'Easy pickings': In Texas town where Martha's Vineyard ordeal began, few options for migrants
The journey to Marthas Vineyard began in Eagle Pass.
This tiny Texas town, located 2.5 hours of sweltering highway southwest of San Antonio, has become a common point of entry for asylum seekers from Central and South America. Among them: the 48 migrants who were unwittingly sent to the posh Massachusetts island by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis last week after many said a mysterious woman who identified herself as Perla promised them jobs on the other end of the trip.
On Sunday, a family from Venezuela turned themselves in to U.S. authorities in Eagle Pass, after wading through the mostly shallow water of the Rio Grande that runs under one of the bridges connecting the border town to Piedras Negras, Mexico. The family of four had been traveling for over a month, the mother, who identified herself as Carolina, told the Miami Herald. Her youngest child, just over a year old, gave fist bumps to a member of the National Guard offering migrants water and words of encouragement.
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Migrants who cross here are vulnerable to scammers and political opportunists, said Domingo Garcia, president of the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC), an advocacy group.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/easy-pickings-in-texas-town-where-martha-s-vineyard-ordeal-began-few-options-for-migrants/ar-AA11YDPs