8 people found dead, 30 injured in tractor trailer in apparent human-trafficking crim

B00Mer

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8 people found dead, 30 injured in tractor trailer in apparent human-trafficking crime

Eight people were found dead and 30 others injured, inside a semitrailer overnight in a Walmart parking lot in San Antonio, Texas, in what officials are describing as a "human trafficking crime."

At a press conference at the scene early Sunday morning, local police and fire officials said the U.S. Department of Homeland Security Immigration and Customs Enforcement has also been called in to help investigate.

In addition to the dead, authorities said 17 people in the truck were taken to area hospitals in serious condition, and another 13 were transported with less severe injuries. Many suffered from heat stroke and dehydration. The group in the truck included adults in their 20s and 30s, and at least two young children.

The driver of the truck, who was not identified, was arrested and could federal and state charges.

Speaking to reporters, San Antonio Police Chief William McManus said authorities were notified after midnight by a Walmart employee, who had been approached by someone who had been in the truck, asking for water.

"We're looking at a human trafficking crime here," McManus said.

San Antonio Fire Chief Charles Hood, who stood alongside McManus at the press conference, said firefighters arrived on the scene at 12:26 a.m., and began pulling the people out of the truck, which had no working air conditioning. In a phone interview with CNN later in the morning, Hood said all of the dead were adult males and that some may have suffered brain damage from the intense heat conditions inside the truck.

Authorities said they are investigating where the truck arrived from, and said they don't yet know how long it had been parked. But surveillance video from the store showed that a number of vehicles entered the parking lot and "picked up lots of folks that were in that trailer that survived the trip," McManus said.

Some of the people who had been in the truck ran into the woods, he said. The area was searched, and another attempt will be made in the morning.

While he called it a "horrific tragedy," the police chief said the discovery "is not an isolated incident. This happens quite frequently ... fortunately there are people who survived, but this happens all the time,” he said.

ABC News' Amanda Maile and Matt Foster contributed to this report.

source: 8 dead, 30 injured found inside semitrailer at Walmart parking lot in Texas - ABC News

www.youtube.com/watch?v=VBUeXdgwQxE
 

tay

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And we have to consider just how bad are the circumstances where these people came from that they felt their only alternative was to sneak across the border.


The whole thing is just so cruel........
 

Walter

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Why would they want to come and live in the US? Don't they know Tump is POTUS?
 

Danbones

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Illegal immigration along the southern border is down around 70 % in the last 6 months.

I read somewhere though that the Coyotes love to off their prey after they get the money, and if not them then, the cartel types take out the drug mules so they can't report who they were delivering to, or from, or to send a message to the other drug mules that they ought to stay in line...
or else.

Not according to many on this forum.

They seem to think life would be better in places like Syria, Libya, Iraq, Yemen, the EU or Ukraine then it is under Trump in the US.
 

Danbones

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nine, ten, do I hear eleven ..eleven...ten is going...do I here eleven...give me an eleven...
 

B00Mer

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I thought Trumps wall was suppose to stop this??

The driver of this rig, hope he gets the death penalty.. if possible. (or hand him over to the families of those who perished)

At least the people who perished will be returned to their loved ones, so many try to make it across the desert and are never to be found again, bones bleached by the sun, the family never knows what happen to their loved ones.
 

spaminator

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Driver of Texas trailer indicted for 10 passengers’ deaths
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Wednesday, August 16, 2017 11:09 PM EDT | Updated: Wednesday, August 16, 2017 11:12 PM EDT
SAN ANTONIO — The driver of a tractor-trailer packed with people illegally entering the United States in an alleged human smuggling operation was indicted Wednesday on charges related to the deaths of 10 people inside.
James Matthew Bradley Jr. was indicted Wednesday by a federal grand jury in San Antonio on five counts, including a count of illegally transporting immigrants for financial gain, resulting in death, and a separate count of conspiracy to transport immigrants illegally, resulting in death.
Those charges carry the possibility of the death penalty. A spokesman for the U.S. Attorney’s office in San Antonio declined to say Wednesday if prosecutors would pursue the death penalty. One of Bradley’s attorneys did not immediately return a message seeking comment.
Bradley was also indicted on two counts related to illegally transporting immigrants resulting in serious bodily injury, and one count of firearm possession by a convicted felon. The indictment alleges Bradley, who pleaded guilty in 1997 to a felony domestic violence case in Colorado, was in possession of a .38-calibre pistol.
At least 39 people were inside the trailer as it drove from the border city of Laredo to San Antonio, about 150 miles (240 kilometres) north. The trailer’s refrigeration system was broken, and investigators said passengers struggled to breathe as the temperature rose to dangerous levels. One witness told The Associated Press he heard people crying and asking for water.
Twenty-two survivors have been released from the hospital and are being held in detention as potential witnesses against Bradley. Two survivors remained hospitalized as of Wednesday.
Four of the survivors testified before the grand jury, said Michael McCrum, a San Antonio attorney appointed to represent them.
“They came to America wanting just to work, as they could not find a job in Mexico that could support their families. And yet, the circumstances of what happened brought them to this situation,” McCrum said in an email. “They were asked to tell the truth about how they suffered, and they did.”
Investigators have said they believe Bradley was part of a broader conspiracy funding and planning the smuggling operation, though they have not announced any additional arrests or charges.
According to a criminal complaint released in July, Bradley told investigators that the trailer had been sold and he was transporting it for his boss from Iowa to Brownsville, Texas. But said he had driven to Laredo and stopped twice there before driving back to San Antonio, in the opposite direction from Brownsville.
He denied knowing people were inside the trailer. After hearing banging and shaking, he opened the door and was “surprised when he was run over by ‘Spanish’ people and knocked to the ground,” according to the criminal complaint.
Human smuggling operations often linked to Mexican drug cartels are a major problem for law enforcement along the United States’ southern border. Border Patrol agents in West Texas found 20 people crammed in a semitrailer just this week, one day after police in the border city of Edinburg discovered 16 people inside another trailer.
Most of the people known to have been on board were from Mexico. Others are believed to have fled from the truck after it stopped.
The U.S. Attorney’s office identified eight of the 10 people who died.
According to the U.S. Attorney, seven were from Mexico: 27-year-old Ruben Hernandez Vargas; 21-year-old Osbaldo Rodriguez Cerda; 26-year-old Jorge Reyes Noveron; 36-year-old Jose Rodriguez Aspeitia; 37-year-old Benjamin Martinez Arredondo; 24-year-old Ricardo Martinez Esparza; and Mariano Lopez Cano, whose age is unknown. Another person, Frank Fuentes, was from Guatemala. A Guatemalan diplomat previously told the AP that Fuentes had been deported and was trying to return to his family in Maryland.
Lopez Cano and Martinez Esparza died at an area hospital.
Driver of Texas trailer indicted for 10 passengers’ deaths
 

tay

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Sixty immigrants have been found in a load of ice-covered broccoli in a refrigerated trailer that was searched at a South Texas border checkpoint, federal officials said Monday.

A U.S. Customs and Border Protection statement said nobody was hurt and the trucker was arrested at the Falfurrias checkpoint.

Agents on Saturday opened the padlocked trailer and found dozens of immigrants amid pallets of broccoli lined with ice.

Customs officials say the temperature inside the trailer was 49 degrees.

The immigrants -- from Guatemala, Mexico, El Salvador and Hondurans -- were detained and being processed for entering the U.S. illegally. The trucker faces immigrant smuggling charges.

Officials didn't immediately say where the produce was headed or provide further details on the investigation.

Last week, Border Patrol agents found 16 immigrants locked inside a semitrailer at a gas station in the South Texas city of Edinburg and 20 immigrants crammed into a locked semitrailer at an Interstate 10 checkpoint southwest of El Paso.

All were in good condition.


60 Immigrants Found in Refrigerated Truck Trailer in Texas - NBC New York
 

tay

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The driver of a semitrailer packed with at least 39 immigrants, 10 of whom died, pleaded guilty Monday to making the deadly smuggling run.

James Matthew Bradley Jr., 61, pleaded Monday in federal court in San Antonio to one conspiracy count and a count of transporting the immigrants resulting in death. He faces up to life imprisonment when he's sentenced on Jan. 22.

The Clearwater, Florida, man could have faced the death penalty had he gone to trial.

A co-defendant, Pedro Silva Segura, 47, still faces two conspiracy counts, including one of conspiracy to transport and harbor undocumented immigrants for financial gain resulting in death. The Laredo, Texas, man also is charged with two counts of transporting undocumented immigrants resulting in serious bodily injury and placing lives in jeopardy. He remains in custody in Laredo without bond awaiting transfer to San Antonio. No trial date has been set.

"Today's admission of guilt by Mr. Bradley helps to close the door on one of the conspirators responsible for causing the tragic loss of life and wreaking havoc on those who survived this horrific incident," said Shane Folden, special agent in charge of Homeland Security Investigations in San Antonio.

Bradley initially had denied knowing anyone was inside the trailer, telling investigators that the trailer had been sold and he was transporting it for his boss from Iowa to Brownsville, Texas. But he said he had driven to Laredo, Texas, and stopped twice there before driving back to San Antonio, in the opposite direction from Brownsville.

Driver of deadly immigrant smuggling run pleads guilty - KTVA 11 - The Voice of Alaska