Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Judge Sends Canadian To Us Prison For Risky Tunnel Scheme

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Apr, 2019 06:16 PM

    DETROIT — A Canadian cab driver who made extra money by steering desperate immigrants to a railroad tunnel under the Detroit River was sentenced Monday to 16 months in a U.S. prison.

     

    Juan Garcia-Jimenez, a 53-year-old Canadian citizen who is a native of Guatemala, wept in federal court. Besides a prison sentence, he was fined $8,680— the amount paid by six people who were caught last year when they emerged on foot on the Detroit side of the tunnel.


    The 2.5-kilometre tunnel is used by cargo trains moving between Ontario and the United States. Assistant U.S. Attorney Susan Fairchild said it's risky: A walkway is only 43.1 centimetres wide and in poor condition.


    "They just walked right through the tunnel, which is a very dangerous thing," said Kris Grogan, a spokesman for U.S. Customs and Border Protection. "There is zero room. If a train would have come through there they would have been killed."


    Garcia-Jimenez would drop people off at a tunnel entrance in Windsor, Ont., and drive away. Nine people arrested by border officers identified him as the man who helped them leave Canada at different times last year.


    "Due to the clandestine nature of this criminal activity, there is no way to be certain how many times he has smuggled aliens into the United States in the past," Fairchild said in a court filing. "Countless aliens could have illegally entered the United States with his assistance."


    Garcia-Jimenez was arrested last August while trying to enter Detroit to celebrate his wedding anniversary.


    "I am sorry for what I have done," he told U.S. District Judge Stephen Murphy III.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Parks Canada Worried Spilled Grain From Derailed CP Train Will Attract Grizzlies

    Parks Canada Worried Spilled Grain From Derailed CP Train Will Attract Grizzlies
    BANFF, Alta. — Parks Canada is worried spilled grain from a derailed train in Banff National Park will attract hungry grizzly bears to the tracks as they emerge from hibernation in the coming weeks.

    Parks Canada Worried Spilled Grain From Derailed CP Train Will Attract Grizzlies

    Top 10 Scams: Millennials 'Natural Targets' For Fraud, BBB Says

    Top 10 Scams: Millennials 'Natural Targets' For Fraud, BBB Says
    March is Fraud Prevention Month and the Better Business Bureau has released the Top 10 Scams of 2018.

    Top 10 Scams: Millennials 'Natural Targets' For Fraud, BBB Says

    Regina Seeking Citizen Input On How To Regulate Body Rub Parlours

    Regina Seeking Citizen Input On How To Regulate Body Rub Parlours
    REGINA — The City of Regina wants input from residents on how body rub parlours should be regulated.

    Regina Seeking Citizen Input On How To Regulate Body Rub Parlours

    Nathan Cullen Joins Long List Of NDP MPs Who Won't Seek Re-Election

    OTTAWA — Nathan Cullen, one of the NDP's best known and most effective MPs, is calling it quits.    

    Nathan Cullen Joins Long List Of NDP MPs Who Won't Seek Re-Election

    Canadian Government Green-Lights Formal Extradition Process For Meng Wanzhou

    The decision marks the formal start of the high-profile extradition process for Meng, whose arrest has put Canada in a deeply uncomfortable position between two superpowers.    

    Canadian Government Green-Lights Formal Extradition Process For Meng Wanzhou

    Tourism Is Economic Force In British Columbia With 6.1 Million Visits: Ministry

    Tourism Is Economic Force In British Columbia With 6.1 Million Visits: Ministry
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's tourism industry is outpacing provincial economic growth, contributing $9 billion to the economy.    

    Tourism Is Economic Force In British Columbia With 6.1 Million Visits: Ministry