(CNN) -- An SUV packed with people and a semitruck towing two trailers collided in a rural California county near the Mexican border on Tuesday morning, leaving at least a dozen dead and others hospitalized, officials said.

Overhead video in Imperial County shows the brutal aftermath of the crash, with the jack-knifed semitruck smashed into the left side of a Ford Expedition. Both came to a rest off the side of a rural road about 10 miles north of the border.

Hospital and police officials gave slightly different tallies of the injured and dead in the incident.

California Highway Patrol Border Division Chief Omar Watson said at a morning briefing there were 25 occupants in the Expedition during the crash and that 13 died, including the 22-year-old driver. A Ford Expedition typically can safely seat up to eight people.

"It would be premature of me to speculate on what happened at this collision. The important thing is that 13 people died in this crash," he said at a second media update. "We owe it to the families of those that were killed and injured as well at the public to conduct a complete and thorough investigation."

Watson described a gruesome scene in which some occupants were ejected from the vehicle and died, while others were found dead within the SUV. He said 12 people died at the collision site and one person died at a hospital.

"Obviously, that vehicle is not meant for that many people," he said. "It's unfortunate that that number of people were put into that vehicle because there's not enough safety restraints to safely keep those people within the vehicle."

Police received a call about the crash at about 6:15 a.m. At the time of the crash, the semitruck was traveling north on State Road 115 and the Expedition was traveling west on Norrish Road. Watson said it was unknown whether the Expedition stopped at a stop sign, but the SUV entered the intersection in front of the semitruck, leading to the collision.

The passengers in the SUV ranged in age from 16 to 55; the youngest person who was injured or killed was 20, Watson said at the second news conference.

Watson said it is unknown where all the people in the SUV are from. Some didn't have identification. The driver was from the Mexican city of Mexicali, he said.

"We are close to the border, so we have people who come back and forth daily for work," he said.

Authorities are working with the Mexican consulate to determine who was in the vehicle and to notify next of kin.

Judy Cruz, the managing director of the emergency room department at El Centro Regional Medical Center, earlier had said the vehicle had 28 occupants and that 15 had died.

"Patients are going through a difficult time as you can imagine," El Centro Regional Medical Center CEO Adolphe Edward said. "This was a major accident and we are taking care of them in the emergency room department."

Edward advised not to refer to those injured as "undocumented" and noted that a member of the Mexican consulate was present at a news conference alongside hospital officials.

The driver of the semitruck, who is 69, had moderate injuries. The trailers he was pulling were not loaded, Watson said.

The injured occupants were taken to El Centro Regional Medical Center (ECRMC), Desert Regional Medical Center in Palm Springs and Pioneers Memorial Hospital in nearby Brawley. UC San Diego Health said it received three patients transferred from ECRMC via air ambulance.

Three of the four patients being treated at Desert Regional Medical Center were in the intensive care unit, hospital director of communications Todd Burke told CNN.

Correction: A previous version of this story had the incorrect number of fatalities. This is a developing story and details, such as the number of fatalities, the number of occupants in the SUV, and the number injured may continue to change.

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