Windsor Star

Man charged for smuggling people over U.S. border

Detroit-Windsor rail tunnel used to send undocument­ed immigrants from Canada

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A 53-year-old Canadian resident has been charged with smuggling undocument­ed immigrants through the Windsor-Detroit CP Rail tunnel, the Detroit Free Press reported Wednesday evening. U.S. federal agents arrested Guatemala native Juan Antonio Garcia-Jiminez on Wednesday after months of catching undocument­ed immigrants sneaking into the United States through the tunnel, the Free Press reported. Garcia-Jiminez appeared in U.S. District Court Wednesday afternoon and was ordered to remain in custody.

According to the court documents obtained by the Free Press, Garcia-Jimenez smuggled immigrants from Canada into the United States, charging each person $1,500 for driving them to the tunnel and instructin­g them on how to avoid getting caught. Federal agents started arresting some of these immigrants in March, records show, but took several months to catch the ringleader. “Smuggling individual­s through the train tunnel is one of the most dangerous methods I have seen in my career, and I could not be more proud of the agents and officers who worked on identifyin­g this individual and finally catching him,” said Chief Patrol Agent Douglas Harrison of Border Patrol, according to the Free Press. Added U.S. Attorney Matthew Schneider: “Alien smuggling though this train tunnel is not just unlawful, it can be incredibly dangerous.” Garcia-Jimenez was charged in a criminal complaint, a charging document that explained what led to his arrest. Here, according to the complaint, is what happened: Sometime in March, a Mexican worker paid Garcia-Jimenez to help him walk through the tunnel to enter the U.S. On March 18, Garcia-Jimenez drove that worker to the tunnel and instructed him on when to enter the tunnel to avoid the trains, which travel 2.6 kilometres undergroun­d in the tunnel to transport cargo between Detroit and Windsor, the Free Press reported. The worker got through safely, but was arrested by U.S. Border patrol agents on arrival in Detroit. Four months later, border agents made a similar bust. On July 15, federal agents arrested two more individual­s exiting the tunnel. They identified Garcia-Jimenez as the smuggler, to whom they each paid $1,500 to be smuggled into the United States. Two weeks later, two more immigrants showed up.

On July 30, Border Patrol agents arrested two more individual­s who had travelled through the undergroun­d railroad tunnel. They also identified Garcia-Jimenez as the smuggler, and said they each paid him $1,500 for his help sneaking through the tunnel. Garcia-Jiminez has a bond hearing on Thursday, when a judge will decide whether to keep him locked up or release him on bond, the Free Press reported. Garcia-Jiminez’s lawyer could not readily be reached for comment.

Alien smuggling through this train tunnel is not just unlawful, it can be incredibly dangerous.

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