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CBS News
US to replace inefficient, pilot program virtual fence on Mexican ...
International Herald Tribune, France - 19 hours ago
The project is made up of nine towers along a 28-mile (45-kilometer) section of border straddling the border crossing at Sasabe, southwest of Tucson. ...
HOMELAND SECURITY Dallas Morning News
US government scraps virtual border fence prototype TG Daily
Virtual fence on Mexican border deemed insufficient... | KXNet.com ... Reiten Television KXMB Bismarck
all 301 news articles »
Virtual fence on Mexican border deemed insufficient
The Associated Press - 8 hours ago
But that's just a fraction of the several hundred illegal immigrants believed to cross the border daily near southwest of Tucson. The virtual fence is part ...
Building wall no substitute for comprehensive reform
Lancaster Eagle Gazette, OH - Apr 21, 2008
A week ago, it was reported that illegal immigrants have resorted to torches - including high-powered plasma torches, hacksaws, giant ladders and even ...

Los Angeles Times
Barbara Davidson / Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times, CA - Apr 21, 2008
asked Ernesto Cortes Jr., Southwest regional director of the Industrial Areas Foundation, a leadership development organization. ...
Imagine, immigrants impact economy
Idaho Mountain Express and Guide, ID - Apr 15, 2008
This tale of woe is emerging all over the West and Southwest, as illegal immigrants flee communities engaged in anti-immigrant dragnets or lose work in the ...
Cops: Texas campus locked down after illegal-immigrant chase
The Associated Press - Apr 16, 2008
A&M-Kingsville has enrollment of about 6200 and 1100 faculty and staff, on a campus located 40 miles southwest of Corpus Christi.
State Helped Roswell Co. Accused Of Using Illegals: Firm's exec ...
TMCnet - Apr 20, 2008
But federal documents allege that nearly 50 of those jobs in recent years have gone to illegal immigrants from Mexico and Central America. ...
Illegal Immigrants Often Die Anonymously
The Associated Press - Apr 1, 2008
More than 2000 illegal immigrants have died in the Southwest since 2002, and many are nameless in death ? buried as anonymous victims of heat stroke, ...
Texas & Southwest briefs
Dallas Morning News, TX - Apr 15, 2008
HOUSTON ? The last of 14 people indicted in a human smuggling attempt that resulted in the deaths of 19 illegal immigrants in a tractor-trailer five years ...
Something there is that doesn't love border wall
Fort Worth Star Telegram, TX - Apr 20, 2008
Its true lasting impact will be the scar it leaves on the landscape of the Southwest and on the wildlife of our great nation. Illegal immigrants will find a ...
Source: Google News
   
   

BLANDING, Utah — The foreigner is buried in a small-town cemetery, against a barbed-wire fence in an unmarked plot set aside for poor people.

He might be Mexican. Or Guatemalan. But he's simply called No. 8, a man with no name because his identity is still unknown, a year after he was killed in a car wreck with seven other illegal immigrants in southeastern Utah.

"This is the Garden of Eden of Utah down here," said Philip Palmer, coordinator at Blanding City Cemetery, referring to the mountain peaks in four states visible from the graveyard. "It's a good place to put him."

More than 2,000 illegal immigrants have died in the Southwest since 2002, and many are nameless in death — buried as anonymous victims of heat stroke, car crashes or other calamities.

They typically carry no ID, just the clothes on their back and the dream of a life better than the one they left behind.

"They're filling our morgues," said Todd Matthews of Livingston, Tenn., who works for the Doe Network, a volunteer organization that helps law enforcement with unidentified remains.

More than half of the border-crossing deaths in the Southwest since 2002 have occurred in Arizona's Pima County, which includes Tucson, on the Arizona-Mexico border.

Bruce Anderson, a forensic anthropologist in Tucson, said a quarter of the victims there lack names. Many remains are little more than bleached bones after a few days in the sun, making them almost impossible to identify.

"They die in the middle of nowhere," Anderson said. "Most Americans die in their car, in their house or with somebody they know."

In the case of No. 8, he apparently died in Utah among strangers.

It's unknown when or how he entered the country. But on the night of April 15, 2007, he piled into a sport-utility vehicle in Phoenix, joining 13 other people for a trip to St. Louis.

They crossed the Arizona-Utah state line at 3:30 a.m. At some point, the driver drifted out of his lane, overcorrected and lost control of the vehicle, sending it spinning onto its side.

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The SUV rolled several times, and seven passengers were thrown from it. Eight people, all illegal immigrants, were killed.

The driver, Rigoberto Salas-Lopez, told agents he was paid $1,000 to drive the group. He pleaded guilty to transporting illegal aliens resulting in death and will be sentenced June 5 in federal court in Salt Lake City.

The body of No. 8 was transported more than 300 miles north to the Utah medical examiner's office in Salt Lake City, where doctors took fingerprints, photographs and samples from his body. But prospects for identifying him became increasingly bleak.

"You can have a very fresh body, and still the person is unidentifiable because there are no leads as to who they might be," said Dr. Todd Grey, the state's chief medical examiner. "There's certainly not going to be a missing-persons report filed."

Virginia Kice, a spokeswoman for Immigration and Customs Enforcement, said agents worked with the Mexican and Guatemalan consulates. The bodies of three other unknown crash victims were eventually identified and sent home for burial, but No. 8 remained.

Experts said DNA will be the key to solving difficult cases in the future.

Lori Baker at Baylor University in Waco, Texas, has been building a DNA database since 2003. With DNA samples from Pima County and cooperation from the Mexican government, she has identified more than 70 dead illegal immigrants.

The process relies on relatives in Mexico telling authorities they haven't heard from a loved one who was expected to cross the border. If they provide a blood sample, Baker runs it through her database to compare it to samples on file.

But to many coroners, the DNA process seems expensive and the technology intimidating, Baker said.

By last fall, No. 8's body had been in Salt Lake City for six months. No family members had stepped up to claim a missing relative fitting his description and circumstances.

That's when Danny Palmer, funeral director at San Juan Mortuary, was called to pick up the body and return it to southeastern Utah for burial, just a few miles from where the crash occurred.

Palmer stored the body in the mortuary garage for about a week while the grave was prepared. San Juan County paid the $700 bill for the burial, and the mortuary donated a steel casket valued at $1,000.

There was no prayer, no ceremony as the body was laid to rest in plot 55 in the Blanding cemetery. No. 8 was recorded in cemetery records as "unknown male" — an immigrant who died thousands of miles from home and was finally buried Oct. 12.

Mike Moses, a local man who assisted Danny Palmer, said: "There was a heaviness that was there. All of us felt pretty helpless about what to do."

The men tied a rope around the casket to make it easier to remove if anyone ever does come looking. But for now, No. 8 will stay in Utah indefinitely.

"That'll be his spot," Philip Palmer said.

Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company


 

 

 

 

 
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