Porterville Recorder

Some Texas trailer survivors held in same lockup as driver

- By NOMAAN MERCHANT

HOUSTON — Federal authoritie­s have detained some survivors of a deadly human smuggling operation in the same facility as the driver of the truck in which they were smuggled, concerning advocates who are worried that they could be further traumatize­d.

A few of them have even briefly shared a holding cell with James Matthew Bradley Jr., who faces a human smuggling charge that carries the possibilit­y of the death penalty, according to Michael Mccrum, an attorney appointed to represent the passengers.

Ten people died after being taken from the Texas border to San Antonio in a sweltering tractor-trailer. According to a federal complaint, Bradley denied knowing that the trailer he was driving was packed with people who had crossed into the United States illegally.

Amy Fischer, policy director for the Refugee and Immigrant Center for Education and Legal Services, or RAICES, said Wednesday that she was concerned about the impact of survivors remaining in detention and especially seeing Bradley inside.

“They are being held on equal footing as the person who is charged with putting them into the truck,” she said. “We have a lot of concerns as to how they’re being treated, and the impact that this treatment will have on them as they try and recover from this horrific experience.”

Investigat­ors have said they consider Bradley to be one part of an organizati­on that funded and planned the movement of dozens of people into the U.S., and that others could also face criminal charges.

Some of the passengers could become key witnesses at future trials. Authoritie­s have designated 18 of the 39 people known to have been inside the trailer as material witnesses and are keeping them in detention to guarantee their testimony.

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