A Mexican citizen was sentenced Tuesday to 10 years in prison for his role in a dangerous human smuggling conspiracy, officials stated.
Jesus Ernesto Dessens-Romero, 28, of Agua Prieta, Sonora, Mexico, received a sentence from U.S. District Judge John Hinderaker for the District of Arizona.
In November 2023, Dessens-Romero was found guilty of multiple alien smuggling offenses by a jury, including conspiracy to transport and transport illegal aliens for profit and bringing in illegal aliens to the United States for profit.
The jury also found that Dessens-Romero placed human life in jeopardy during and in relation to these offenses.
“Human smugglers profit from the exploitation of migrants and routinely expose them to violence, injury, and death,” said Attorney General Merrick B. Garland. “Today’s sentence shows the Justice Department will continue to hold accountable these smugglers and the criminal networks that abuse, exploit, or endanger migrants.”
Evidence presented at trial established that Dessens-Romero was the human smuggling foot guide for five Mexican nationals who illegally crossed into the United States on or about Feb. 13, 2021.
The group included three sisters – ages 23, 20, and 17 – and their family friend, age 16.
Dessens-Romero led the individuals under his care into the rugged and remote Huachuca Mountains near Fort Huachuca in southern Arizona. This route was perilous due to the lack of law enforcement presence.
The group had limited food and water and suffered from serious weather conditions at night, including freezing temperatures and snow.
By Feb. 15, 2021, the 23-year-old sister was in significant physical distress. She was unable to eat, walk, or follow simple commands. Dessens-Romero told the group that they were close enough to a traveled roadway where the sick woman could be found if the group left her behind.
Dessens-Romero did not call emergency services.
Instead, he located a higher-ground cell phone reception to call a transnational criminal smuggling organization. Dessens-Romero then led the rest of the group to Sierra Vista where they were picked up by unidentified co-conspirators and transported further into the United States.
The family of the woman left behind contacted authorities on Feb. 16, 2021, to report a missing person.
Despite extensive search efforts by U.S. Border Patrol, military officials from Fort Huachuca, Cochise County Sheriff’s Department, and Homeland Security Investigations (HSI), she was not located.
During this time, Dessens-Romero contacted the surviving sisters on behalf of the smuggling organization to try to convince them to remove a “missing person” social media post. In the months following,
HSI worked collaboratively with SOS Búsqueda y Rescate, a nonprofit organization dedicated to finding missing migrants, to continue searching for the missing woman.
On Nov. 20, 2021, members of SOS Búsqueda y Rescate located skeletal remains in an isolated area of the Huachuca Mountains, on Fort Huachuca property.
Dental records confirmed that the remains belonged to the missing 23-year-old sister. The deceased is survived by her husband and daughter, according to authorities.
At trial, additional evidence confirmed that Dessens-Romero continued to smuggle undocumented non-citizens within the United States until June 2021.
Dessens-Romero was arrested on June 30, 2021, by the Tennessee Highway Patrol while transporting two migrants.
The HSI Douglas Field Office investigated the case.