Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

51 migrants die after trailer abandoned in Texas heat

- By Eric Gay, Paul J. Weber and Elliot Spagat

Desperate families of migrants from Mexico and Central America franticall­y sought word of their loved ones as authoritie­s began the grim task Tuesday of identifyin­g 51 people who died after being abandoned in a tractor-trailer without air conditioni­ng in the sweltering Texas heat.

It was the worst tragedy to claim the lives of migrants smuggled across the border from Mexico.

The driver of the truck and two other people were arrested, U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar of Texas said.

He said the truck had passed through a Border Patrol checkpoint northeast of Laredo, Texas, on Interstate 35. He didn’t know if migrants were inside the truck when it cleared the checkpoint.

Investigat­ors traced the truck’s registrati­on to a residence in San Antonio and detained two men from Mexico for possession of weapons, according to criminal complaints filed by the U.S. attorney’s office. The complaints did not make any specific allegation­s related to the deaths.

The bodies were discovered Monday afternoon on the outskirts of San Antonio when a city worker heard a cry for help from the truck parked on a lonely back road and found the gruesome scene inside, Police Chief William McManus said. Hours later, body bags lay spread on the ground.

More than a dozen people — their bodies hot to the touch — were taken to hospitals, including four children.

Forty-six people were found dead at the scene, authoritie­s said. Five more

later died after being taken to hospitals, said Bexar County Judge Nelson Wolff, the county’s top elected official. Most of the dead were males, he said.

The death count was the highest ever from a smuggling incident in the United States, said Craig Larrabee, acting special agent in charge of Homeland Security Investigat­ions in San Antonio.

“This is a horror that surpasses anything we’ve experience­d before,” said San Antonio Mayor Ron Nirenberg. “And it’s sadly a preventabl­e tragedy.”

President Joe Biden called the deaths “horrifying and heartbreak­ing.”

“Exploiting vulnerable individual­s for profit is shameful, as is political grandstand­ing around tragedy, and my administra­tion will continue to do everything possible to stop human smugglers and trafficker­s from taking advantage of people who are seeking to enter the United States between ports of entry,” Biden said in a statement.

The home countries of all the migrants and how long they were abandoned on the side of the road were

not immediatel­y known.

At least 22 were from Mexico, seven from Guatemala and two from Honduras, Roberto Velasco Álvarez, head of the North America department in Mexico’s Foreign Relations Department, said on Twitter. Families were reaching out to the Mexican Consulate in San Antonio throughout the morning looking for their loved ones, an employee there said.

Attempts to cross the U.S. border from Mexico have claimed thousands of lives in both countries in recent decades.

U.S. border authoritie­s are stopping migrants more often on the southern border than at any time in at least two decades. Migrants were stopped nearly 240,000 times in May, up by one-third from a year ago.

Comparison­s to pre-pandemic levels are complicate­d because migrants expelled under a public health authority known as Title 42 face no legal consequenc­es, encouragin­g repeat attempts. Authoritie­s say 25% of encounters in May were with people who had been stopped at least once in the previous year.

 ?? JAY JANNER — AUSTIN AMERICAN-STATESMAN VIA AP ?? Dynasty Chavez and Cesar Mendiola walk away after looking at the scene Tuesday in San Antonio where dozens of migrants were found dead in a tractor-trailer on Monday. They were abandoned in the sweltering heat.
JAY JANNER — AUSTIN AMERICAN-STATESMAN VIA AP Dynasty Chavez and Cesar Mendiola walk away after looking at the scene Tuesday in San Antonio where dozens of migrants were found dead in a tractor-trailer on Monday. They were abandoned in the sweltering heat.

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