Crash kills 14 aliens; 23 crammed in truck

A pickup is hauled away from the scene of a fatal crash Sunday night near Goliad, Texas.
A pickup is hauled away from the scene of a fatal crash Sunday night near Goliad, Texas.

— With little more than photographs and fingerprints, authorities were trying to identify 14 suspected illegal aliens who were killed when a pickup packed with nearly two dozen people crashed in south Texas in one of the nation’s deadliest alien-smuggling accidents.

Th e victims - men, women and children - were carrying toothbrushes, toothpaste and changes of socks and underwear but no identification. Authorities said the white Ford F-250 was carrying 23 aliens from Mexico, Honduras and Guatemala when it veered off a highway and crashed into trees Sunday night.

“It’s the worst single-vehicle wreck I’ve worked in my 40 years in the funeral business,” said Adrian Fulton, a local funeral home director who picked up the 11 people who died at the scene.

Fulton estimated their ages from 8 to 30, and he said Homeland Security Investigations agents came Monday to photograph and fingerprint the dead.

Federal immigration agents are looking into the human-smuggling aspect of the case, while public safety authorities are investigating the cause of the crash in Goliad County, about 150 miles northeast of the Mexican border. The crash scene is less than an hour’s drive from the site of the nation’s most deadly alien-smuggling case, where 19 aliens died in 2003 after being placed in a sweltering trailer.

Six of those who died in Sunday’s crash were still inside the cab of the mangled vehicle and one was in the truck’s bed when emergency crews arrived at the scene, Texas Department of Public Safety spokesman Gerald Bryant said.

Others were scattered on the roadway and in a ditch between the pavement and the fence line where the truck stopped.

Bryant said he saw at least two young children among the dead.

“This is the most people I’ve seen in any passenger vehicle, and I’ve been an officer for 38 years,” he said.

Sunday’s accident happened about 6:30 p.m. on a rural yet busy stretch of U.S. 59, which runs diagonally from the Mexican border at Laredo to Houston before turning north and running to the Canadian border.

The pickup was heading north when it drove off the right side of the highway near the unincorporated community of Berclair, about 90 miles southeast of San Antonio, and struck two large trees, Bryant said.

He said it could be another week or two before the Department of Public Safety accident reconstruction team finishes its work, and that investigators were trying to confirm the name of the driver, who was killed at the scene.

The truck was registered in Houston to someone other than the driver, Bryant said. A woman who answered at the address where the truck was registered said she was the daughter of the man listed as the owner.

But she said they had sold the truck and it was no longer theirs. When asked when the sale took place, she hung up.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement spokesman Greg Palmore said the dead were 11 men and three females and had origins in Mexico, Guatemala and Honduras.

Bryant said several of the survivors of Sunday’s crash had life-threatening injuries. He did not have their official conditions but described them as “very serious.” The injured were taken to hospitals in San Antonio, Victoria and Corpus Christi.

Front Section, Pages 3 on 07/24/2012

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