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Horrific journey haunts immigrants months later
The Dallas Morning News ^ | 11/18/2002 | DAVID SEDEÑO

Posted on 11/18/2002 3:46:09 AM PST by Brownie74

By DAVID SEDEÑO / The Dallas Morning News

His left arm and chest covered with antibiotic cream and heavily bandaged with white gauze, Guillermo Gallo can't escape the reminders of his harrowing trip aboard a locked, unventilated tractor-trailer in which two men died last summer.

He doesn't remember the last few hours of the journey and doesn't know whether he wants to push his memory to recall what he and others in the hot trailer said was a living hell.

"I lost consciousness, and I guess that I was more dead than alive," the 32-year-old taco stand owner from suburban Mexico City said. "If I would have been even a little awake, I would have felt my skin burning and would have tried to get up."

Mr. Gallo is one of about three dozen Mexican immigrants who survived that tractor-trailer ride and who are busily, but quietly, pursuing their new lives in the United States. Some work in construction, others landscape homes and businesses, clean offices or work at various restaurant jobs across the country. As a group, they can't shake the memory of the journey that brought them together and to the brink.

"Right now, I need to find a job," said Mr. Gallo, who owes about $100,000 for his medical care. "I'm thankful for people who have helped us. It's very hard right now, but I have to think that if I didn't die in the trailer, nor in the hospital, nor in jail ... I'm still ahead."

Luciano Alcocer is overcome during his first trip to Love's truck stop since he and about three dozen others escaped a sweltering tractor-trailer. Accompanying Mr. Alcocer are fellow immigrants Guillermo Gallo (center) and Guillermo Cabrera.

Also among the immigrants living in the Dallas area who have tried to keep tabs on one another are Guillermo Cabrera, 34, of Veracruz state, and Luciano Alcocer, 41, of Mexico City.

Mr. Gallo, Mr. Cabrera and Mr. Alcocer survived the tractor-trailer ride that began at a mobile home northeast of El Paso and ended at Love's Country Store at Interstate 20 and Polk Street in southern Dallas County on July 27.

Temporary papers

The three men have received temporary visas, Social Security cards and work permits. Some have met with private attorneys to determine whether to file lawsuits. They are required to check in with immigration officials every two weeks, reporting where they are living and whether they are working. All cling to the hope that their temporary legal status will someday become permanent so that the trip for which they paid smugglers thousands of dollars will not have been in vain.

"Yes, I crossed here illegally and, yes, I know that some people say that we don't deserve anything and we should go home," said Mr. Alcocer, who works at a golf club restaurant in The Colony. "I am willing to work, and I am respecting the laws of this country because right now I'm a guest here, but I hope to be a permanent resident."

Their trip aboard the tractor-trailer rig was similar to countless others this summer undertaken by immigrants trying to get into the United States. Many made it to their destinations, immigration officials said, while others were rescued from locked tractor-trailers in South Texas and San Antonio. An additional 11 perished in a locked railroad car found in Iowa this fall.

Immigration officials have declined to discuss specifics in the case of the North Texas immigrants, but prosecutors are determining who will make the best witnesses in the trial of five accused smugglers, including truck drivers Troy Philip Dock, 30, and Jason Steven Sprague, 27.

The proceeding is expected to start Jan. 20 in U.S. District Court in Sherman. After its conclusion, federal officials will determine the immigrants' legal status.

"I think this is a horrible trick if we are sent back," said Mr. Cabrera, whose younger brother, Pioquinto Cabrera, was one of the two men who died. Mr. Cabrera earns $6 an hour mowing lawns.

"Did my brother die in vain? There isn't a day that goes by that I don't think about him and that he paid with his life so that he could help make my life better.

"With everything that I went through getting here, it's not worth trying to get back again," he said. "I'll go back to my little ranch, and I know that my life will be full of beans and chiles and misery, but at least I'll be with my family."

Last week, the three men returned together to the Love's truck stop for the first time. The smugglers were to drop off dozens of the immigrants who were to be picked up or would connect to other parts of the country via buses at an adjacent Greyhound bus station.

As Mr. Alcocer and Mr. Gallo tentatively approached the truck stop, they looked around, trying to get oriented as to where they were on that summer day. They paused, wiping away tears when they thought about how close to death they were.

Recalling the day

"I remember just running out, thinking somebody was going to shoot me," Mr. Alcocer recalled, tears welling, as the others nodded in agreement. "I remember falling down, and the next thing was like buckets of gravel on my chest, but they were buckets of ice." Emergency workers were tending to his burns with ice brought from the Love's. Added Mr. Cabrera: "I got out and I was stumbling all over. I was looking for my brother, but no one saw him get out."

After the immigrants got out, the truck drivers continued north on U.S. Highway 75 and were arrested at a truck stop in the Collin County city of Anna. The bodies of Pioquinto Cabrera, 28, and José Gastón Ramírez, 53, were discovered in the trailer.

Pioquinto Cabrera had been working on a farm near Louisville, Ky. He left his wife and three young children there in early July to see his dying father near Jamapa, Veracruz, Mexico, about 60 miles inland from the Gulf of Mexico.

On July 12, three days after his father's funeral, Pioquinto Cabrera persuaded his older brother to travel to the United States with him, paying a smuggler $3,000 for safe passage to Kentucky for the both of them.

After his death, Pioquinto Cabrera's wife and children – including a 1-year-old born in the United States – returned to Mexico and now live with his mother.

"My family needs money, but at least I can work. Pioquinto's family doesn't have anything or anyone who can help them," said Mr. Cabrera, who would like to find a second job on weekends.

Mr. Ramírez, a shoemaker from Cuernavaca, Mexico, was on his way to visit his daughters in Chicago.

His widow, Elizabeth Ramírez, 51, is in Chicago on a temporary humanitarian visa given by the Immigration and Naturalization Service. She is attending to legal matters relating to her husband's death.

"I feel bad that he isn't here because it was his dream to come here to Chicago," Ms. Ramírez said. "I'm just enjoying being here, seeing my children and grandchildren."

Mr. Gallo would like to find work in Dallas before the Texas winter sets in. He was in and out of Methodist Hospital of Dallas over the summer and continues treatment for severe burns to his chest and left forearm.

Slowly healing

A burly 5-foot-10-inch man, Mr. Gallo used his body as a battering ram to try to open the locked cargo doors on the tractor-trailer. After several attempts he wedged himself between the hot aluminum doors and the cargo of medical supply boxes. He was able to breathe because of a slight opening between the doors, but because he wasn't wearing a shirt, his skin burned as he pressed against the doors. "This is nothing compared to what I had," Mr. Gallo said, pointing to a raised 2-inch-long purple scar near the bandage on his left forearm. "When I first took off my shirt, I think Guillermo [Cabrera] almost fainted seeing how bad it was."

Mr. Gallo, whose taco stand is in Ecatepec, outside of Mexico City, has recovered slowly with the help of Laura Ovalle of Oak Cliff. She opened her home to Mr. Gallo and Mr. Cabrera, who has moved on.

Ms. Ovalle was instrumental in securing a humanitarian visa for Mr. Gallo's wife, who cared for him for two months before returning to tend to the family's business in Mexico.

Mr. Gallo wants to pay his medical bills but doesn't know how that will be possible.

Hospital spokeswoman Kathleen Beathard could not discuss specific cases but said that the facility will look at all types of assistance programs that could help cover such an expense. She noted that the hospital wrote off more than $47 million in patient care charges last year.

Mr. Alcocer, 41, has been on his own mission, intending to work as much as he can and learn as much as possible about the United States because he doesn't know whether he'll be allowed to remain.

He had planned to travel to Atlanta to work with relatives doing carpentry work, but after his near-fatal trip he decided to stay with relatives. He earns a little above minimum wage washing dishes at the golf club. He is buying a car on time, learning English and hoping to get a second job as a grocery store stocker. He'll send any extra money home to his wife and two daughters in Mexico City.

He said the plight that he and his compatriots shared should demonstrate to others their resolve.

"I am ready to work to show that my sacrifice wasn't in vain," Mr. Alcocer said. "I came to work. I didn't come to take anybody's job."

E-mail dsedeno@dallasnews.com


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: illegalaliens
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1 posted on 11/18/2002 3:46:09 AM PST by Brownie74
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To: madfly; sarcasm; 4America; dennisw; MissAmericanPie; Tancredo Fan; Sabertooth; WRhine; ...
The three men have received temporary visas, Social Security cards and work permits. Some have met with private attorneys to determine whether to file lawsuits.

Why weren't they detained and deported? Anoter example of getting rewarded for breaking federal law. It works for them but I guarantee it won't work for us!!

2 posted on 11/18/2002 3:51:13 AM PST by Brownie74
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To: Brownie74
Any bets on who's picking up these invaders medical bills?
got a mirror?
3 posted on 11/18/2002 3:56:28 AM PST by ninonitti
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To: Brownie74
"Yes, I crossed here illegally and, yes, I know that some people say that we don't deserve anything and we should go home,"

Well, at least you've got that much right. If this article is supposed to make me feel sorry for these people it's not working.

4 posted on 11/18/2002 3:56:30 AM PST by Ima Lurker
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To: Brownie74
Betcha they voted Nov. 5th too. Ain't motor voter great!
5 posted on 11/18/2002 3:56:59 AM PST by Waco
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To: Ima Lurker
If this article is supposed to make me feel sorry for these people it's not working.

I know where you are coming from. This is also a prime example of how the main stream media spins these stories to cast these illegals as heros.

Why don't they tell the truth for a change?

6 posted on 11/18/2002 4:01:16 AM PST by Brownie74
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To: ninonitti
Any bets on who's picking up these invaders medical bills?

You're right - we are picking up the tab. It really ticks me off that these people get Carte Blanche here but yet our senior citizens only got a 1.2 or 1.3% pay raise on their Social Security. That's not right.

7 posted on 11/18/2002 4:08:21 AM PST by Brownie74
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To: Brownie74
I have 5 words for these criminals.

Get out and stay out!

8 posted on 11/18/2002 4:09:31 AM PST by 4Freedom
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To: Brownie74
This is also a prime example of how the main stream media spins these stories to cast these illegals as heros.?

They ARE the heroes, don't you get it? We white, American-born Anglos are the GOATS in this storyline.

When are you going to get it?

9 posted on 11/18/2002 4:12:33 AM PST by BenR2
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To: Brownie74
The bias of the story is no surprise given the author's name. Another file for racial profiling folder.
10 posted on 11/18/2002 4:18:14 AM PST by RWG
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To: RWG
The bias of the story is no surprise given the author's name.


11 posted on 11/18/2002 4:20:34 AM PST by Brownie74
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To: Brownie74
Mr. Gallo wants to pay his medical bills but doesn't know how that will be possible.

IOW we pay. The logic behind allowing these illegal aliens to stay here is so damn stupid. All you need to do is send them back to stinking Mexico then pay them $500 to come here to testify in court against the coyotes. I am disgusted at the INS!!

Might as well hang a welcome sign at the border saying "WELCOME ILLEGAL ALIENS"

12 posted on 11/18/2002 4:22:24 AM PST by dennisw
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To: dennisw
I am disgusted at the INS!!

At least Ziglar will be gone come the first of the year. Is there any rumble as to who is going to replace him?

13 posted on 11/18/2002 4:25:22 AM PST by Brownie74
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To: Brownie74
It makes absolutely no difference who's appointed to that position. GWB is walking point. He's the big guy in charge. He's not doing a damned thing right now to stop this BS. What makes you think things will change?
14 posted on 11/18/2002 4:48:09 AM PST by taxed2death
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To: Brownie74
The only way to stop horrific incidents like this is to consistently deport illegal aliens.
15 posted on 11/18/2002 4:54:14 AM PST by keats5
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To: Brownie74
Mr. Gallo wants to pay his medical bills but doesn't know how that will be possible.
Hospital spokeswoman Kathleen Beathard could not discuss specific cases but said that the facility will look at all types of assistance programs that could help cover such an expense. She noted that the hospital wrote off more than $47 million in patient care charges last year.

Why was he given medical care in the first place?
Message to US citizens:
Try getting a Dr. appt without insurance!! FORGET IT!
I think we should work his butt off to pay for some of those bills and then ship his @$$ back to Mexico.

16 posted on 11/18/2002 4:54:59 AM PST by Sungirl
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To: taxed2death
GWB is walking point. He's the big guy in charge. He's not doing a damned thing right now to stop this BS.

Exactly!! I have made this point many times. All Bush has to do is pick up the phone and demand that Ashcroft and Ziglar do their jobs. But he won't do it.

As Truman said - the buck stops here.

17 posted on 11/18/2002 4:56:46 AM PST by Brownie74
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To: Brownie74
The article says they're going to be witnesses in the criminal trial.
18 posted on 11/18/2002 4:58:08 AM PST by Catspaw
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To: Sungirl
Why was he given medical care in the first place?

The law only requires that we provide emergency medical treatment. Mr. Gallo was probably entitled to emergency medical treatment and then he should have been deported. End of story. It doesn't get any simpler than that.

19 posted on 11/18/2002 5:01:26 AM PST by Brownie74
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To: Brownie74
their sob stories won't play with me - they shouldn't have been trying to smuggle themselves into this country unlawfully. that one fool asked "did my brother die in vain", is this now the basis for admission? come on - I'm sorry for their hardship but nobody forced them into that trailer. my resentment of their invasion, and their loathing of America and its culture, is pushing my compassion almost off the table
20 posted on 11/18/2002 5:13:27 AM PST by Texas_Jarhead
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