A Mexican man pleaded guilty for his role in a smuggling conspiracy case involving access to the U.S. through Canada.
The 24-year-old was accused of leading a smuggling organization out of Kansas City, Mo., according to a news release published last week from the U.S. Office of Public Affairs.
The office says this organization was responsible for smuggling hundreds of migrants originally from Mexico, Central America and South America into the U.S. from Canada. Prosecutors say that those people were driven across the U.S. after clearing the border. They alleged the accused, who pleaded guilty to “one count of conspiracy to commit alien smuggling and five counts of alien smuggling for commercial advantage and private financial gain,” helped co-ordinate and took part in these events.
One such border crossing, which occurred in May 2023, involved a high-speed chase between a van and U.S. Border Patrol officials, the office said in a May 7 statement. Other chases are noted in a 2025 news release announcing charges in the case.
Border patrol officers stopped the chase for safety reasons, and the van was brought to a stop by the local sheriff’s department and a tire deflation device, the office said, summarizing information from court documents.
Following an investigation, Edgar Sanchez-Solis entered a guilty plea, and is scheduled to be sentenced in September. He faces a minimum prison sentence of five years, and maximum of 15, according to the Office of Public Affairs.
Charges against Sanchez-Solis and three others were announced last year by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). A news release issued by ICE at the time said the accused had told migrants to make “testimonial videos” with positive reviews of the smuggling organization’s efforts.
“In reality, the defendants imperiled their human cargo and innocent American lives when they repeatedly engaged in life-threatening conduct, including multiple high-speed getaways from law enforcement,” the head of the U.S. Justice Department’s criminal division, Matthew R. Galeotti, said in the release.
It was alleged the organization operated for two years in Mexico, Canada, and the U.S., and that migrants were brought into the U.S. through border crossings in New York.


