At 5:

00 a.m., just before the bus leaves, the father tells agents she is sick and she is vomiting. The bus continues to move to what is the closest Border Patrol station. It's an hour-and-a-half away. At 6:30, it arrived there. And she received medical care for the first time since arriving in the U.S. at 7:45.

And she's no longer breathing, by the way, by the time she gets to the Border Patrol station — 7:45, an air ambulance is called in to transport her to the closest trauma unit. That is over in El Paso.

We're told, when she arrived there, Jakelin was dehydrated. She had swelling around her brain. She was reliant on a ventilator by that point. The next morning, December the 8th, this 7-year-old girl dies.

Now, one of the big questions is, why did it take so long to get her medical attention? Here's where a map is incredibly you useful to know where we're talking about. That base, Antelope Wells in New Mexico, it's in an incredibly remote part of the country. There is water on site, we're told by DHS. We don't know if Jakelin had any.

There is no medical staff there. And, from that base, they have to drive 95 miles to that closest Border Patrol station you see up in Lordsburg. That's 95 miles of nothing. There's no facilities, no towns, no medical support along the way.

DHS officials basically say, look, everyone got initially screen. She wasn't sick at the time. Her father didn't flag that she was unwell. They say, when they got on the bus — and there is just one bus available to shuttle people back and forth, by the way — they did all they could with the resources that they had.