USA TODAY US Edition

In scorching Southwest, a deadly trek

Number of migrants found dead in Ariz. has soared this year

- Daniel González @azdangonza­lez The Republic | azcentral.com

AJO, ARIZ . Perched on a hilltop, Border Patrol agent Daniel Hernandez scanned the vast sunbaked desert below through a set of binoculars.

His dark hair glistened with sweat. The thermomete­r on his truck registered 104 degrees. Suddenly, his portable radio crackled to life.

A sensor had detected human movement near Charlie Bell Pass, about 15 miles southwest of Hernandez’s location, the voice on the radio said.

A Department of Homeland Security helicopter had swooped in to investigat­e. Two men in camouflage, likely undocument­ed migrants, were spotted headed south carrying backpacks and water jugs.

Soon Hernandez was barreling through the desert on a rough dirt road deep into the Cabeza Prieta National Wildlife Refuge to find the two men.

Hernandez’s job is to catch people trying to enter the country illegally. But the searing summer heat added to the urgency.

Every summer, hundreds of migrants die crossing the Southwest border. But nowhere is crossing more deadly than Arizona’s western desert. Already the number of dead migrants found this year in southern Arizona is way up.

As of the end of June — with at least two more months of searing summer heat to come — 81 bodies or skeletal remains had been recovered in southern Arizona, most of them in the west desert, according to data from the Pima County Medical Examiner’s Office, which covers the west desert. That is 26 more than the 55 remains recovered during the same six-month period in 2016.

The number of remains discovered so far this year is on pace to exceed the 154 found in 2016.

FEWER PEOPLE CROSSING The deaths are particular­ly alarming because the overall number of Border Patrol apprehensi­ons is down this year and remains at some of the lowest levels in decades, said Program Manager Chelsea Halstead of the Tucson-based Colibri Center for Human Rights, which helps identify the remains of migrants found in the desert. “Less people are crossing and more people are dying. What we are seeing is more deaths,” she said.

It’s too early to tell whether 2017 will be a particular­ly deadly year for migrants, said Gregory Hess, chief medical examiner of the Pima County Medical Examiner’s Office.

Humanitari­an groups recovered many of the remains so far, Hess said. And many were skeletons or partial skeletons indicating they had not died recently.

“I think that is why our number is a little bit higher this year: It’s just because people are out there looking,” Hess said. “Just because people find remains in 2017 doesn’t mean the person died in 2017.”

Phoenix- and Tucson-based No More Deaths, and two San Diego humanitari­an groups, Angeles del Desierto and Aguilas del Desierto, have conducted searches this year in the west desert of Arizona.

The Aguilas group has been traveling to the west desert every two to three weeks and has recovered at least 22 remains this year, said Jose Genis Gonzalez, the group’s vice president.

Most of the remains were recovered during searches of the Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument, the Cabeza Prieta National Wildlife Refuge and the Barry Goldwater Air Force Range, Genis said.

The group has posted pictures and videos of several of the re- mains on its Facebook page in an attempt to identify them.

Twelve migrants’ remains were recovered on the bombing range west of Ajo where Air Force jets from bases in Arizona conduct training exercises, Genis said.

PRIME AREA FOR SMUGGLERS Smugglers use the bombing range to guide migrants illegally into the United States because they know the Border Patrol doesn’t keep watch over the area, he said. As a result, Genis believes the remains of many more migrants haven’t been found.

After allowing searches of the bombing range May 27 and June 10 leading to the discovery of the 12 remains, officials at Luke Air Force Base in Glendale, Ariz., turned down the group’s request to conduct a third search on the range July 1 and 2, Genis said.

Maj. Rebecca Heyse, a Luke Air Force Base spokeswoma­n, confirmed the request was denied. She said officials had no time to put safety precaution­s in place where the group wanted to search.

The west desert of Arizona is larger than many states. Migrants can walk for days without encounteri­ng water and can become disoriente­d and lost easily, Hernandez said.

The scorching summer heat adds to the danger. Daily temperatur­es routinely soar above 100 degrees and can spike much higher, as they did June 21 when the temperatur­e hit 118 degrees during a record-breaking heat wave that baked the area for nine days.

“I would say it’s the hardest place to cross in terms of distance and remoteness,” Hernandez said. “There is not a lot of infrastruc­ture. Then you add the heat, no water, no roads, it makes it that much harder.”

Many are unaware of the risks, he said. The only way to navigate the wilderness is by hiring smuggling guides. But the guides often underplay the amount of water needed and the number of days it will take to walk.

That became evident Thursday, when Hernandez raced to find the two migrants spotted near Charlie Bell Pass, west of Ajo. After about half an hour, Hernandez reached the area where the migrants had been spotted from the air walking away from a large white water tank. The tank, identifiab­le from a distance by a blue flag fluttering atop a long pole, had been placed there by Humane Borders, one of several humanitari­an groups that work to prevent migrant deaths.

The helicopter was circling low when Hernandez climbed out of his truck, along with a second Border Patrol agent who had responded in a separate vehicle. But the pilot radioed that he had lost sight of the migrants. Soon after, running low on fuel, the helicopter pilot flew off, leaving Hernandez and the other agent to search on foot.

The agents split up. Hernandez followed as the other agent took the lead. After searching for about a mile and a half, Hernandez paused next to a deep wash, staring at what appeared to be hand prints, perhaps left by someone trying to lay low in the sand. A moment later, the other agent radioed from a hilltop: “I’ve got eyes on one of them.”

In the distance, Hernandez could see the silhouette of a man carrying a backpack standing still on the side of a hill. The man started running, cresting a ridge with the second Border Patrol agent in pursuit. Shortly after, the migrant was apprehende­d.

TWO DAYS WITHOUT WATER After escorting the migrant back to the Border Patrol vehicles in handcuffs, the agents searched his backpack. They found two black plastic gallon jugs full of water. He had dropped two other water jugs in the desert during the chase.

The agents removed the handcuffs and placed the man in the cargo hold of one of the Border Patrol vehicles. Hernandez handed him a bottle of cold water from a cooler in his truck.

“Take small sips,” Hernandez instructed. “Don’t gulp it.”

Sitting in the cargo hold, the migrant said his name was Roger Paiz Leyton. He said he was 28 and came from Leon, Nicaragua, “looking for a better life.”

He said he had been walking in the desert for 10 days, trying to reach Gila Bend, about 80 miles from the border.

At one point Paiz said he ran out of water for two days. He had just replenishe­d his four water jugs when the Border Patrol helicopter spotted him and the other migrant who escaped.

“I’m sure this man did not even imagine how tough it was going to be,” Hernandez said. “Most people do not stand a chance out here more than a few days.”

“I would say it’s the hardest place to cross. ... There is not a lot of infrastruc­ture. Then you add the heat, no water, no roads, it makes it that much harder.”

Daniel Hernandez, Border Patrol agent

 ?? NICK OZA, THE ARIZONA REPUBLIC ?? Border Patrol agent Daniel Hernandez scans for traces of a person who was illegally crossing the U.S. border near Ajo, Ariz. His thermomete­r that day read 104 degrees.
NICK OZA, THE ARIZONA REPUBLIC Border Patrol agent Daniel Hernandez scans for traces of a person who was illegally crossing the U.S. border near Ajo, Ariz. His thermomete­r that day read 104 degrees.

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