SAN ANTONIO — Adan Lalravega said he was told the $5,500 he was being charged to be smuggled into the United States would include an air-conditioned truck ride.
Instead, the 27-year-old Mexican laborer climbed with his friends into a pitch-black, metal tractor-trailer compartment that lacked ventilation — a deadly oven that would claim 10 lives.
“After an hour I heard crying — people crying and asking for water. I, too, was sweating and people were despairing,” Lalravega told The Associated Press in an exclusive interview Monday from his bed in a San Antonio hospital. “That’s when I lost consciousness.”
By the time he regained it Sunday, he was in the hospital.
He told the AP it all started when he climbed aboard the tractor-trailer in the border city of Laredo, Texas, with six friends from the state of Aguascalientes after the group waited nearly two weeks in a safe house.
“The guy we were with in the house told us they’d be putting us in a refrigerator, a refrigerator with air. But that didn’t happen,” he said.
The trailer was already full of people when the door opened up on a Laredo street. Lalravega said it was so dark he couldn’t see how many there were. A few were children, he said, whose voices he heard begging for water.
He said the smugglers didn’t offer passengers water, and he and his friends hadn’t brought any with them. The ride to San Antonio would only be 150 miles.
Lalravega said he never saw the driver of the tractor-trailer. He said that when people are being smuggled, they are told not to look at the faces of their handlers — and it’s a good idea to obey.
The packed tractor-trailer was found early Sunday outside a Wal-Mart store. As many as eight passengers were dead, and two more would soon die. The driver has been charged in the deaths.
