ion is ongoing but did not say whether any of the migrants were in custody.

The two dead were among 17 people — 15 men and two women — found Friday in what Union Pacific railroad said were two rail cars near Knippa, Texas, about 70 miles west of San Antonio and less than 100 miles from the U.S. border with Mexico, according to Ms. Pruneda’s statement.

Union Pacific said in a statement Saturday that it is working with authoritie­s to determine what happened and how the migrants boarded the train. The statement said the company is “deeply saddened” by the loss of life.

“Safety is our focus, and we have strict policies in place to prevent unauthoriz­ed access of our trains,” the statement from company spokespers­on Robynn Tysver said.

Four of the survivors found in the cars were taken to hospitals, Ms. Pruneda said. Their nationalit­ies and conditions were not released.

University Health in San Antonio tweeted that two male survivors were in critical condition Saturday.

Spokespers­on Leigh Strope from Christus Health in San Antonio said one survivor was hospitaliz­ed there in undisclose­d condition.

Officials at other hospitals in the area either had no patients from the train or did not respond to messages seeking comment Saturday.

Uvalde police Chief Daniel Rodriguez had said dispatcher­s received a 911 call about 3:50 p.m. Friday from an unknown person seeking help for “numerous undocument­ed immigrants ‘suffocatin­g’ inside of a train car.”

Chief Rodriguez told local media it was believed the call came from inside one of the two rail cars where the migrants were found, a shipping container where the two dead men were found and a freight car.

Last summer, more than 50 migrants died in the back of a sweltering tractortra­iler that had been abandoned outside San Antonio. It was the deadliest smuggling episode on America’s southern border.

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