Three Illegal Aliens Rescued From Rio Grande

Department of War Southern Border
Story by Capt. Shamari Pratt

Date: 04.02.2026
Posted: 04.09.2026 11:32
News ID: 562341
U.S. Border Patrol agents, Texas state troopers, and U.S. Army soldiers assigned to JTF-SB rescue three Illegal aliens attempting to cross the U.S southern border.

LAREDO, Texas — Three illegal aliens were rescued from the Rio Grande River on Wednesday, April 1, 2026, at approximately 7:40 p.m. after a vehicle pursuit tied to a suspected human smuggling operation ended with a crash. Multiple illegal aliens entered the river, and one illegal alien was presumed to have drowned.

The incident began around 7 p.m. when a Texas state trooper initiated a pursuit of a vehicle near Laredo, suspected of involvement in human smuggling. The chase ended when the occupants abandoned the vehicle near a U.S. Army post staffed by soldiers assigned to Joint Task Force-Southern Border (JTF-SB).

Six individuals exited the vehicle and entered the river, apparently attempting to return to Mexico. Four began to struggle against the strong current, prompting an immediate rescue response from local law enforcement and military personnel.

U.S Army, Spc. Alexa Aviles and Spc. Jahdaniel Garcia, assigned to the 442nd Military Police Company, 104th Military Police Battalion, 130th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade, were monitoring the border when they heard radio traffic indicating the pursuit was approaching their sector.

“I saw the vehicle that was described over the radio run off the road and drive into the river," said Aviles. “The individuals quickly exited the SUV and jumped in the water and started swimming.”

Two suspects made it across the border to Mexico. The four others struggled to cross while attempting to evade state troopers and border patrol agents.

“When I saw them struggling in the current, I immediately grabbed rope and flotation devices from our vehicle,” Garcia said. “My partner and I ran the supplies over to border patrol agents and state troopers.”

Working in unity, U.S. Border Patrol agents and U.S. Army soldiers rescued three individuals from the water. Two of the individuals made it back to the Mexican side of the river. “One person went under and did not resurface,” Garcia said. Local law enforcement later identified the body of the missing individual.

The incident underscores the dangers associated with human smuggling operations along the southern border, particularly in hazardous natural conditions such as the Rio Grande.

U.S. Northern Command established JTF-SB to execute full-scale, agile, and simultaneous multi-domain border operations. To protect the United States sovereignty, territorial integrity, and security from unlawful mass migration, narcotics trafficking, human smuggling and trafficking, and other criminal activities.