Texas motorists hit a bus stop full of migrants, leaving seven people dead.
In the border city of Brownsville, Texas, seven people were killed and up to six more were hurt after they were hit by a car while waiting at a bus stop outside of a migrant shelter.
As soon as he heard about the crash on Sunday morning, Bishop Enrique San Pedro Ozanam Center director Victor Maldonado said he watched the shelter's security footage.
The city bus stop is unmarked and located across the street from the shelter. According to Maldonado, there was no bench and people were waiting along the curb. Most of the victims, he claimed, were men from Venezuela.
"What we see in the video is that this SUV, a Range Rover, just ran the light which was about 100ft away and just went through the people who were sitting there in the bus stop," Maldonado said.
He claimed that after approaching the curb, the automobile flipped and continued to move for about 200 feet. A few pedestrians who were around 30 feet from the main group and were walking on the pavement were also struck, according to Maldonado.
The Ozanam shelter oversees the release of thousands of migrants from federal custody and is the sole overnight refuge in the city of Brownsville.
Brownsville has traditionally been a hub for migration across the US-Mexico border, and it has emerged as a crucial location for the coming week's repeal of Title 42 border restrictions enacted during the pandemic.
According to Martin Sandoval, a police investigator from Brownsville, the collision happened at 8.30 am.
Authorities are looking into whether the crash was intentional or an accident, he told KRGV-TV. The driver, who was detained at the site by witnesses, is also being tested for intoxication.
Prior to the collision, according to Maldonado, the center had not received any threats, but they had thereafter.
Maldonado said, "I've had a few folks come by the gate and inform the security guard that this happened due of us.
250 people can stay at the shelter, although many go the same day. The city recently declared an emergency as local, state, and federal resources coordinated the enforcement and humanitarian response in response to an increase in border crossings.
"In the last two months, we've been getting 250 to 380 a day," Maldonado claimed.
During the week, the shelter provides transportation for the migrants, although they are also free to use the city's public transportation.
The director explained that some of them were en route to the bus stop since they had a bus reservation.
By Covenant

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