Alternet reports
On Friday December 4th, an Arizona District Court judge told Walt
Staton, a 28 year-old seminary student, that he might be facing 25 days
in a federal prison. His crime was "knowingly littering" along the
U.S.-Mexico border.
One day last December, Staton and a friend named Victor Ceballos,
loaded 70 plastic water jugs into the back of a truck and drove from
Tucson to outer stretches of Sonora desert. Temperatures in the desert
are extreme, reaching 120 degrees during summer months and dropping
below 30 degrees in the winter. Many people who attempt the four-day
trek between the Mexico border and Phoenix do not survive; this year, a
human rights group found the remains of 206 people. The main causes of
death, the group believes, are heat overexposure or hypothermia, but
corpses decompose so quickly in the desert that it is often impossible
to tell.
Staton and Ceballos are volunteers for a group called No More Deaths,
which offers humanitarian aid to those trying to cross the
Mexico-Arizona border. Volunteers hand out water bottles and socks;
they provide food and basic medical care. These actions carry risks of
their own; in July 2005, two No More Deaths volunteers were charged
with multiple felonies for driving three travelers to get medical care.
Their case was eventually dismissed.
When it comes to the water bottles, volunteers are precise; they
monitor each drop-off point to see if they've left too many or too few
and they pick up any debris. "We put the water jugs right on the trail.
So you can't miss them. Because a lot of people walk at night," Staton
explained in a phone interview with AlterNet.
"We hear stories from people about how they were literally crawling on
the ground and thought they were going to die and came across gallon
jugs of water and were able to live."
It was ten days before Christmas when Staton and Ceballos were almost
finished with their route. "We were dropping off 70 bottles total over
five different locations," Staton recalled. The second to last spot
that day was the Buenos Aires Wildlife Refuge, ten or so miles from the
U.S.-Mexico border. As they were entering the refuge, Staton noticed a
border patrol helicopter overhead. "That's really common. We interact
with border patrol quite a bit. I didn't think anything of it."
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