San Diego Union-Tribune

AT LEAST 13 PEOPLE KILLED IN SUV CRASH NEAR BORDER

More than two dozen were in vehicle when it collided with a big rig in Imperial County

- BY ANDREW J. CAMPA, FAITH E. PINHO, MARIA L. LA GANGA & RUBEN VIVES

By the time first responders arrived at the intersecti­on near the U.S.-Mexico border, bodies lay on the highway where they had been flung by the force of the earlymorni­ng collision. The wounded who were still able to walk after the violent crash wandered, dazed and in pain.

And what was left of the burgundy Ford Expedition — which was wrapped around the front of a white big rig — was still filled with passengers.

Normally the SUV would hold seven or eight people. But this one had just two seats, one for the driver and one for a front passenger. When it collided with the empty tractor-trailer Tuesday at 6:15 a.m., 23 other men and women were jammed into the back of the vehicle.

Little is known about what happened shortly after sunrise at the intersecti­on of State Highway 115 and Norrish Road in Imperial County.

The weather was clear. The highway was long and straight, the terrain, flat and empty farmland.

One thing, though, was certain. Twelve people died at the scene. One more person died after being taken to a hospital. Everyone else involved in the crash was injured.

“It’s a very sad situation,” said California Highway Patrol Chief Omar Watson. “That vehicle is not meant for that many people. ... The fire department had to cut the right front seat out of the vehicle to extricate people.”

Watson, who heads the agency’s border division, said the scene was “chaotic” when fire crews and law enforcemen­t agents arrived about 10 minutes after the crash. The scene was not expected to be cleared until late evening because of the ongoing investigat­ion. By late afternoon, the CHP was still working with the coroner’s office to identify the passengers.

At least 10 of the dead were Mexican nationals, said Roberto Velasco Álvarez, who heads the North America Department for the Mexican foreign ministry.

“We continue in close collaborat­ion with authoritie­s with the aim of assisting the Mexican people killed and injured,” Velasco said on Twitter. “We offer our profound condolence­s and reaffirm our commitment to the families of

the persons who lose their lives.”

The driver of the SUV was a 28-year-old from Mexicali who died in the crash. The 68-year-old driver of the big rig suffered moderate injuries, according to CHP officials, and was one of four people airlifted by helicopter to Desert Regional Medical Center in Palm Springs; two others are in intensive care there, including one who is in critical condition, said hospital spokesman Todd Burke.

Other injured passengers were treated at El Centro Regional Medical Center, Pioneers Memorial Healthcare District in Brawley, about 20 miles away, Scripps Mercy Hospital in San Diego and UC San Diego Medical Center.

Dr. Shavonne Borchardt at El Centro Regional Medical Center said injuries ranged from fractures to lifethreat­ening head and chest injuries. The hospital is transferri­ng patients to other treatment centers as soon as they are stable, she said.

“Our staff has done a tremendous job getting everything ready for these patients and being able to handle them and get them transferre­d out to the appropriat­e places as soon as possible, or if we can take care of them here, they’re being well taken care of as well,” Borchardt said.

Watson said the men and women in the Ford were between the ages of 15 and 53 years old. There is little additional informatio­n about them, where they had come from or where they were going.

During several news conference­s Tuesday, Watson was asked whether the victims in the SUV were migrant workers being transporte­d to or from a job or whether they were immigrants being brought into the country. Although Border Patrol had responded to the incident, he said, “this was not a Border Patrol pursuit.”

It is “too early in the investigat­ion to say what they were doing or where they were coming from,” Watson said. “We are close to the border. People come back and forth on a daily basis for work. That’s not something we can necessaril­y rule out.”

But an official from U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t said in a statement that “Special Agents from Homeland Security Investigat­ions San Diego responded to the scene of today’s fatal crash in El Centro, California, and have initiated a human smuggling investigat­ion. The investigat­ion is ongoing and no further details are available at this time.”

Macario Mora, a spokesman for Customs and Border Protection’s Yuma and El Centro sectors, said in a statement to the Los Angeles Times that the agency’s personnel weren’t chasing or following the vehicle at the time of the accident, but had responded to the scene at the request of the Imperial County Sheriff’s Department.

“CBP personnel were not involved in the accident,” Mora said.

Authoritie­s from various state and federal agencies are investigat­ing the crash. In addition to ICE, the National Transporta­tion Safety Board is partnering with CHP in an investigat­ion. NTSB’s investigat­or-incharge who is expected to arrive today, will later be joined by two other investigat­ors.

The big rig was traveling north on State Highway 115, and the SUV was westbound on Norrish Road, Watson said, when the semi broadsided the smaller vehicle and pushed it to the shoulder. He did not say whether either vehicle was speeding.

“At this point, it is unknown whether or not the SUV stopped at the stop sign,” Watson said. “For reasons still under investigat­ion, the Ford Expedition entered the intersecti­on in front of the big rig.”

In a CHP collision report released late Tuesday, the agency said the driver of the 2011 Peterbilt semi was from El Centro. “At this time it is unknown if alcohol and drugs were a factor in the collision and if seat belts were worn,” the report stated.

The vehicle belonged to Havens and Sons Trucking Inc. of El Centro. Multiple calls to the business went unanswered.

Late Tuesday afternoon, dirt mounds en route to the accident scene were dotted with small, colorful crosses — burnt orange, yellow and green. Immigrant rights organizer Hugo Castro began placing the memorials about 200 yards from the crash at around noon.

They were inscribed in Spanish with various pleas: Help for immigrants. Justice and love. No more deaths.

The 49-year-old brought 40 of them with him from Calexico. He said they were made by migrant workers deported over the last few years or refugees waiting in Mexico to hear about their asylum cases. Castro said he’s been fighting for immigrant causes since 2002 and currently runs a hostel in Tijuana for migrants called Immigrant Embassy.

“They were migrants looking for a better future and dealing with a horrible immigratio­n system,” Castro said, switching between English and Spanish.

Castro eventually closed to within 30 feet of the mangled SUV. He took a knee, dug one cross deep into the ground and rose slowly, before exhaling and moving on to the next spot.

Campa, Pinho, La Ganga and Vives write for the Los Angeles Times. Union-Tribune staff writer Teri Figueroa and Times staff writers Molly O’Toole and Matthew Ormseth contribute­d to this report.

 ?? NELVIN C. CEPEDA U-T ?? Law enforcemen­t investigat­ors look over the wreckage of an SUV after tow operators separated it from a large tractor trailer on Tuesday. The deadly crash occurred outside Holtville on State Highway115 near the U.S.-Mexico border.
NELVIN C. CEPEDA U-T Law enforcemen­t investigat­ors look over the wreckage of an SUV after tow operators separated it from a large tractor trailer on Tuesday. The deadly crash occurred outside Holtville on State Highway115 near the U.S.-Mexico border.
 ?? NELVIN C. CEPEDA U-T PHOTOS ?? A California Highway Patrol official described the Tuesday as “chaotic” when firefighte­rs and law enforcemen­t personnel arrived about 10 minutes after the crash.
NELVIN C. CEPEDA U-T PHOTOS A California Highway Patrol official described the Tuesday as “chaotic” when firefighte­rs and law enforcemen­t personnel arrived about 10 minutes after the crash.
 ??  ?? Immigrant rights organizer Hugo Castro places crosses in the ground near the scene of the deadly accident Tuesday to memorializ­e those who were killed.
Immigrant rights organizer Hugo Castro places crosses in the ground near the scene of the deadly accident Tuesday to memorializ­e those who were killed.

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