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Manitoba

Bodies found frozen at U.S. border may be tied to 3 human smuggling cases in past month

A U.S. Homeland Security agent believes the four people, including an infant, who were found dead on Wednesday on the Manitoba side of the Canada-U.S. border may have been victims of a wider human smuggling operation.

Steve Shand, 47, suspected in December, January incidents: U.S. Homeland Security agent's affidavit

Sophisticated operation suspected in familys death near U.S. border

3 years ago
Duration 1:54
Human smuggling experts say the initial investigation and arrest connected to a family being found frozen to death near the U.S. border points to a sophisticated operation.

A U.S. Homeland Security agent believes the four people found dead on Wednesday in a field on the Manitoba side of the Canada-U.S. border may have been victims of a wider human smuggling operation.

The bodies of a man,a woman and a baby were found together in one area near the town of Emerson, while the body of a teen boy was found a few metres away, RCMP said on Thursday.

Before their bodies were discovered, U.S. Border Patrol officers had stoppeda 15-passengervan about one kilometresouth of the international border in a rural area between the official ports of entry at Lancaster, Minn.,and Pembina, N.D., according to anews release from the U.S. Attorney's Office for the district of Minnesota.

The driver of that van, 47-year-old Steve Shandof Florida, was arrested and chargedwith human smuggling.

According to court documents filed on Thursday with the U.S. District Court in Minnesota, Shandis suspected of beingpart of three other recent smuggling incidents. Court filings also showShand filed for bankruptcy in 2018.

A man with a beard and glasses looks at the camera with what appears to be VLT machines in the background.
Steve Shand is accused of human smuggling after seven people were picked up just south of the U.S. border on Wednesday. Four others, who were believed to be with the group, were found dead in a field in Manitoba. (Steve Shand/Facebook)

"The investigation into the death of the four individuals is ongoing along with an investigation into a larger human smuggling operation of which Shand is suspected of being a part," Homeland Security special agent John Stanley said in an affidavit filed Thursday.

Larger group being transported

Shand was transporting two undocumented Indian nationals in the passenger van when he was arrested.

Five other undocumented Indian nationals were also arrested around the same time, very close to where Shand was arrested, the affidavit said.

It's believed that those seven people, and thefour who died in Manitoba, were all part of the same group, but that the fourhad become separated from the rest.

The group of five people were all wearing the same type of clothes new black winter coats with fur-trimmed hoods, black gloves, black balaclavas and insulated rubber boots,Stanley said in hisaffidavit.

Thetwo people who were in the van with Shand wore similar clothes, but were not identical to the others.

Shand was also in possession of a set of black gloves and black balaclava that matched those the others were wearing.

Stanley's affidavit says a border patrol agent told him there had beenthree other recentincidents of human smuggling on Dec. 12 and22, 2021,and Jan. 12, 2022at the same location where Shand was arrested.

That border patrol agent had spotted boot prints in the snow made by three people who had walked across the border at that location on Jan. 12. All three prints were made by the same brand of boots, according to the court document.

RCMP officers found the four bodies on Wednesday. (Submitted by RCMP)

The boot prints matched those made by the rubber boots the people arrested on Wednesday were wearing, it says.

Serious injuries from exposure

Little is known about the Indian nationalstaken into custody in the U.S.The court documentsays they spoke limited or no English, but are fluent in Gujarati, a language spoken in western India.

The people in the group of five taken into custody near where Shand was arrestedtold officials theyhad walked across the border expecting to be picked up by someone. Theyestimated they had been walking around for more than 11 hours.

One man had paid a "significant amount of money" to enter Canada from India under a fraudulent student visa, and planned to enter the U.S., the affidavit says.

Two of those people were seriously injured from being out in the cold, according to the court document.

A man and a woman were both taken to hospital to be treated for suspected frostbite. Although the man was later released, the woman was airlifted to a larger hospital and will likely require a partial amputation of one hand, court documents say.

She stopped breathing several times while being transported by border patrol.

RCMP used off-road vehicles in their search for more people in the fields just north of the U.S. border on Wednesday and Thursday. (Submitted by RCMP)

'Nobody deserves this'

Members of the Indian community in Manitoba are deeply disturbed by the deaths of thepeople found on Wednesday, who are believed to be members of the samefamily.

Ramandeep Grewal of the Indian Association of Manitoba said he became emotional when he heard about their deaths.

"It's unbelievable and nobody deserves this.And this little infant kid and the other young person we heard [of] in the family, they had their lives ahead [of them]," he said in an interview on Thursday.

WATCH | A plea from a former refugee who immigrated to Manitoba:

Refugee from El Salvador who settled in Manitoba pleads with other immigrants and refugees to keep hopes up

3 years ago
Duration 4:22
Alma Ramos speaks with CBC Winnipeg News host Janet Stewart after four people died trying to cross into the United States.

Grewal says the people who crossed the border must have been desperate to get to the U.S. to risk such a dangerous trip.

He has a message to people considering such crossings.

"The community should pursue only the legal ways to come and stay in any country they want to. Illegal routes can be fatal."

with files from Caroline Barghout