Beckham County, Oklahoma
Crime News Gleanings

ELK CITY -- Riders in a minivan that crashed during the recent ice storm -- a wreck that killed seven people -- were illegal immigrants from Mexico being taken to North Carolina, an immigration official confirmed Tuesday.  "This was a smuggling operation," said Carl Rusnok, a spokesman for the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement's regional office in Dallas. "Right now, we're in the process of determining whether or not this was part of a bigger smuggling ring."  Six passengers and the driver were killed about 3:50 a.m. Sunday after the van slid across the median and spun into an oncoming tractor-trailer going west on Interstate 40 near Elk City. All seven victims were thrown from the vehicle.  Driver Miguel Marquez-Vargas, 32, and Francisco Marquez-Vargas, 19, of Acaxochitlan, Mexico, were among those found dead at the scene. The Oklahoma Highway Patrol is withholding the names of the five other victims until next of kin can be notified -- a process that "could take weeks," patrol Lt. Pete Norwood said.  Eleven of the van's 12 occupants have been identified, Rusnok said.  Truck driver Donald Ray Reeves, 54, of Midwest City was unharmed.  Agents later learned the occupants of the van were headed for Durham, N.C., presumably to find work.  Agents were notified of the possible smuggling operation by Oklahoma troopers roughly three hours after the wreck, Rusnok said.  At least one survivor -- Pedro Valdez, 56, of Mexico -- was taken into custody by federal agents Sunday after being released from the Great Plains Medical Center in Elk City. He was held at the Beckham County jail in Sayre, where Rusnok said he awaits deportation.  "If it is determined that he has no criminal history in the United States, then I would imagine he'll be sent back to Mexico right away," Rusnok said.  Two other survivors -- Mexican nationals Sergio Yanez-Martinez and Mitxi Vasquez -- were released from the hospital Monday, Great Plains spokesman Stephen Ryhmer said. Their whereabouts are unknown.  Gaudencio P. Perez, 17, of Mexico and Eurencio V. Gonzales, 20, of Durham, N.C., remained in the hospital with injuries.  Both have been identified as Mexican nationals. [The Daily Oklahoman, Jan. 17, 2007]



Melva Lynn Hudgens

When Florella Bashaw saw two lawmen walking to her door Wednesday in Elk City, Okla., she knew why they were there. The bullet-riddled body found nearly three decades ago in Denton County was her daughter's. The long wait was over.  "I had been really, really hoping that wasn't why they were here," Bashaw said in a phone interview, taking a deep breath. "I was hoping that some day, we could be together again. It was not satisfying."  On Tuesday, the Tarrant County Medical Examiner's Office positively identified the body of Melva Lynn Hudgens of Elk City. She had been classified as a Jane Doe after being found in April 1978 in a creek bed on Farm Road 156 north of Krum in North Texas.  The 18-year-old high school senior had been shot seven times with a .38-caliber weapon, officials said.  Because her body had not been identified, authorities buried Hudgens in a pauper's grave in Oakwood Cemetery in Denton.  Through the years, Bashaw refused to let the investigation die. In September 2003, she persuaded local sheriff's deputies to reopen the case. The original case folder was lost, so they started a new one, said Undersheriff Donnie Smith of the Beckham County Sheriff's Office, which serves Elk City.  At Bashaw's request, officers also put information on the Web site www.doenetwork.us, a volunteer group that helps law enforcement agencies solve cold cases involving missing people and unidentified victims.  That was the turning point.  Last October, Don Britt and Allen Gibson, investigators with the Denton County Sheriff's Department, learned of the Web site through a newspaper article about a Washington State Patrol detective who solved an 11-year-old missing-person case using the Web site.  "If it wasn't for this site, I would never have known who she is," Britt said.  Gibson and Britt, who had reopened the case in Texas four years ago, combed through the site until they found information that pointed to Hudgens.  Britt contacted the Beckham County Sheriff's Office. Hudgens' mother and sister looked at photographs taken when the body was found and believed that they had found Hudgens. Britt then requested DNA testing.  Forensic identification was completed Tuesday, and on Wednesday, Smith and Britt went to Bashaw's home to tell her.  "She didn't break down, but you could tell she was upset," Smith said. "At the same time, it looked like it gave her relief -- because she had been searching nearly 30 years."  According to the Web site information submitted by Beckham County officials, Hudgens was traveling with two friends on U.S. 66 in Oklahoma and had car trouble. Hudgens accepted a ride to town from two men in a green vehicle with Missouri license plates. The friends stayed behind, the Web site said.  At a news conference Friday in Denton, Britt said that having an identification could be the break they need to solve the slaying.  "This is a 27-year-old case, but it's a brand new investigation now and we're approaching it from that standpoint," he said.  Hudgens' mother, meanwhile, is hoping that media attention will help turn up more information about what happened to her daughter.  Bashaw remembers her daughter as a creative young woman who made her own clothes and wanted to become a dressmaker.  "She must have got that from me because I made her clothes when she was little," Bashaw said. "I still have all the ribbons she won."
[Source: Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Texas - Feb. 12, 2005]

AMMON WRIGHT
Governor Cruce granted a parole to Ammon Wright of Beckham county, sent to the Granite reformatory for two years for burglarizing a store. He has served ten months of the term. The parole was recommended by everyone in touch with the case, the most urgent plea for the youth being made by the merchant who had been robbed. Young Wright had had punishment enough he wrote. The boy’s record in the reformatory was excellent.
(Farmer’s Champion, Elgin, Okla., November 14, 1912, page 2 - Submitted by Peggy Thompson)






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