![Man arrested after 4 people, including baby, found frozen to death near Manitoba-U.S. border](https://i.cbc.ca/1.6321731.1642707046!/fileImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/16x9_620/rcmp-search-for-bodies-at-canada-u-s-border.jpg)
Man arrested after 4 people, including baby, found frozen to death near Manitoba-U.S. border
CBC
A Florida man has been charged with human smuggling after four people, one an infant, were found dead in a Manitoba field, near the Canada-U.S. border, on Wednesday.
"What I am about to share is going to be difficult for many people to hear," RCMP Assistant Commissioner Jane MacLatchy said at a news conference in Winnipeg on Thursday. "It is an absolute and heartbreaking tragedy."
The bodies of a man, woman and baby were found together in one area, while the body of a teen boy was found a few metres away, she said.
They are believed to have died from exposure to the freezing weather while attempting to walk across the border from Canada to the United States.
Just before 9:30 a.m. on Wednesday, members of the RCMP integrated border enforcement team were alerted that U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers had apprehended a group that crossed into the U.S. from Canada, near the town of Emerson.
The U.S. officials said one of the adults had items meant for an infant but that no infant was with the group.
A search was immediately launched on both sides of the border and the bodies were found at about 1:30 p.m. on the Canadian side, about 10 kilometres east of Emerson and about a dozen metres from the border.
"I can assure you that the search for any possible survivors or additional victims continued throughout the evening [Wednesday] and our officers continued to patrol the area today," MacLatchy said.
RCMP issued a news release later in the day to say the search was complete and no other people were found.
The U.S. Attorney's Office for the district of Minnesota also issued a release late Thursday afternoon saying 47-year-old Steve Shand of Florida has been arrested and charged with human smuggling in connection with the incident.
Before the bodies were discovered in Manitoba, U.S. Border Patrol officers had stopped a 15-passenger van about one kilometre south of the international border in a rural area between the official ports of entry at Lancaster, Minn., and Pembina, N.D., the release stated.
Shand was driving with two passengers determined to be undocumented foreign nationals from India, Acting U.S. Attorney Charles J. Kovats stated in the news release.
Officers also found cases of plastic cups, bottled water, bottled juice and snacks in the van. While Shand and the passengers were being taken to the border patrol station in North Dakota, police came across five more Indian nationals just south of the border, walking in the direction of where Shand was arrested, the release stated.
They said they had walked across the border expecting to be picked up by someone, and estimated they had been walking around for more than 11 hours.