33-year-old migrant woman found dead near U.S.-Canada border - Action News
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Montreal

33-year-old migrant woman found dead near U.S.-Canada border

The body of a 33-year-old woman from Mexico was found in a river near the Canada-U.S. border with Quebec late last week.

Mexican woman had recently crossed into U.S. on foot from Quebec, according to N.Y. police

cinder blocks and a ditch delineate a the us-canada border at roxham road. snow covers the ground
The Champlain, N.Y., border at Roxham Road used to be a popular crossing path for asylum seekers heading north into Canada. But it was effectively closed in March 2023, after the United States and Canada closed a loophole in their Safe Third Country Agreement. (Verity Stevenson/CBC)

A 33-year-old woman from Mexico was found dead by New York police after crossing the United States border on foot from Canada last week.

Following a two-day search by first responders in Clinton County, about 65 kilometres south of Montreal, the body of Ana Karen Vasquez-Floreswas found in theChazy River in the village of Champlain,on Dec. 14 at around 11 a.m., according toMajor Nicholas Leon of the Clinton County Sheriff.

Vasquez-Floreswas supposed to meet with someone in the United States after crossing on foot, Leon said.

That person was interviewed by U.S. Border Patrol agents shortly afterVasquez-Flores left Canada andasked officialswhether they'd found Vasquez-Flores, launching the searchwhich also involved N.Y. state forest rangers and the N.Y. state fire department.

"She went exactly where she was supposed to be going, from what we understand," Leon said. "The problem is our rivers, they rise and fall. They rise with the rain, they rise with the snow melt. It's just a dangerous area."

U.S. Border Patrol agents for the Swanton Sector a stretch of the border from theNew Hampshire-Maine state lineto the western edge of St. Lawrence County in New York state have reported staggering increases in the numbers of people crossing on foot from Canada into the U.S. since 2022.

In a recent Facebook post, they wrote that agents in the sector "have seen an astonishing 550 per cent increase compared to last year by recording 6,925 apprehensions from 79 different countries" between Oct. 1, 2022 and Sept. 30, 2023.

Harsher restrictions at the southern U.S. border have prompted thousands of Mexicans to fly to Canada, which does not require a tourist visato travel from Mexico,and then cross into the U.S. on foot. Many asylum seekers have also crossed after struggling to survive in Canada due towork permit delays of up to a yearand the rising cost of living.

That was the case for 44-year-oldFritznel Richard and 45-year-oldJose Leos Cervantes, according to their families, both of whom died near the U.S.-Canada border with Quebec in the past year. It was also the case for a Romanian family of four, who died alongside an Indian family of three and a local Akwesasne man who was helping them cross into the U.S. via the St. Lawrence Riverin late March.

A boat docked at a marina called
Searchers docked at a marina in Akwesasne earlier this year. Eight bodies were recovered from the St. Lawrence River in late March, after two families and a local man attempted to cross into the United States. (Ryan Remiorz/The Canadian Press)

In a statement sent to CBC News Monday evening byMike Niezgoda, a public affairs officerfor U.S. Customs and Border Protection, Niezgoda said the agency wants to remind people of the dangers associated with walking across the border outside of ports of entry.

"The winter season presents sub-freezing temperatures, forested hilly terrain, swampland, deadly ice, and countless rivers, streams, and lakes. Those caught in these conditions for even a short amount of time run the risk of frostbite, hypothermia, and death," the statement said.

Leon said the teams involved in the search for Vasquez-Flores were involved in two similar searches in the same week.

In the other searches, the migrants were found alive.

"But it's happened and it's going to happen more,certainly in the winter months because the people that are coming across are not aware of the the high rivers.They're not aware of the cold temperatures," Leon said.

He said Vasquez-Flores's family has been advised of her death. He was not aware whether she had any children, but he said she may have been pregnant.

"We believe that she, based upon what we've seen, that she was possibly pregnant," he said. "Horrific."

It is unclear if any arrests have been made in connection with Vasquez-Flores'scrossing into the United States.

Champlain Mayor Janet McFetridge, reached in her car, called Vasquez-Flores's death a tragedy.

"It's just absolutely horrible," she said.