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Eight undocumented immigrants were found dead in a semi parked at a Southwest San Antonio Walmart on Sunday, July 23, 2017. |
Eight people were found dead Sunday inside a truck in a Walmart parking
lot in San Antonio, Texas in what police said appeared to be "human
trafficking crime."
Another 28 people were injured 20 of them severely and were being
treated at seven local hospitals, San Antonio Police Chief William McManus and
Fire Chief Charles Hood told reporters.
He said the truck driver had been arrested.
"We got a call from a Walmart employee about a welfare check in a
tractor-trailer that was parked on the lot here," McManus told a news
conference.
"He was approached by someone from that truck, who was asking for
water."
The employee returned with the water and then called the police who
"found eight people dead in the back of that trailer," the police
chief said, calling it a "horrific tragedy."
He said store security footage showed that some vehicles came to pick up
some travellers who were on the truck and who had made it out alive.
"We're looking at a human trafficking crime this evening," he
added.
It was not immediately clear how many people may have survived and fled,
McManus said.
Hood said the air conditioner in the trailer was not working.
"We started extricating patients out of the back of a semi-truck …
we had another 20 patients that were either in extremely critical condition or
very serious condition and they have been transported to a number of
hospitals."
San Antonio lays a few hours’ drive from the border with Mexico's Nuevo
Leon state. Weather in the area has been hot and dry.
Federal immigration officials with Immigration and Customs Enforcement
have also been notified, the police chief said.
The deadly discovery, sadly "is not an isolated incident. This
happens quite frequently under cover of night," McManus said.
Illegal migration over the US border with Mexico is an everyday fact.
Most of the migrants are from Mexico and Central America seeking better-paying
work in the United States.
This time, "fortunately there are people who survived, but this
happens all the time," he said.
There have been many cases of migrants often scores at a time stranded
and killed in northern Mexico when the truck they are being moved in was
abandoned in heat by drivers.
The smugglers in their haste to evade
authorities often leave passengers without air conditioning, and often without
air to breathe.
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