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Two charged over Indian family freezing to death at Canada-US border

 Two charged over Indian family freezing to death at Canada-US border

Prosecutors allege Harshkumar Ramanlal Patel and Steve Shand, put profit over people’s lives in smuggling migrants from India

By DesiMax Wire

Nearly three years after an Indian family of four froze to death in Canada during an ill-fated attempt to enter the US, two men are facing trial, accused of trying to help smuggle them across the border.

Prosecutors alleged in a Fergus Falls, Minnesota court Monday that Indian national Harshkumar Ramanlal Patel, 29, ran part of a sprawling human smuggling scheme and recruited Steve Shand, 50, to shuttle migrants across the border.

READ: Indian family that froze to death forced to walk in –31F (January 16th, 2023)

Both men have pleaded not guilty to four federal counts related to human smuggling, The Associated Press reported. Their trial in Minnesota is expected to last about five days.

Prosecutors say the family of four — 39-year-old Jagdish Patel; his wife, Vaishaliben, who was in her mid-30s; their 11-year-old daughter, Vihangi; and 3-year-old son, Dharmik — died on Jan 19, 2022, after spending hours wandering in blizzard conditions.

Shand had been waiting in a truck for 11 migrants, including the family from Gujarat state, as the wind chill reached minus 36 degrees Fahrenheit.

Shand and Patel knew the winter weather conditions were extreme, but chose to go forward with a plan to smuggle migrants across the border on foot anyway, prosecutor Ryan Lipes said in his opening statement. “The migrants were dropped at a dark isolated part of the Canadian border nowhere near a legal port of entry,” Lipes said.

When Jagdish Patel’s body was found, he was holding Dharmik, who was wrapped in a blanket, prosecutors added. “This case is about these two men putting profit over people’s lives, profit they earned by smuggling migrants from India across the Canadian border into the US,” Lipes told the jury.

Attorney Thomas Leinenweber said his client, Harshkumar Patel, should never have been charged. Leinenweber said in his opening statement that no one would testify that Patel ever talked about a smuggling conspiracy or provide visual evidence of his involvement.

“There are certain universal feelings that we all have,” Leinenweber said. “One of the worst feeling universally that anyone could feel is when you are wrongfully accused.”

Leinenweber also told AP that his client came to America to escape poverty and build a better life for himself before being unjustly accused of crimes he didn’t commit.

Shand’s attorney, Lisa Lopez, asked the jury to differentiate between the two defendants. She said Shand was an unwitting participant in the smuggling ring.

“Mr. Shand was used by Mr. Patel. And being used does not equate under the law to being guilty of conspiracy,” Lopez said. Shand and the migrants were duped by Patel and the smuggling network, he added.

A jury of eight men and six women, including two alternates, was seated Monday afternoon. Before jury selection began in the morning, defense attorneys objected to prosecutors’ plan to show seven photos of the frozen bodies of Jagdish Patel and his family, including close-up images of the children.

Another attorney for Shand, Aaron Morrison, said the heart-wrenching images could cause “extreme prejudice to the jury” and asked for them to be removed as evidence. Prosecutors argued the photos were necessary to show Shand and Harshkumar Patel did not prepare the family for the frigid conditions.

US District Judge John Tunheim allowed the images to remain as evidence.

Federal prosecutors say Harshkumar Patel and Shand were part of an international criminal network that scouted for clients in India, got them Canadian student visas, arranged transportation and smuggled them into the US, mostly through Washington state or Minnesota.

Prosecutors filed court documents showing Patel was in the US illegally after being refused a visa at least five times, and that he recruited Shand at a casino near their homes in Deltona, Florida, just north of Orlando.

Over five weeks, court documents show, Patel and Shand often communicated about the bitter cold as they smuggled five groups of Indians over a quiet stretch of the border. One night in December 2021, Shand messaged Patel that it was “cold as hell” while waiting to pick up one group, the documents say.

“They going to be alive when they get here?” he allegedly wrote. During the last trip in January, Shand had messaged Patel, saying: “Make sure everyone is dressed for the blizzard conditions, please,” according to prosecutors.

Prosecutors say Shand told investigators that Patel paid him about $25,000 for the five trips.

Jagdish Patel grew up in Dingucha. He and his family lived with his parents, who were schoolteachers, according to local news reports.

Since the Patel tragedy, at least two more families have died trying to unlawfully cross the US-Canada border, according to BBC.

Immigration experts fear clandestine smuggling networks will be used more by undocumented migrants in the coming years, in light of Donald Trump’s incoming administration and its plan for mass deportations.

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