As business booms for people smugglers using trucks in Texas, risks grow
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[July 01, 2022]
By Ted Hesson, Laura Gottesdiener and Kristina Cooke
WASHINGTON/
MONTERREY (Reuters) - Months
before dozens of migrants died inside a sweltering tractor-trailer this
week that had slipped through a Border Patrol checkpoint on a Texas
highway, another truck driver was making the same journey carrying 52
migrants.
Roderick DeWayne Chisley was stopped on December 17, 2021, driving a
stolen rig on the I-35 highway, which runs north from Laredo to San
Antonio. According to court documents, Chisley said his payment for
agreeing to drive the vehicle with no questions asked was $50,000.
Experts say human smugglers are increasingly using 18-wheeler trucks to
move large numbers of migrants, and court records reviewed by Reuters -
including from Chisley's case - offer a detailed look at how the process
plays out.
Criminal organizations can take advantage of corruptible drivers, a
growing volume of cargo traffic difficult to scan and a record number of
migrants crossing into the United States, experts and U.S. officials
said.
Human smuggling by tractor-trailer has increased exponentially in the
past decade, according to Craig Larrabee, an acting special agent in
charge with the investigative arm of U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement (ICE).
The agency said it investigated over 1,000 human smuggling cases from
January to date, but did not provide a breakdown of the incidents by
type.
Previously, more migrants would be smuggled by "mom and pop" criminals
in small vehicles, Larrabee said, but as trans-national cartels have
taken over the illicit business, profits have become paramount.
"People are now treated completely as a commodity," he said. "Each body
represents an amount of money. It doesn't represent a family, a father,
son, mother or daughter."
MAXIMUM GAIN
The growing trafficking trend around San Antonio, Texas, was thrust into
the spotlight this week after 53 migrants suffocated in a truck left on
the side of I-35.
In what appears to be a common pattern, the victims of the tragedy had
already crossed into the United States before boarding the truck to
evade U.S. authorities inland, officials said.
In Chisley's 2021 case, two Guatemalan migrants said they entered the
United States illegally by crossing the Rio Grande river and then
boarded the tractor-trailer, according to court records.
Aristedes Jimenez, a former ICE official in San Antonio, said the
smugglers gather together groups of migrants who have recently crossed
the U.S.-Mexico border illegally in various ways in U.S. stash houses
and then board them on trucks. "They wait until they have enough
people," Jimenez said. "They want maximum gain."
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Law enforcement officers work at the scene where people were found
dead inside a trailer truck in San Antonio, Texas, U.S. June 27,
2022. REUTERS/Kaylee Greenlee Beal
The U.S. Border Patrol maintains a network of some
110 checkpoints along U.S. roads, the majority of which are located
25 to 100 miles (40-160 km) inland of the country's borders.
Border Patrol arrests at those checkpoints only make up about 2% of
overall detentions of migrants, U.S. government data shows.
The truck carrying the 53 migrants who died passed a checkpoint that
lacks some of the high-tech equipment available at the border, said
Representative Henry Cuellar, a Democrat whose district includes the
outskirts of San Antonio.
The sheer volume of truck traffic makes comprehensive monitoring a
huge challenge and increases the number of potential drivers for
cartels to recruit, said Ernesto Gaytan Jr., chairman of the Texas
Trucking Association.
Smugglers try to lure drivers at the state's truck stops, offering
them thousands of dollars to transport migrants further north, he
said.
More than 2.5 million trucks transited northbound through the port
of entry in Laredo, Texas - 157 miles (253 km) south of San Antonio
- in 2021, a more than 50% increase over a decade ago.
As the president of the Laredo-based trucking company Super
Transport International Ltd., which has over 200 trucks in
operation, Gaytan has prohibited his drivers from stopping and
refueling at truck stops in Laredo to keep them from being targeted
by smugglers.
Chisley would have received about $1,000 per migrant, according to
court documents. A driver arrested less than two weeks later at the
same checkpoint on I-35 with 18 migrants in the back of his truck
expected a similar rate of payment, court documents in a separate
case showed.
In May, a federal jury in Laredo convicted Chisley of transporting
immigrants in the country illegally and he faces up to 10 years in
prison, according to the U.S. Department of Justice. Chisley's
lawyers did not respond to a request for comment.
(Reporting by Ted Hesson in Washington, Laura Gottesdiener in
Monterrey, and Kristina Cooke in San Francisco; Additional reporting
by Jason Buch in San Antonio and Randi Love in New York; Editing by
Mica Rosenberg and Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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