WORLD> America
8 illegal immigrants killed in rollover in Arizona
(Agencies)
Updated: 2009-06-08 14:16

SONOITA, Arizona - Eight illegal immigrants "stacked like wood" in the back of a sports-utility vehicle were killed when the driver lost control on a remote southeastern Arizona highway, authorities said Sunday.

At least 27 men and women were in the vehicle traveling about 4 miles (6 kilometers) east of Sonoita when the vehicle rolled for an unknown reason shortly before midnight Saturday, said Officer Joy Craig of the Arizona Department of Public Safety.

Most of the vehicle's passengers were ejected.

The department originally reported that 10 people were killed but later lowered the number after learning two people were in the hospital with life-threatening injuries, not dead.

Authorities said all the victims are believed to be illegal immigrants from El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Ecuador and perhaps Mexico.

Related readings:
 US-Cuba talks on immigration to resume
 Mexican President: US should fix economy, then immigration
 Immigration raids US plant seeking illegal workers
 Spain registers highest rate of immigration

 European parliament passes stringent immigration guidelines

"There was no rear seat in the (Ford) Excursion. They stack live people, as many as they can, like stacking wood," Craig told The Associated Press.

Five survivors were airlifted to a Tucson hospital and 14 were transported to hospitals in Tucson and Sierra Vista. Eight men treated and released from the hospitals were in the custody of the US Border Patrol, agency spokesman Omar Candelaria said.

The identities of the driver, passengers and the vehicle's owner were being withheld pending their identification and notification of relatives. Many victims did not have identification, Craig said.

The department said the cause of the rollover is under investigation.

Investigators have not identified the driver, but if he survives, Craig said charges against him would be pending.

Craig said the remote area where the accident occurred is a route commonly used by those smuggling illegal immigrants into the United States.

"We see the people stacked like wood frequently," she said. "If they had had the right number of people in there and they all had their seat belts on, they would have lived."

Authorities are looking for anyone else who may be injured, she said.

Initially, Craig said there were 22 victims, but several victims fled the accident scene and sought help from businesses in the Sonoita area, saying they had been injured in the wreck. Sonoita is about 40 miles (64 kilometers) southeast of Tucson.