Santa Fe New Mexican

Migrant takes own life after being separated from family

- By Nick Miroff

A Honduran father separated from his wife and child suffered a breakdown at a Texas jail and killed himself in a padded cell last month, according to Border Patrol agents and an incident report filed by sheriff ’s deputies.

The death of Marco Antonio Muñoz, 39, has not been publicly disclosed. But according to a copy of a sheriff ’s department report obtained by the Washington Post, Muñoz was found on the floor of his cell May 13 in a pool of blood with an item of clothing twisted around his neck.

Starr County sheriff ’s deputies recorded the incident as a “suicide in custody.”

Muñoz’s death occurred not long after the Trump administra­tion began implementi­ng its “zero tolerance” crackdown on illegal migration, measures that include separating parents from their children.

The government has said little about how it handles parents who become mentally unstable or violent after authoritie­s split up their families.

Officials at U.S. Customs and Border Protection in Washington, which oversees border enforcemen­t, had no immediate comment on Muñoz’s death nor the whereabout­s of his wife and child. Starr County authoritie­s refused to provide a copy of Muñoz’s autopsy report and did not respond to several phone messages requesting more informatio­n about the cause of death.

An official at the Embassy of Honduras in Washington, Assunta Garcia, said the nation’s ambassador was the only person authorized to comment on Muñoz’s death. But Garcia said he was too busy attending to a visit from President Juan Orlando Hernández.

According to Border Patrol agents with detailed knowledge of what occurred, Muñoz crossed the Rio Grande with his wife and three-year-old son on May 12 near the tiny town of Granjeno, Texas. The area is a popular crossing point for Central American families and teenagers who turn themselves in to apply for asylum in the United States.

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