
Death Toll Rises to 43 in Texas Floods as Rescuers Scour for Missing
The death toll was expected to rise. Officials do not know how many remain missing, but managers at one beloved summer camp said that 27 girls were unaccounted for as of late Saturday afternoon.
Anguish was everywhere. Parents raced to the scene, intending to search for their children themselves. At a local reunification center, family members hugged and sobbed. They spoke hurriedly into cellphones and scanned for photographs of their missing loved ones. Online, they posted desperate pleas for information. And at news conferences, police officers and elected leaders alike struggled to compose themselves.
'People need to know – today will be a hard day,' said Joe Herring Jr., the mayor of Kerrville, one of the hardest hit cities. His voice caught as he spoke. 'It will be a hard day.'
Rain fell in sheets as first responders combed over the Guadalupe and several other already-swollen rivers. The downpours prompted additional evacuations and flash flood warnings in and around the Texas Hill Country. The forecast offered little relief: More rain was predicted for Saturday night into Sunday.
Swarms of emergency personnel, working in difficult and dangerous conditions, pledged to carry on. They flew helicopters and drones, steered boats and scoured on foot.
'We are literally walking every inch of the Guadalupe from the east side of Kerr County to the west side of Kerr County,' said Jonathan Lamb, a sergeant with the local sheriff's office. He added: 'Our focus remains on the missing and their loved ones, and we're not going to stop until we find and return every missing person.'
Authorities were holding out hope – it remained a search-and-rescue, not a recovery mission – but Lamb said the grief is 'probably going to be just about more than we can bear.'
Kerr County Judge Rob Kelly, the county's top elected leader, spent the morning at a funeral home. The scene was horrific.
Parents were identifying children. Some victims had been in the water so long their fingerprints were no longer usable.
'When you see that many small body bags, it's just, I can't even begin to explain it,' Kelly said in an interview with The Washington Post.
The first 36 hours also brought stories of relief and hope. So far, more than 850 people have been saved, some clinging to trees or floating on mattresses.
The catastrophe unfolded quickly, just before dawn Friday. With parks and summer camps along the river crowded for the Fourth of July holiday, nearly 2 trillion gallons of rain washed over the region. In one part, the Guadalupe rose from 7 feet to 29 feet in just a few hours.
The torrents cut a long path of destruction. Floodwater filled houses and swept away camper vans. It toppled trees and crashed through concrete.
This part of Texas is known as 'Flash Flood Alley,' and it is one of the deadliest places in the country for that type of disaster. The same rolling hills and rugged valleys that make the area so picturesque tend to supercharge surging water, sending rainfall rushing into rivers that soon overflow.
Yet, the speed and severity of the flooding appeared to catch many off guard. Meteorologists warned about a worrying incoming storm Thursday, but at first, there was little sign it would be so vicious.
The most dire alerts came in the overnight hours, and many residents said they didn't see them in time. At about 4:30 a.m. Friday, the National Weather Service notified residents of 'a life-threatening situation.'
At a news conference, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi L. Noem said without elaborating that the agency was using 'ancient technology' to issue alerts and that the Trump administration would work on upgrading it. In a statement, however, the Weather Service said its reports gave localities hours of lead time.
Officials have deflected questions about what more should have been done to prepare for the floods, with Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas) asking observers to stop 'finger-pointing.' Every level of government, he maintained, was doing everything possible to help.
Kelly, the county judge, lives on the Guadalupe and said he never expected the storm to get so bad.
'We didn't know,' he told reporters Saturday. 'We know we get rains. We know the river rises. But nobody saw this coming.'
A similar tragedy occurred some 40 years ago, when 10 teens, also attending a summer camp, were killed and 33 others injured after flooding along the Guadalupe River.
But the death toll from the latest event quickly surpassed that of July 1987, with local officials saying it was the worst flooding they had ever seen.
At an RV park just outside of Kerrville, it initially seemed like a typical summer rainstorm, said Lorena Guillen, who owns the property. As the deluge picked up, Guillen checked for evacuation orders and called the sheriff's office for advice. The answer, she said, was: 'We don't know.'
A few hours later, water was rapidly swallowing the park. Guillen dashed door to door, pulling people in pajamas and underwear to higher ground. As she went, lives floated by: cabins from nearby campgrounds; cars with people still inside, honking for help.
Before the inundation, there were 28 RVs parked at Guillen's park. After, they were all gone. Six of her tenants remain missing and one of her employees, Julian Ryan, is among those who died.
'There was no warning,' Guillen said.
Authorities have not identified all the victims, but more information about some emerged Saturday. There were young and old among them. Campers and counselors.
Ryan, who worked for Guillen at a restaurant near the RV park, died while helping rescue his mother, his fiancée and their children. His family told local media that he cut his arm while punching through a window as they evacuated their house, which was filling with water fast. He lost blood quickly, and the ambulance couldn't make it in time.
Members of another family, the Eads, were separated in the swift waters. Brian and Katheryn Eads had parked their RV at a campground on the riverbank. Brian was later rescued; Katheryn, who went by Kathy, was not.
'Katheryn was a hope and a light to all who knew her,' one of her former colleagues told The Post.
Several victims – and the 27 children who remained missing – were connected to Camp Mystic, an all-girls Christian summer camp that is nearly a century old. When the storm arrived, more than 700 children were at the camp, part of a cherished summer tradition in Texas.
Renee Smajstrla, 8, was photographed smiling as she sat on the camp's stone steps the day before the floodwaters came. 'She will forever be living her best life at Camp Mystic,' her uncle wrote in a memorial post on Facebook.
Richard 'Dick' Eastland, the director of Camp Mystic, and Jane Ragsdale, director of Heart O' the Hills, another camp just upriver, were also among the deceased.
Eastland was found alongside the bodies of three young campers, whom he had died trying to save.
'Dick died doing what he loved,' said Craig Althaus, who worked on the property for 25 years and described finding survivors in trees and on cabin roofs. 'Taking care of those girls.'
Stuart Gross, a retired medical technician at the local fire department, spent years responding to flood events. But on Friday, he found himself on the other side, evacuating his riverside residence. He knew the Guadalupe was dangerous, and he was expecting a flash flood, but he didn't get any alerts.
By 5 a.m. Saturday, he got a knock on the door from emergency personnel urging him to leave. As he fled, he could hear first responders work. Gross spoke to neighbors who heard the chilling cries for help.
'The screams of children they couldn't reach,' Gross said. 'You can't stop Mother Nature.'
Uncertainty reigned as the search wore on. On social media, local news feeds were crowded with family members sharing descriptions and photos of lost loved ones and pets. Residents reported spotty cell service, and officials asked the public for patience.
'I can't tell you how long it's going to take, it's going to take a while,' Kerr County Sheriff Larry L. Leitha said at a news conference.
At the Kerrville reunification center, relieved parents picked up children who had evacuated from Camp Waldemar, another all-girls site near Camp Mystic. All campers and staff made it out safely.
Kathleen and John McGrath were there to collect their 19-year-old daughter, a counselor at the camp, who was looking after a cabin of six 10-year-olds.
'I just want to hug her,' Kathleen said, as she waited for her daughter, Erin, to arrive.
Many of those who survived brought with them harrowing stories of narrow escape. Some of these also played out online, as stranded residents posted last-ditch pleas for rescue.
In one terrifying video, Rachel Sanchez panned across the inside of her home in San Angelo, about 150 miles northwest of Kerrville, on the Concho River. Brown water was lapping against cabinets and through doors: 'Okay, my house is flooding,' she said. 'Anybody out there.'
Her father, in hospice care, was lying in a bed, with the pool approaching the bottom of the mattress. She broke down as she narrated.
'We've lost our cars, everything,' Sanchez said. 'We've lived here for 30 years and this has never happened. Anybody, please, if you have a boat or something, I need help.'
After several calls to 911, they were rescued at last.

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The Mainichi
07-07-2025
- The Mainichi
What to know about the flash floods in Texas that killed more than 80 people
KERRVILLE, Texas (AP) -- Flash floods in Texas killed at least 82 people over the Fourth of July holiday weekend and left others still missing, including girls attending a summer camp. The devastation along the Guadalupe River, outside of San Antonio, has drawn a massive search effort as officials face questions over their preparedness and the speed of their initial actions. Here's what to know about the deadly flooding, the colossal weather system that drove it in and around Kerr County, Texas, and ongoing efforts to identify victims. Massive rain hit at just the wrong time, in a flood-prone place The floods grew to their worst at the midpoint of a long holiday weekend when many people were asleep. The Texas Hill Country in the central part of the state is naturally prone to flash flooding due to the dry dirt-packed areas where the soil lets rain skid along the surface of the landscape instead of soaking it up. Friday's flash floods started with a particularly bad storm that dropped most of its 12 inches (30 centimeters) of rain in the dark early morning hours. After a flood watch notice midday Thursday, the National Weather Service office issued an urgent warning around 4 a.m. that raised the potential of catastrophic damage and a severe threat to human life. By at least 5:20 a.m., some in the Kerrville City area say water levels were getting alarmingly high. The massive rain flowing down hills sent rushing water into the Guadalupe River, causing it to rise 26 feet (8 meters) in just 45 minutes. Death toll is expected to rise and the number of missing is uncertain Gov. Greg Abbott said Sunday that there were 41 people confirmed to be unaccounted for across the state and more could be missing. In Kerr County, home to youth camps in the Texas Hill Country, searchers have found the bodies of 68 people, including 28 children, Sheriff Larry Leitha said Sunday afternoon. Fatalities in nearby counties brought the total number of deaths to 79 as of Sunday evening. Ten girls and a counselor were still unaccounted for at Camp Mystic, a Christian summer camp along the river. For past campers, the tragedy turned happy memories into grief. Beyond the Camp Mystic campers unaccounted for, the number of missing from other nearby campgrounds and across the region had not been released. "We don't even want to begin to estimate at this time," Kerrville City Manager Dalton Rice said Saturday, citing the likely influx of visitors during the July Fourth holiday. Officials face scrutiny over flash flood warnings Survivors have described the floods as a "pitch black wall of death" and said they received no emergency warnings. Kerr County Judge Rob Kelly, who lives along the Guadalupe River, said Saturday that " nobody saw this coming." Various officials have referred to it as a "100-year-flood," meaning that the water levels were highly unlikely based on the historical record. And records behind those statistics don't always account for human-caused climate change. Though it's hard to connect specific storms to a warming planet so soon after they occur, meteorologists say that a warmer atmosphere can hold more moisture and allow severe storms to dump even more rain. Additionally, officials have come under scrutiny about why residents and youth summer camps along the river were not alerted sooner than 4 a.m. or told to evacuate. Officials noted that the public can grow weary from too many flooding alerts or forecasts that turn out to be minor. Kerr county officials said they had presented a proposal for a more robust flood warning system, similar to a tornado warning system, but that members of the public reeled at the cost. On Sunday, officials walked out of a news briefing after reporters asked them again about delays in alerts and evacuations. Monumental clearing and rebuilding effort The flash floods have erased campgrounds and torn homes from their foundations. "It's going to be a long time before we're ever able to clean it up, much less rebuild it," Kelly said Saturday after surveying the destruction from a helicopter. Other massive flooding events have driven residents and business owners to give up, including in areas struck last year by Hurricane Helene. President Donald Trump said he would likely visit the flood zone on Friday. AP photographers have captured the scale of the destruction, and one of Texas' largest rescue and recover efforts.


Yomiuri Shimbun
06-07-2025
- Yomiuri Shimbun
Death Toll Rises to 43 in Texas Floods as Rescuers Scour for Missing
KERRVILLE, Texas – A nightmarish search-and-rescue operation continued in Kerr County on Saturday, as authorities frantically fanned out along the roiling Guadalupe River looking for survivors of the fierce flooding that has killed at least 43 people, 15 of them children. The death toll was expected to rise. Officials do not know how many remain missing, but managers at one beloved summer camp said that 27 girls were unaccounted for as of late Saturday afternoon. Anguish was everywhere. Parents raced to the scene, intending to search for their children themselves. At a local reunification center, family members hugged and sobbed. They spoke hurriedly into cellphones and scanned for photographs of their missing loved ones. Online, they posted desperate pleas for information. And at news conferences, police officers and elected leaders alike struggled to compose themselves. 'People need to know – today will be a hard day,' said Joe Herring Jr., the mayor of Kerrville, one of the hardest hit cities. His voice caught as he spoke. 'It will be a hard day.' Rain fell in sheets as first responders combed over the Guadalupe and several other already-swollen rivers. The downpours prompted additional evacuations and flash flood warnings in and around the Texas Hill Country. The forecast offered little relief: More rain was predicted for Saturday night into Sunday. Swarms of emergency personnel, working in difficult and dangerous conditions, pledged to carry on. They flew helicopters and drones, steered boats and scoured on foot. 'We are literally walking every inch of the Guadalupe from the east side of Kerr County to the west side of Kerr County,' said Jonathan Lamb, a sergeant with the local sheriff's office. He added: 'Our focus remains on the missing and their loved ones, and we're not going to stop until we find and return every missing person.' Authorities were holding out hope – it remained a search-and-rescue, not a recovery mission – but Lamb said the grief is 'probably going to be just about more than we can bear.' Kerr County Judge Rob Kelly, the county's top elected leader, spent the morning at a funeral home. The scene was horrific. Parents were identifying children. Some victims had been in the water so long their fingerprints were no longer usable. 'When you see that many small body bags, it's just, I can't even begin to explain it,' Kelly said in an interview with The Washington Post. The first 36 hours also brought stories of relief and hope. So far, more than 850 people have been saved, some clinging to trees or floating on mattresses. The catastrophe unfolded quickly, just before dawn Friday. With parks and summer camps along the river crowded for the Fourth of July holiday, nearly 2 trillion gallons of rain washed over the region. In one part, the Guadalupe rose from 7 feet to 29 feet in just a few hours. The torrents cut a long path of destruction. Floodwater filled houses and swept away camper vans. It toppled trees and crashed through concrete. This part of Texas is known as 'Flash Flood Alley,' and it is one of the deadliest places in the country for that type of disaster. The same rolling hills and rugged valleys that make the area so picturesque tend to supercharge surging water, sending rainfall rushing into rivers that soon overflow. Yet, the speed and severity of the flooding appeared to catch many off guard. Meteorologists warned about a worrying incoming storm Thursday, but at first, there was little sign it would be so vicious. The most dire alerts came in the overnight hours, and many residents said they didn't see them in time. At about 4:30 a.m. Friday, the National Weather Service notified residents of 'a life-threatening situation.' At a news conference, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi L. Noem said without elaborating that the agency was using 'ancient technology' to issue alerts and that the Trump administration would work on upgrading it. In a statement, however, the Weather Service said its reports gave localities hours of lead time. Officials have deflected questions about what more should have been done to prepare for the floods, with Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas) asking observers to stop 'finger-pointing.' Every level of government, he maintained, was doing everything possible to help. Kelly, the county judge, lives on the Guadalupe and said he never expected the storm to get so bad. 'We didn't know,' he told reporters Saturday. 'We know we get rains. We know the river rises. But nobody saw this coming.' A similar tragedy occurred some 40 years ago, when 10 teens, also attending a summer camp, were killed and 33 others injured after flooding along the Guadalupe River. But the death toll from the latest event quickly surpassed that of July 1987, with local officials saying it was the worst flooding they had ever seen. At an RV park just outside of Kerrville, it initially seemed like a typical summer rainstorm, said Lorena Guillen, who owns the property. As the deluge picked up, Guillen checked for evacuation orders and called the sheriff's office for advice. The answer, she said, was: 'We don't know.' A few hours later, water was rapidly swallowing the park. Guillen dashed door to door, pulling people in pajamas and underwear to higher ground. As she went, lives floated by: cabins from nearby campgrounds; cars with people still inside, honking for help. Before the inundation, there were 28 RVs parked at Guillen's park. After, they were all gone. Six of her tenants remain missing and one of her employees, Julian Ryan, is among those who died. 'There was no warning,' Guillen said. Authorities have not identified all the victims, but more information about some emerged Saturday. There were young and old among them. Campers and counselors. Ryan, who worked for Guillen at a restaurant near the RV park, died while helping rescue his mother, his fiancée and their children. His family told local media that he cut his arm while punching through a window as they evacuated their house, which was filling with water fast. He lost blood quickly, and the ambulance couldn't make it in time. Members of another family, the Eads, were separated in the swift waters. Brian and Katheryn Eads had parked their RV at a campground on the riverbank. Brian was later rescued; Katheryn, who went by Kathy, was not. 'Katheryn was a hope and a light to all who knew her,' one of her former colleagues told The Post. Several victims – and the 27 children who remained missing – were connected to Camp Mystic, an all-girls Christian summer camp that is nearly a century old. When the storm arrived, more than 700 children were at the camp, part of a cherished summer tradition in Texas. Renee Smajstrla, 8, was photographed smiling as she sat on the camp's stone steps the day before the floodwaters came. 'She will forever be living her best life at Camp Mystic,' her uncle wrote in a memorial post on Facebook. Richard 'Dick' Eastland, the director of Camp Mystic, and Jane Ragsdale, director of Heart O' the Hills, another camp just upriver, were also among the deceased. Eastland was found alongside the bodies of three young campers, whom he had died trying to save. 'Dick died doing what he loved,' said Craig Althaus, who worked on the property for 25 years and described finding survivors in trees and on cabin roofs. 'Taking care of those girls.' Stuart Gross, a retired medical technician at the local fire department, spent years responding to flood events. But on Friday, he found himself on the other side, evacuating his riverside residence. He knew the Guadalupe was dangerous, and he was expecting a flash flood, but he didn't get any alerts. By 5 a.m. Saturday, he got a knock on the door from emergency personnel urging him to leave. As he fled, he could hear first responders work. Gross spoke to neighbors who heard the chilling cries for help. 'The screams of children they couldn't reach,' Gross said. 'You can't stop Mother Nature.' Uncertainty reigned as the search wore on. On social media, local news feeds were crowded with family members sharing descriptions and photos of lost loved ones and pets. Residents reported spotty cell service, and officials asked the public for patience. 'I can't tell you how long it's going to take, it's going to take a while,' Kerr County Sheriff Larry L. Leitha said at a news conference. At the Kerrville reunification center, relieved parents picked up children who had evacuated from Camp Waldemar, another all-girls site near Camp Mystic. All campers and staff made it out safely. Kathleen and John McGrath were there to collect their 19-year-old daughter, a counselor at the camp, who was looking after a cabin of six 10-year-olds. 'I just want to hug her,' Kathleen said, as she waited for her daughter, Erin, to arrive. Many of those who survived brought with them harrowing stories of narrow escape. Some of these also played out online, as stranded residents posted last-ditch pleas for rescue. In one terrifying video, Rachel Sanchez panned across the inside of her home in San Angelo, about 150 miles northwest of Kerrville, on the Concho River. Brown water was lapping against cabinets and through doors: 'Okay, my house is flooding,' she said. 'Anybody out there.' Her father, in hospice care, was lying in a bed, with the pool approaching the bottom of the mattress. She broke down as she narrated. 'We've lost our cars, everything,' Sanchez said. 'We've lived here for 30 years and this has never happened. Anybody, please, if you have a boat or something, I need help.' After several calls to 911, they were rescued at last.


Japan Today
05-07-2025
- Japan Today
Death toll at 27 as flood waters recede in central Texas
By Rich McKay and Ryan Patrick Jones Some 27 people, including nine children, have been confirmed dead after flash floods in central Texas, authorities said on Saturday, as rescuers continued a frantic search for survivors including dozens still missing from a girls' summer camp. The sheriff's office in Kerr County, Texas said more than 800 people had been evacuated from the region as flood waters receded in the area around the Guadalupe River, about 85 miles (137 km) northwest of San Antonio. "We will not stop until every single person is found," Kerr County Sheriff Larry Leitha said at a news conference. At least 23 to 25 people from the Camp Mystic summer camp were missing, most of them reported to be young girls. The river waters rose 29 feet rapidly near the camp. The U.S. National Weather Service said that the flash flood emergency has largely ended for Kerr County, the epicenter of the flooding, following thunderstorms that dumped as much as 15 inches of rain -- half of the total the region sees in a typical year. A flood watch remained in effect until 7 p.m. for the broader region. Kerr County sits in the Texas Hill Country, a rural area known for its rugged terrain, historic towns and other tourist attractions. Texas Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick said up to 500 rescue workers were searching for an unknown number of missing people, including some who had come to the area for an Independence Day celebration by the river. 'We don't know how many people were in tents on the side, in small trailers by the side, in rented homes by the side, because it was going to be the Fourth of July holiday," he said on Fox News Live. Camp Mystic had 700 girls in residence at the time of the flood, according to Patrick. Another girls' camp, Heart O' the Hills, said on its website that co-owner Jane Ragsdale had died in the flood but no campers had been present as it was between sessions. U.S. President Donald Trump said the federal government is working with state and local officials to respond to the flooding. "Melania and I are praying for all of the families impacted by this horrible tragedy. Our Brave First Responders are on site doing what they do best," he said on social media. Videos posted online showed bare concrete platforms where homes used to stand and piles of rubble along the banks of the river. Rescuers plucked residents from rooftops and trees, sometimes forming human chains to fetch people from the floodwater, local media reported. Dalton Rice, city manager for Kerrville, the county seat, told reporters on Friday that the extreme flooding struck before dawn with little or no warning, precluding authorities from issuing advance evacuation orders as the Guadalupe River swiftly rose above major flood stage in less than two hours. State emergency management officials had warned as early as Thursday that west and central Texas faced heavy rains and flash flood threats, citing National Weather Service forecasts ahead of the holiday weekend. The forecasts, however, "did not predict the amount of rain that we saw," W. Nim Kidd, director of the Texas Division of Emergency Management, told a news conference on Friday night. The weekend disaster echoes a catastrophic 1987 Guadalupe River flood in which 10 teenagers drowned when trying to leave a church camp, according to the National Weather Service. © Thomson Reuters 2025.