Focus in U.S.-Canada border tragedy to shift Monday as accused appears in court
FARGO, N.D. — Under cover of darkness, strafed by bitter winds and obscured by a swirling blizzard, four people plodded through deep snow and deadly cold, aiming to cross an invisible threshold that held the promise of a better life.
Believed to be a family from India, all four — including an infant and a teen — perished in the towering drifts, just metres from the Canada-U.S. border and the warmth of a sanctuary idling on the other side.
Investigators believe they were bound for a waiting passenger van, found laden with provisions purchased in the nearby North Dakota city of Fargo — the famous namesake of Hollywood’s dark 1996 fusion of hapless criminal conspiracy and folksy Midwestern charm.
On Monday, the cameras will pan from the forbidding moonscapes of northern North Dakota and Minnesota to a courthouse in Minneapolis-St. Paul and the man who was allegedly behind the wheel.