Minnesota trial set for Florida man in human smuggling case

Minnesota trial set for Florida man in human smuggling case

by Sue Jones
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A Florida man will stand trial in Minnesota this summer on human smuggling charges following his January arrest after authorities just across the Canadian border found four migrants who had frozen to death during a blizzard, according to federal court documents filed Wednesday.

steve shand

Steve Shand is accused of human smuggling after seven people were picked up after crossing the border into the U.S., two of whom were apprehended when Shand was arrested. Four others, believed to be with the group, were found dead in a field in Manitoba. (Steve Shand/Facebook)

A Florida man will stand trial in Minnesota this summer on human smuggling charges following his January arrest after authorities just across the Canadian border found four migrants who had frozen to death during a blizzard, according to federal court documents filed Wednesday.

U.S. District Judge John Tunheim scheduled Steve Shand’s trial to begin July 18. He is charged with bringing two people into the country illegally and illegally transporting them once in the U.S.

The trial will be held in Fergus Falls, which is about 97 kilometers southeast of Fargo, North Dakota.

Authorities said the four bodies were discovered near Emerson, Man., which borders Minnesota and North Dakota. In addition, five Indian nationals were found on foot on the Minnesota side of the border and two others were discovered nearby riding in Shand’s van.

Shand, of Deltona, Florida, has not been charged in the deaths of the migrants. They died of exposure. Authorities also haven’t said whether they think the dead migrants or those found on foot in Minnesota had been passengers in Shand’s van.

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Jagdish Baldevbhai Patel (left to right), son Dharmik Jagdishkumar Patel, wife and mother Vaishaliben Jagdishkumar Patel and daughter Vihangi Jagdishkumar Patel are shown in a handout photo. The family was found frozen in Manitoba near the Canada-U.S. border in January. (Amritbhai Vakil/The Canadian Press)

According to court documents, one of the five who was walking told authorities that his group had walked across the U.S. border, expecting to be picked up by someone on the other side. He said they had been walking for nearly 12 hours and had been with a family of four Indian nationals earlier but had gotten separated from them during the night.

Neither Shand’s attorney, Doug Micko, nor federal prosecutor Laura Provinzino immediately responded to phone messages seeking comment.

A federal magistrate judge released Shand without bond, but ordered him to obey several conditions.

The seven migrants found in the van and on foot are accused of having entered the U.S. illegally and have been released pending deportation hearings.

Federal authorities suspect that the case is linked to a larger smuggling operation along the Canadian border.

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