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  • WTF Is Wrong With People?

    17 Found Dead Near 18-Wheeler in Texas
    50 minutes ago Add Top Stories - AP to My Yahoo!


    By T.A. BADGER, Associated Press Writer

    VICTORIA, Texas - Sheriff's deputies found the bodies of 17 suspected illegal immigrants early Wednesday in and around a truck trailer that was packed with dozens of people and left at a South Texas truck stop. Another person who had been locked inside died at a hospital.


    AP Photo


    AP Photo
    Slideshow: Texas Human Cargo Deaths

    17 Found Dead Near 18-Wheeler in Texas
    (AP Video)



    A suspect, believed to have been the driver of the tractor-trailer rig, was arrested hours later, Victoria County District Attorney Dexter Eaves said.


    Authorities wouldn't immediately say if the people inside the trailer were illegal immigrants, though officials from the Mexican Consulate were at the truck stop to help identify the victims.


    "This case involves the greatest loss of life in recent history in what appears to be an alien smuggling case," said Asa Hutchinson, undersecretary for border and transportation security at the Department of Homeland Security.


    Hutchinson said the federal agency was working with local authorities to help apprehend those involved.


    "This grim discovery is a horrific reminder of the callous disregard smugglers have for their human cargo," he said in Washington.


    Deputies found the bodies shortly after 2 a.m. when they answered a reported disturbance inside a refrigerated trailer at a truck stop near Victoria, said sheriff's investigator Stuart Posey.


    As many as 40 other people may have fled the trailer into nearby fields and woods after the back door was opened, Sheriff Michael Ratcliff said.


    "Nineteen of those individuals have been located. They are now at our local community center, receiving medical attention, water and food," he said. He wouldn't say if the refrigeration unit had been operating.


    Jerrel Robinowich, a spokesman for Detar Hospital Navarro, said about 60 people were in the back of the truck with little or no ventilation. "And you can just imagine the consequences of that."


    At least six men were taken to Detar Hospital, including one who was in critical condition. Eight others were taken to Citizens Medical Center, where one died.


    The men taken to Detar ranged in age from 20 to 47 and all suffered from heat-related injuries, Robinowich said.


    "It's brutally hot down here," he said. The National Weather Service (news - web sites) said it was 74 degrees with 93 percent humidity at 2 a.m. The high Tuesday was 91, one degree shy of a record for the date.


    Ratcliff wouldn't say how long the people may have been in the back of the trailer, where they came from and where they might have been heading.


    Asked if any children were among them, Ratcliff said, "We have not identified anyone, and we're not going to speculate on ages."


    He said the trailer had arrived at the truck stop on Highway 77, about 230 miles north of the Mexican border, about an hour before authorities were notified. The driver had unhitched the cab and left the trailer behind.


    Border Patrol agents were searching the area on foot and with a helicopter.





    Marco Nunez, a spokesman for the Mexican Consulate in Houston, said consulate officials were in Victoria and working with the sheriff's office and immigration officials to identify the victims.

    "What happened is tragic but we have yet to confirm any of the details of the case," Nunez said.

    Bodies were still in the back of the trailer late Wednesday morning as investigators gathered evidence from the scene.

    There have been several cases of illegal immigrants dying in sealed containers as they are being brought secretly into the country.

    In October, workers at a grain elevator in Denison, Iowa, discovered the badly decomposed bodies of 11 migrants in a grain car that was being prepared for loading. Authorities estimated the four women and seven men had been trapped inside the grain car for at least four months and died of dehydration and hyperthermia, or overheating.

    Last July, authorities found two dead immigrants and at least 28 others crammed into the back of a sweltering, unventilated tractor-trailer truck during a 600-mile trip from El Paso to Dallas.

    In 1987, Border Patrol agents found 18 Mexican immigrants dead and one barely alive in a boxcar left on a rail siding in Sierra Blanca, Texas. The survivor told authorities the man who smuggled them across the border put them aboard a boxcar in El Paso and locked the door. Temperatures in the boxcar reached 130 degrees.

  • #2
    so sad to read this thread


    sometimes I wonder how cruel life can be

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    • #3
      I just heard the story on NPR and was absolutely appalled at the reckless disregard for life by the smugglers.
      Brains, Beauty and Brawn

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      • #4

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        • #5
          totally fucked up!

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          • #6
            I think the smugglers didn't realize what would happen. I seriously doubt they thought anyone was going to die.

            Seriously tho.. would you get into a sealed tractor trailor with 60 other people on a 90 degree day? Especially when you know you're going to be in there for hours? Don't just blame the smugglers.
            RIP BigJim33 & GearedUp: You are sorely missed my friends.

            Hindsight is always 20/20. But looking back it's still a bit fuzzy.

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            • #7
              I understand your position perfectly Ironfist.

              I agree... it's hard to feel sorry for someone who got themselves into trouble by breaking the law. They took the risks and they were aware of the dangers.
              RIP BigJim33 & GearedUp: You are sorely missed my friends.

              Hindsight is always 20/20. But looking back it's still a bit fuzzy.

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              • #8
                They come for the fruit picking season. You think any of those giant fruit companies that give you your OJ in the morning are gonna be able to get U.S. citizens to work for $20 a day?

                No way, Hombre. But to a dirt poor Mexican, that's a lot of dinero.

                The U.S. wont post enough border guards in order to let just enough get through. You don' think they'd be able to stop everyone if they wanted to?

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                • #9
                  crazy
                  Go big or go home!

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                  • #10
                    Same with the Chinese, they'll come in shipping containers from China. I remember reading about some Bangladeshi was frozen in the belly of a Jumbo jet after he hung onto the wheel as it took off for America. When the landing gear was deployed over NYC he dropped and broke through the roof of someone's house, he was frozen solid.

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                    • #11
                      The immigrants are poor, uneducated and looking for a better life. Human life was loss here and someone made money so that is the point. I can't sit in judgement of them living a good life in America.

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                      • #12
                        really tragic and sad...

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