Photos: Bear Guerra/High Country News
How a medical examiner’s office transformed to address migrant death
High Country News / The Guardian
19 September 2022
“The Pima County Office of the Medical Examiner began to coordinate its response to migrant death in May of 2002, when 14 people — 13 migrants and a suspected guide who remains unidentified to this day — died in the desert southeast of Yuma, Arizona, on a 115-degree day. They were found more than 50 miles from the highway, headed in the wrong direction.
‘It hit us over the head like a brick, like a bunch of bricks, that there was a change occurring,’ said former Chief Medical Examiner Bruce Parks, Hess’ predecessor. ‘And the numbers kept going up.’”
High Country News / The Guardian
19 September 2022
“The Pima County Office of the Medical Examiner began to coordinate its response to migrant death in May of 2002, when 14 people — 13 migrants and a suspected guide who remains unidentified to this day — died in the desert southeast of Yuma, Arizona, on a 115-degree day. They were found more than 50 miles from the highway, headed in the wrong direction.
‘It hit us over the head like a brick, like a bunch of bricks, that there was a change occurring,’ said former Chief Medical Examiner Bruce Parks, Hess’ predecessor. ‘And the numbers kept going up.’”