How the Government Is Blocking Humanitarian Aid on the Border
An upcoming criminal trial is just the latest effort by Fish and Wildlife Service and Border Patrol agents to prosecute volunteers who are trying to keep people from dying in the desert
On August 13, 2017, Zaachila Orozco was in Cabeza Prieta National Wildlife Refuge, 860,000 acres of sandy plains and dunes in southwestern Arizona, leaving crates of food and water on trails commonly used by migrants crossing the U.S.-Mexico border. Orozco was one member of a four-person group of volunteers with the humanitarian aid organization No More Deaths. At a time when hundreds of people had been found dead in the refuge — many succumbing to hunger or thirst after losing their way through the desert — the group hoped to help alleviate the perils of the journey, for at least a few people.
The four volunteers had just returned to their vehicle, fresh off a supply drop, when they saw the truck parked right behind them. “It’s a very desolate area,” says Orozco. “There aren’t cars everywhere, so it became obvious to us very quickly that it was a law enforcement officer of some sort.”
Driving the truck was an officer with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS), the federal agency…