Picture of the vehicle that had an accident. |
organization, federal officials said Thursday.
The driver, a U.S. citizen, and two others in the vehicle are believed to be members of the smuggling organization, Leticia Zamarripa, a spokeswoman for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, said in a statement.
The driver was
one of the individuals who died in the accident, while the other five
killed were immigrants in the U.S. illegally.
Officials say the vehicle was packed with the three smuggling ring members and 13 people who were in the country illegally.
Those
being smuggled in the vehicle were adults from Honduras, Guatemala and
Mexico, Zamarripa said. One of the smuggling suspects is from Mexico,
and the nationality of the other is unknown, she said.
The chase began early Thursday as officers in Edna, 90 miles southwest
of Houston, tried to stop the 2003 Ford Explorer for a traffic
violation, said city police Chief Clinton Wooldridge.
As the vehicle veered onto Highway 59, the driver seemed to overcorrect and the SUV flipped several times, police said.
Four people died at the scene and two more died at hospitals, Wooldridge said.
"It is a tragedy and it is a horrible situation," Wooldridge said at a news conference Thursday afternoon.
Two
of the immigrants were being treated at a hospital in nearby Victoria
for fractures, while another was in critical condition at a Houston
hospital, Wooldridge said. The other immigrants who were injured in the
crash were treated at Jackson County Hospital in Edna and later released
into the custody of U.S. Border Patrol agents.
Two
people who ran from the scene were tracked down and detained. A third
person was found around 3 p.m. Thursday across the roadway from the
crash site, near a home, Wooldridge said.
"We've been in contact
with consulates and they are working with the medical examiner's offices
to try and find these people's families," he said.The car had been modified so it would hold 16 people, with the center seat having been removed, Wooldridge said.
"I
believe the Ford Explorer is built on a half-ton chassis and it had ¾
of a ton of people. So that probably had something to do with the
instability of the vehicle," he said.
Last
year, a South Texas teenager was sentenced to 20 years in prison after
being convicted in a 2012 accident that killed nine immigrants. The
teenager had been fleeing Border Patrol agents when the van he was
driving with at least 17 immigrants inside flipped. Also, a Mexican man
was sentenced to 45 years in prison over a crash that left seven
immigrants dead in 2013.
Wooldridge
said his agency and others in the area have a lot of experience
stopping northbound vehicles that are transporting drugs and immigrants
in the country illegally.
"That's fairly common in our area," he said.
Source: AP
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