Listen - Sponsor - Stations


Return Home
Future & Past Guests
Affiliate Syndication
About Bryant McGill
Meet Your Co-Hosts
Friends of McGill Live
Event Photographs
Program Archives
OUR COMMUNITY
Request an Interview
Sponsor Information
Apply to be a Guest
Guestbook & Comments
Contact Us
McGill's Online Works
Featured Treaty Signers
Vision Board
Int'l Photo Journal
Universality of Suffering
Books by Guests
Night Riders Magazine
Xammon Magazine
GUEST WEBSEARCH
Media Links
Top News Stories
World News Archives
Bryant's Official Site
The Goodwill Treaty
McGill Charities
Candle Vigils
Give Yourself
No Secrets, No Fear


Carmen Electra
Michael Jackson
Matt Damon
Montel Williams
Ray Romano
Evander Holyfield
Me & Cheech
Ray Lewis
Boomer



Light a Candle
Heal the World



Interesting World News



Discuss this Article | Post Another Article for Discussion

Desert's Heat Deadly For 7 Illegals

At least seven illegal entrants have died since Thursday while crossing the U.S.-Mexican border southwest of Tucson as the heat reached unbearable levels.
June 9, 2002

At least seven illegal entrants have died since Thursday while crossing the U.S.-Mexican border southwest of Tucson as the heat reached unbearable levels.

The victims succumbed one by one in a slow-motion disaster that gained momentum Friday and Saturday, forcing law-enforcement officers and ambulance services to scramble to rescue at least 70 other border-crossers in peril. At least eight have been hospitalized since Thursday, said U.S. Border Patrol spokesman Ryan Scudder.

Ajo Ambulance set up a triage station to handle the dozens of dehydrated migrants found Friday and early Saturday. At the Mexican consulate in Tucson, employees worked at a frenzied pace, helping to identify victims, notify their families and care for survivors, even as more reports came in.

Agents of the Border Patrol's emergency-response team, who have been working almost non-stop since Thursday, were involved in additional rescue operations late Saturday.

In one case late Friday night, the Border Patrol received a cell-phone call from someone who said he was with a group of 43 people, Scudder said.

"One has already died, and the others may die also," the caller said, according to Scudder.

Based on the caller's description of the area, agents, aided by the Pima County Sheriff's Department were able to find the group near the Ajo Mountains.

Another of the victims in the rash of border deaths was a young Mexican woman traveling with her husband and 2-year-old son. Her husband, Reyes Paez Martinez, described the family's ill-fated trip during an interview in a Tucson motel Saturday as he waited to return with his son to their impoverished hometown in central Mexico.

Paez Martinez, 21, his wife, Norma Rodriguez Amado, 22, and their son Alexander were staying in Sonoyta, Sonora, Thursday when their guide rousted them from their rented room to make the cross-border journey, Paez Martinez said. There were seven people in their group, including the guide.

It was noontime, and they piled into a pickup and traveled for an hour across the border in a remote area, he said, an area that was probably in Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument. The truck stopped near a highway and the group ran fast away from the paved road for about five minutes.

Then, during the hottest part of the day, when the temperature reached 108 degrees in the shade, the group started to walk, Paez Martinez said. He carried young Alexander on his shoulders.

Within two hours, Paez Martinez said, his wife collapsed. But the guide insisted on continuing, and left him behind with his wife, their son, and a friend who also was in the group.

"She was chubby, so I think the heat harmed her," he said.

Within 45 minutes, she was dead, Paez Martinez said, and they decided that since they were running out of water, they should go find help. After a couple more hours, they heard Border Patrol agents shouting and went to meet the agents.

"I yelled at them. I said 'Amigos, I'm here!' " he recalled. "I said, 'I need help. I need you to help me bring out my wife.' "

Reaching this point in the story, Paez Martinez started to sob, even as young Alexander nodded off, unaware of his father's anguish or the reason his mother was gone.

"I tell him that she went to the store," Paez Martinez said.

Rodriguez Amado was one of at least two victims who perished a relatively short time into their cross-border treks, said David Aguilar, chief of the Border Patrol's Tucson Sector.

"The last call I had this morning was about a young woman that died right on the border, literally 20 meters from the fence, right there on the border road," Aguilar said. "I think that goes to the fact that these people are already in distress long before they reach the border."

In the case of the group found near the Ajo Mountains, when agents arrived, the caller and his cellphone were no longer with them, Scudder said. That could indicate the caller was the group's guide or was otherwise related to the people-smuggling operation.

"They often will carry a cellphone in order to call for the load car," Scudder said.

A man suspected of smuggling that group was arrested and in Border Patrol custody Saturday, Scudder said. It appeared he was apprehended separately from the rest of the group but was identified by other members as their smuggler.

Those with stamina are also falling victim to the heat far north of the border, near Arizona 86. Tohono O'odham Police Chief Larry Seligman said that while driving from Tucson to Sells Saturday morning, he saw about 10 border-crossers in smaller groups by the side of the road needing help.

Six of the seven known victims died on the Tohono O'odham Reservation, Seligman said. When he left in the afternoon, officers were making a run to buy Gatorade and water for another group of dehydrated illegal entrants.

"We've got to get people not to do this. It's too dangerous," Seligman said.

Paez Martinez said he was unaware of the danger when he brought his wife and young son to the border. He said he had crossed in early 1999, when his wife was three months pregnant with their son. He lived in Tennessee and Florida for nearly three years, then returned to his hometown in Morelos state in December and saw Alexander for the first time. Soon after, he had the bug to return to the United States.

"I said, 'Honey, let's go. It's really nice,' " he said.

Around 300 of the town's 11,000 inhabitants have left for the United States, and none had significant problems, Paez Martinez said. He didn't consider that they wouldn't make it.

"I regret it, but now I can't do anything. It's too late."
By Tim Steller and Ignacio Ibarra, ARIZONA DAILY STAR
Link to Article Source


Universal 7 Radio | gtbroadcasting.com | GlobalEnquirer.com | Comment


  News in Mexico
  1. Water Stops for Illegal Aliens
  2. Bypassing US Sovereignty
  3. Border-Militia Leader Spells Out Strategy
  4. Coast Guard Steps Up Patrols Anticipating More Illegal Haitian Immigrants
  5. SC Women Allegedly Paid To Marry Illegal Aliens In Green Card Plot
  6. Mexican Army Torturing Soldiers - Military Denies Allegations
  7. Illegal Immigrants Rally for Legal Status
  8. Eleven Decomposing Bodies Found in Railroad Car in Iowa
  9. Canada-US Cracks Immigration Smuggling Ring
  10. Struggles After Isidore
  11. Many Hispanics Support Tancredo on Illegal Aliens
  12. Averts Nationwide Oil Strike
  13. Mexicos Banks Tight-Fisted with Entrepreneurs
  14. Illegal Feared Lost on Niagara
  15. Border
  16. Border War Mexican Police Join Drug Lords
  17. Lax New INS Limits on Mideast Visitors
  18. Kidnapping Is Growth Industry in Mexico
  19. Sen Tancredo Seeks Deportation of Illegal Mexican Student
  20. IRS Picks Up On Border Agents Scam
  21. Campfires of Illegal Aliens Blamed in
  22. Illegals Trample Sensitive Border Regions and Deface Our Monuments
  23. Criminals Use Semis to Smuggle in Illegal Aliens
  24. Mexican ID Card Gets Illegal Aliens
  25. Increasing Alarm Over US Borders
  26. Agents Leaving Border Patrol in Droves, Union Says
  27. Two Dead, 14 Hospitalized In Truck
  28. Judge Rules Immigrants Can Seek Amnesty
  29. Gephardt Bill Legalize 4 Million Illegals
  30. US Banks, Cities Accept Mexican Illegals ID
  31. Mexicans Line Up in Chicago for ID
  32. Illegal Refugees Low INS Priority
  33. Australia Calls Off Hunt For Escapees
  34. Top Agent Says US Must Care For Illegals
  35. 7 Killed, 30 Hurt In East County Crash
  36. Do We Want Mexifornia
  37. Troops for Border Sought to Control Illegals
  38. Tancredo Wants Troops Now Along US Borders
  39. Illegal Immigrants Cost US Taxpayers
  40. Expired Law Creates Loophole for Illegals
  41. End Policy Of Death
  42. Immigrants Shot While Crossing to US Congressman Pushing To Militarize Border
  43. Mexicans Southwest US is Ours
  44. Illegals in US Exploit Loophole
  45. Deserts Heat Deadly For 7 Illegals
  46. US Demands Probe Of Border Act Of War
  47. Lawmakers Dont Use Cops On Illegals
  48. INS Announces Six Rescue Beacons
  49. To Investigate Border Incident
  50. Is Building 10 Border Towers
  51. Mexicans Still Flood Border Despite Deaths
  52. Illegal Immigrants Concern England
  53. Illegal Chinese Immigrants Captured After Swimming Ashore Naked in California
  54. Forgotten Widows, Death in the DesertOne Year Later
  55. Battling Over Rights Of Non-Citizens
  56. Two Brothers Accused in Plot to Smuggle
  57. Mexican Government Erects Rescue Towers To Watch For Migrants In Danger
  58. Mexican Army Shoots At US Agent
  59. INS Confirms Border Incident With Mexico
  60. INS Confirms Act of War Committed at US Mexican Border
  61. Border Patrol Agent Fired On
  62. Arizona House Passes Wage Protection
  63. Risky Crossing
  64. Nearly 10 of Foreigners Illegally Getting
  65. Illegal Aliens Want Drivers Licenses
  66. Guards Border Duties Are Cut
  67. Mexican Soldiers in Border Crossings
  68. Families of 11 Dead Illegals to Sue US
  69. Coalition Sues to Delay Mexican Trucks
  70. Bill Dont Pay an Illegal Worker, Pay a Fine
  71. Government Worker in US Fired for Speaking English
  72. The New American - Aztlan and Amalgamation - May 6, 2002
  73. Smuggler Brags Of Bringing 500,000-800,000 Illegals Into US
  74. Illegal Cargo
  75. Could US Give Terrorists Green Cards
  76. Border Patrol Encounters Mexican Soldiers
  77. Concern Over Terror-Human Smuggling Link - Illegals a 10 Billion Global Business
  78. Census 100,000 Mideast Illegals in US
  79. Reconquering US Southwest
  80. Arab Terrorists Crossing Border
  81. Relations May Help Limited Migrant Plan
  82. Polarized Congress Hears Foxs Proposal
  83. More Surprises Expected From Fox
  84. Dreams Deferred For Illegals
  85. Undocumented Workers Economys Hidden Fuel
  86. To Put Water On Its Side Of The Border
  87. Immigration Reform Years Away, Fox Says
  88. 40 Miles Past Border, Crossers know Theyre Home Free
  89. Big Changes May Come
  America General
  Asian Anxiety
  Cosmic
  Earth Changes
  Espionage
  Europe
  Financial
  Genetics
  Global
  Mars
  Mexico
  Mideast
  Nukes
  NWO
  Persecution
  Precious Metals
  Prophetic
  Signs
  Strange Stuff
  Technology
  Terrorism
  The Pale Horse
  Unrest
  Yellowstone

FAIR USE NOTICE. Many of the stories on this site contain copyrighted material whose use has not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are making this material available in its efforts to advance the understanding of environmental issues and sustainability, human rights, economic and political democracy, and issues of social justice. We believe this constitutes a 'fair use' of the copyrighted material as provided for in Section 107 of the US Copyright Law. If you wish to use such copyrighted material for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use'...you must obtain permission from the copyright owner. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. For more information go to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml



Where applicable, U.S. & Int'l Copyrights by Bryant McGill. All Rights Reserved. Notices and Fair Use. McGill Trademark Licensed from the House of Gill, Corp Sole.