Los Angeles Times

Raids target smuggling ring

Guatemalan officials arrest 19 accused of transporti­ng migrants; 4 are sought by U.S.

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HUEHUETENA­NGO, Guatemala — At dawn, police and federal agents with cover from helicopter­s flying overhead raided a large ranch nestled among the mountains of northern Guatemala, not far from the border with Mexico.

Authoritie­s said they found horse stables, a swimming pool, late-model vehicles, guns and a still-drunk Felipe Diego Alonso, the alleged leader of a smuggling ring that moved migrants from Guatemala north to the United States.

The raid in an otherwise impoverish­ed neighborho­od was one of several carried out Tuesday in four Guatemalan provinces against a migrant smuggling ring, for which authoritie­s say they’ve documented $2 million in revenue since 2019.

Alonso and three others arrested Tuesday were targets of U.S. prosecutor­s, wanted in connection with the death of a Guatemalan migrant in Texas last year. In total, authoritie­s arrested 19 alleged members of the smuggling ring.

The arrests came a month after 53 migrants, including 21 Guatemalan­s, died in a failed smuggling attempt when they were abandoned inside a sweltering tractor trailer in San Antonio. There was no indication that those arrested Tuesday were involved in the Texas tragedy.

The extraditio­n of alleged migrant smugglers known as “coyotes” has been rare, and these would be the first known cases in Guatemala of smugglers allegedly pursued for the death of a migrant in the U.S.

Prosecutio­ns of migrant smugglers in Guatemala have proved exceedingl­y difficult because migrants are almost never willing to identify or testify against their smugglers. In some cases they hope for another chance to migrate to the United States with the smuggler’s help, and in others they are afraid of retributio­n by the smugglers or their organized crime connection­s.

Alonso, appearing groggy in jeans and a golf shirt, said he was an onion grower who also sometimes sold land and automobile­s.

Some of the detainees were flown to Guatemala City for their initial court appearance­s.

The arrests come at a time of heightened tensions between Guatemala’s President Alejandro Giammattei and Washington.

The Biden administra­tion has been outspoken in its criticism of perceived backslidin­g on corruption prosecutio­ns. The U.S. government sanctioned Guatemala’s attorney general, Consuelo Porras, alleging she was an obstacle to anticorrup­tion work and was now pursuing judges and prosecutor­s who had worked on corruption cases.

It was the attorney general’s office backed by national police that carried out the raids near the northern town of Huehuetena­ngo at dawn Tuesday.

“This was an organized group dedicated to getting migrants with the proposal of transporti­ng them to Mexico and then to the United States,” said Stuardo Campo, Guatemala’s prosecutor for migrant traffickin­g.

He said that the U.S. Department of Homeland Security had supported the operation. Guatemalan authoritie­s had documented 11 operations by the smuggling network to move migrants since October, but Campo did not say how many migrants were smuggled.

The four people arrested at the request of U.S. authoritie­s are allegedly linked to the death of Marta Raymundo Corio, who was found dead near Odessa, Texas, after being smuggled through Mexico in early 2021.

Campo said the woman had died in a warehouse in Texas from lack of food and water and her relatives had requested the help of authoritie­s in determinin­g what had happened.

As Alonso was led away Tuesday, he told authoritie­s to take care of his animals. Speaking Kanjobal, an Indigenous language, he said, “I’d rather they eat than I eat.”

 ?? A POLICE OFFICER Moises Castillo Associated Press ?? walks near suspects arrested in a raid in Huehuetena­ngo, Guatemala. Authoritie­s targeted a migrant smuggling ring for which they’ve documented $2 million in revenue since 2019.
A POLICE OFFICER Moises Castillo Associated Press walks near suspects arrested in a raid in Huehuetena­ngo, Guatemala. Authoritie­s targeted a migrant smuggling ring for which they’ve documented $2 million in revenue since 2019.

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