ALTAR, Sonora, Mexico – The Santa Maria pharmacy in the northern Mexico smuggling town of Altar is often a last stop for migrants before they embark on the dangerous trek across the Sonoran desert into Arizona.
Here they buy caffeine pills, electrolyte packets and other supplies they will need for the trip. And pharmacist Maria Jaime Peña said women often come in with a common question.
“What can I do in case I’m raped, and I don’t want to get pregnant?,” Peña repeated in Spanish from behind the counter. “What can I use?”
Peña recommends an injection for 48 pesos, or less than $4, that protects women from pregnancy for a month. In Mexico, women can buy these products without a prescription.
Peña said sometimes it is the guides — also called coyotes — who advise their female clients to go on birth control. That was the case for Maria Salinas, a petite 43-year-old who recently tried crossing with her 18-year-old daughter.
Salinas said at first she was confused when a guide at the start of the trip offered her and other women pills he said would prevent pregnancy. Later, it made more sense.
Once Salinas started walking with the group, she couldn’t keep up. One coyote said he’d help – on one condition.
“If I gave him my daughter, then he’d wait for me,” Salinas said. Meaning, if she let him have sex with her daughter. She refused, and he abandoned them. They only survived because they found Border Patrol.
“It’s awful,” Salinas said about making this trip as a woman. “I wouldn’t wish it on anyone.”
And when a woman is raped in remote stretches of the border region, it almost always goes unpunished. Almost always.
It was almost all men, save for a young woman and the 14-year old girl. The girl came from the southern state of Oaxaca and was crossing to meet her parents in the U.S. Since she is a minor, we will identify her only by her first initial, L.
When agents arrested the group they tried to load everyone into a truck for processing. But L. hesitated.
“The young girl seemed pretty scared to get in the vehicle with everyone,” Bidegain said. “One of the members of the group pulled an agent aside and told him the story about how this girl had been raped by one of the guys in the group.”
Her alleged rapist is also believed to be the group’s coyote. L. just knew him by the nickname “El Viboro,” or The Snake, according to records from the local sheriff’s office. Because of where the group was walking, authorities say L. was assaulted twice in Arizona, meaning law enforcement on this side of the border has jurisdiction to prosecute.
And now the Santa Cruz County Attorney’s office is doing just that.
Bidegain says what happened to L. wasn’t unique, but the outcome was.
“We have a brave young girl who was able to speak up, we have members of the group who witnessed the crime, and we have this alleged rapist in our custody,” Bidegain said. “So everything lined up for us in this case.”
Santa Cruz County Sheriff Tony Estrada has been trying for years to get justice for migrants who have been raped.
“Finally, finally we were able to be successful and hopefully catch someone we could hold accountable,” Estrada said.
El Viboro, who is 23 and whose real name is Jose Ramon Mancinas-Flores, has been charged with two counts of sex with a minor under 15. He could face decades in prison.
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