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The devastated sister of a 12-year-old Missouri boy killed by an illegal migrant accused of driving the wrong way at almost double the speed limit has said 'she shouldn't have been here'.
Heartbroken Taylor Wolfe said her family has been 'ripped apart' by the death of her little brother Travis.
The youngster died from brain injuries on March 6, three months after the head on collision.
Venezuelan migrant Endrina Bracho was behind the wheel of her minivan going at 75mph in a 40mph zone with her own two children in the back at the time of the crash, police said.
Following her arrest, Taylor expressed outrage that Bracho was driving given she did not have a license.
Travis Wolfe, 12, from St. Louis, Missouri, has died three months after a car crash with an illegal migrant
Endrina Bracho was driving along the road in the wrong direction, at twice the speed limit with her own children in the back of her car when she hit the car Travis Wolfe was traveling in
The Wolfe family's blue Jeep is seen following the impact in December last year
'It makes me really angry if I'm being honest, everybody here has to get a driver's license [...] and she didn't do that', she told Fox. 'She shouldn't have been here.
'Now my family is stuck with the loss of a child because she didn't know how to drive.'
Following the crash, which also injured left Travis' parents, a GoFundMe was set up to cover the family's medical expenses.
'If she had come here legally she would have had the documents and she would have been able to get herself insurance,' Taylor added.
Court documents state Bracho is 'here illegally from Venezuela' and was driving in the wrong lane when she hit the Jeep the Wolfes were traveling in.
The boy's dad, Tim, had broken wrists and ribs, while his mom, Steph, suffered a broken ankle and sternum. They have both since been released from hospital.
The crash took place the day before Travis' twelfth birthday and Taylor described their anguish at watching him lie lifeless when he should have been celebrating.
'It was horrible, he wasn't awake for it he didn't get to experience anything so did he really actually make it to twelve?' She asked.
Such was the impact of the crash, it left Travis on life support at St. Louis Children’s Hospital with brain injuries from which he did not recover
Bracho's Dodge minivan is seen with a crumpled bonnet after the fatal car crash
Travis is pictured with his parents, Tim and Steph, in happier times
She described her brother as a 'very sweet soul' who was committed to his friends and 'always tried to light up the room making people laugh'.
Taylor was alerted to the crash via an app alerting her that her brother and Steph had been in some kind of accident.
Travis was taken to St. Louis Children’s Hospital following the collision and she described the agony of being forced to make decisions for him whilst his parents were incapacitated.
'I was in the waiting area trying to figure out who was okay. What was going on with Travis and Stephanie felt like a million years.
'They told me Steph and Dad were okay, but Travis was critical. After she said that they were wheeling him past. It was really hard, I followed him to the children's hospital and I was there with him for days.
'Being the older sister and having to make decisions for his wellbeing, it was really hard.'
Bracho is currently in custody and being held on a $500,000 cash-only bond, with a hearing set for April 8.
Her children are currently being looked after by their father.
She is facing charges of involuntary manslaughter in the first degree, two counts of assault in the second degree, two counts of endangering a child in the first degree, and one count of operating a vehicle without a valid license.