Widower’s death adds to grief over El Paso massacre

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Widower’s Death Adds To Grief Over El Paso Massacre
Antonio Basco, © AP/Press Association Images
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By Morgan Lee, AP

A man who drew worldwide sympathy and support after his wife was killed in a mass shooting at a Walmart store in El Paso is being laid to rest.

Antonio Basco died on August 14, just over two years after his wife, Margie Reckard, was fatally shot along with 22 other people by a lone gunman in the Texas city who authorities say targeted Latinos in an attack that stunned the US and Mexico.

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Ms Reckard’s August 2019 funeral drew thousands of people from as far away as California, after Mr Basco announced that he was alone with almost no family left and invited the world to join him in remembering his companion of 22 years.

Few in attendance had ever met Ms Reckard.

Mr Basco – a wiry, weathered man in his early 60s – embraced one visitor after another with open arms.

Flowers poured in, and an SUV was donated to Mr Basco, who made a modest living by washing cars and other odd jobs.

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Adria Gonzalez, an El Paso native who was inside the Walmart during the attack on August 3 2019, said she saw Mr Basco deteriorate mentally and physically in the months after the funeral, amid struggles with alcohol consumption.

Mr Basco was arrested and jailed in late 2019 for driving under the influence.

“He said he missed his wife, and he wasn’t the same,” Ms Gonzalez said.


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No cause of death has been listed by the funeral home.

Mr Basco lived to see the dedication of a memorial to the 2019 shooting victims – a plaque and metal tower evoking a candle that stands outside store where the attack occurred.

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The state’s capital murder case against Patrick Wood Crusius is pending trial in the mass shooting that claimed Ms Reckard’s life.

Crusius also has been charged in federal court with more than 90 counts under federal hate-crime and firearms laws.

The shooting happened on a busy weekend day at a Walmart that is typically popular with shoppers from Mexico and the US.

Authorities say Crusius aimed to scare Latinos into leaving the United States, driving from his home
near Dallas to target Mexicans after posting a racist screed online.

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Crusius has pleaded not guilty, and his lawyers said their client has been diagnosed mental disabilities.

Ms Gonzalez fears consciousness about the shooting, its racist intent and traumatic impact on witnesses has faded amid the coronavirus pandemic.

“We forgot that 23 lives were gone, completely,” she said. “There hasn’t been anything fixed.”

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