Harlingen man gets 14 years in deadly 2003 smuggling case

Posted Monday, Nov. 09, 2009 Comments   (0) Print Share Share Reprints
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HOUSTON — A Texas man was sentenced Monday to more than 14 years in prison for his role in what became the deadliest human smuggling attempt in U.S. history.

Abelardo Flores was part of a smuggling ring that packed more than 70 undocumented immigrants into the back of a stifling tractor-trailer in May 2003 and tried to transport them from southern Texas to Houston, prosecutors said.

The immigrants, from Mexico, Honduras, El Salvador and the Dominican Republic, were found after the driver, whom Flores had recruited, abandoned the trailer at a truck stop in Victoria, about 100 miles southwest of Houston.

Authorities found 17 dead in the trailer, and two others died later, all of dehydration, overheating and suffocation.

Erik Sunde, Flores’ attorney, said his client, before being sentenced, acknowledged what he had done.

"He expressed deep remorse for the loss of life in the case, and in open court he apologized to the families, one by one, of the decedents," Sunde said.

U.S. District Judge Vanessa Gilmore also fined Flores, 40, of Harlingen, $3,000.

He had previously pleaded guilty to a smuggling conspiracy charge and was given a reduced sentence as part of an agreement with federal prosecutors. Flores had been indicted on 58 counts and had faced up to life in prison.

As part of the plea deal, Flores testified at the trials of seven co-defendants.

Sunde said prosecutors had recommended that Flores receive a sentence of 10 years, but Gilmore decided to impose a sentence of more than 14 years.

"We felt Gilmore’s sentence was thoughtful and reasonable under the circumstances. Mr. Flores has indicated he will not be appealing the sentence," Sunde said.

Twelve people, including Flores, have been convicted for their roles in the smuggling attempt and are serving prison terms, prosecutors said. The final sentencing in the case is set for January.

The driver of the trailer, Tyrone Williams, was sentenced in January 2007 to life in prison. Prosecutors had sought the death penalty against him.

Authorities said the temperature in the trailer reached 173 degrees. Survivors testified that the immigrants took off their sweat-drenched clothes for relief and crowded around holes they had punched in the truck so that they could breathe.

He expressed deep remorse for the loss of life in the case, and . . . apologized to the families . . . of the decedents."

Erik Sunde,
defense attorney


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