From Texas to remote Central American villages, AP delivered comprehensive coverage of breaking developments and the stories behind the victims of a sweltering trailer.
Reporting from four different countries after the discovery of a tractor-trailer in San Antonio in which 53 migrants died, AP journalists working in all formats used APâs unmatched reach to stay atop developments in the investigation and to share the journeys of those who perished by locating and talking to relatives and a survivor. Their teamwork earns Best of the Week â Second Winner.
In Texas, photographer Eric Gay, video journalist Mike Householder and text reporters Juan Lozano and Paul Weber sped to the scene. Lozano and Weber reported on victims and the law enforcement response while members of the immigration beat team, including Elliott Spagat, worked on determining how it had happened. Spagat confirmed the initial death toll and key developments in the investigation, his expertise in covering the border and other smuggling incidents helping drive APâs coverage with fresh ideas and perspective. AP colleague John Seewer jumped in from Ohio as an anchor writer and Chicagoâs Tammy Webber provided an explainer on heat deaths.
When U.S. authorities were slow to provide information about the victims, reporters relied on government and non-governmental-organization sources and scoured both local media reports and social media platforms for clues. Mexico City reporter Fabiola SĂĄnchez and San Diego-based Julie Watson were able to move the first account from a victimâs family, one day after the trailerâs discovery, when Sanchez interviewed the victimâs family in Oaxaca.
In the days that followed, AP journalists fanned out in capital cities and remote mountain villages, approaching families with sensitivity and telling the stories of lives lost in a sweltering trailer â what had driven the migrants to leave, and family membersâ agony as they awaited word. Freelancers, especially for visuals, were critical to reaching families quickly across the region, among them photographer Delmer Martinez and video journalist Claudio Escalon; they visited two Honduran families whose loved ones were among the dead.
The stories provided a nuanced look at those who ultimately risked their lives to reach the United States â 13-year-old Guatemalan cousins who barely spoke Spanish, but who wanted to build homes for their families; three teenage Mexican cousins who had given themselves four years to make enough money in the U.S. to open a clothing store in their Mexican village; the story of a young college-educated Honduran couple desperate for opportunity, reported by Christopher Sherman, Mexico-based news director.
Many other journalists contributed, among them the freelance team of reporter Alba AlemĂĄn and photographers FĂ©lix Marquez and Yerania Rolon who found the extended Olivares family in Veracruz, Mexico, awaiting word on their three teenage cousins.
Once the migrantsâ motivations and journeys were established, the remaining gap was what happened inside the trailer. The only known survivors were still hospitalized in San Antonio. Guatemala reporter Sonia PĂ©rez D. tried a phone number obtained by Guatemala photojournalist Moises Castillo and reached the father of one hospitalized survivor.
The father told PĂ©rez what little he knew and agreed to meet. PĂ©rez asked if they could call his daughter, Yenifer. They called from inside a car to limit noise and to hear Yenifer recount in a soft voice the suffocating temperatures, the smugglersâ attempt to disguise their scent with powdered bouillon and the migrantsâ unheeded pleas for help until she lost consciousness. That exclusive interview ran in El Universal, one of Mexicoâs most prominent papers.
APâs stories, photos and video were widely across the U.S. and Latin America.
The Texas Tribune, which covered the tragedy closely, sought permission to run one of the victimâs stories despite not being an AP member. Editor-in-chief Sewell Chan described it in a tweet as a âpowerfulâ story and credited AP and its journalists.
For sweeping breaking news coverage across borders that reveals details both harrowing and poignant, the team of Lozano, Weber, Householder, Gay, Spagat, SĂĄnchez, Watson, Escalon, MartĂnez, PĂ©rez D., Castillo, AlĂ©man, Marquez, Rolon, Sherman, Seewer and Webber, and colleagues across the Americas, earns APâs Best of the Week â Second Winner.
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