The non-profit tasked with identifying migrants who die on the border
Eduardo Canales and law enforcement on the border will tell you -- migrants get left behind with little to no water, with nothing to survive.
Author: Anastasiya Bolton (KENS)
Updated: 6:54 PM CDT June 25, 2021
FALFURRIAS, Texas — One way to measure or try to understand what’s going on at the U.S.-Mexico border is to watch Eduardo Canales work. He’s the director of the South Texas Human Rights Center, a non-profit based in Falfurrias, Texas.
Canales can be on the phone with a grieving family one moment, calling the U.S. Border Patrol another and connecting with a consulate that’s trying to help find a citizen or that person’s remains in the U.S.