logo
Signs of lost campers litter riverbanks amid search for the missing in Texas

Signs of lost campers litter riverbanks amid search for the missing in Texas

USA Todaya day ago
'I'd want everybody and anybody to help': Hundreds of volunteers grapple with what they might find along the Guadalupe River in flood-wrecked Kerr County, Texas.
CENTER POINT, Texas – Less than an hour into his mission, Troy Tillman came across a disturbing clue in his search for missing flood victims: a small, headless Barbie doll, its clothes and extremities missing.
Not a small human, but something once belonging to one.
'The whole missing 10-year-old girls thing just pulls on everyone's heart,' said Tillman, 34, a detective with the Hockley County Sheriff's Office near Lubbock, as he scoured the banks of the Guadalupe River. 'That's why we're out here.'
On Tuesday, hundreds of volunteers in flood-wrecked Kerr County entered their fifth day of search and rescue. With each passing day, however, the chance of finding someone alive dwindles. The last "live rescue" was made on Friday, July 4, said Jonathan Lamb with the Kerrville Police Department.
More than 100 people were killed in the floods that barreled along the Guadalupe River early on the Fourth of July, including at least 27 campers and counselors from a nearby beloved Christian girls camp. Five campers and one counselor remained missing as of July 8 and could potentially be entangled within the masses of tree branches and debris lining the banks.
Each day, searchers find remnants of what could be detritus from the camp: Child-size life vests, pillowcases, swim goggles, girls T-shirts, underwear, headless Barbie dolls.
Many of the volunteers hurried to Kerrville to help with the search specifically because of the number of young victims. But, as rescue shifts to recovery, the grim possibility of discovering a young victim added a layer of dread to the effort.
'You do, but you don't,' said Hannah Whitney, 42, of nearby Boerne, as she poked through tree branches and bushes along a mud-covered embankment. 'You don't want to find somebody, but at the same time finding a child could bring peace and closure to a family.'
On Tuesday, July 8, more than 200 volunteers gathered just past dawn in the Center Point Volunteer Fire Department parking lot. They split into teams of 10 to 15 and were given specific areas along the Guadalupe River to search, part of a larger grid organizers are using to scour the entire river valley.
Tillman and a group of 13 others were assigned a stretch on the north bank of the river in Center Point, about 28 miles downriver from Camp Mystic. Around 13 bodies had been found in the area the past few days, he said.
The volunteers fanned out across a terrain littered with uprooted trees and piles of branches. Some dug into a tangle of branches, using mini flashlights to peer under the roots of downed cypress trees. Others used chainsaws to cut through trunks and branches.
If a volunteer was satisfied no one was there, he'd spray a large orange 'X' on the trunk, alerting other searchers that the area was body-free.
Rafael Martinez, 33, saw the images of the drowned and missing campers and drove four hours from Alvardo, Texas, to help with the search.
'It was weighing on me,' said Martinez, who has two daughters, ages 3 and 5.
On an earlier search over the weekend, Martinez's team found swim goggles, pillowcases and small life jackets hanging from branches in the trees or lodged in the mud – painful reminders of the victims they're looking for.
'Obviously, we want to find someone,' he said as he ducked under branches and peered into debris piles. 'But every time we crawl into a hole and reach in, you fear you might actually find someone.'
The volunteers carefully poked through the mud-slicked terrain. Splintered branches poked at them like spears, vines tangled feet and the mud sent some sliding down the embankment.
Whitney said she was motivated to help by the missing campers. Her two daughters, ages 10 and 18, leave for their own summer camp in Colorado next week.
'If I were a mother searching for my children, I'd want everybody and anybody to help,' she said. 'You just hope you could bring those babies home, in some shape or form.'
Tillman, the detective, has volunteered in other disaster zones, including rescuing residents in Vidor, Texas, stranded by floods from Hurricane Harvey and wildfires in the Texas Panhandle. The scope of destruction in this disaster feels bigger, different, with far fewer survivors, he said.
Also, the missing children.
'I have a six-year-old son,' Tillman said. 'If it were my kid missing, you'd want someone to crawl up there and find him for you.'
He picked up a chainsaw and trudged on through the tangled debris.
Follow Jervis on X: @MrRJervis.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

El Paso man arrested after more than 70 copper flower vases stolen at Evergreen Cemetery
El Paso man arrested after more than 70 copper flower vases stolen at Evergreen Cemetery

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

El Paso man arrested after more than 70 copper flower vases stolen at Evergreen Cemetery

El Paso County sheriff's investigators arrested a man as part of an investigation into the theft of more than 70 copper flower vases from a cemetery. Daniel Sanchez, 53, was arrested on Tuesday, July 8, after allegedly attempting to sell two copper vases to a local recycling center that he knew had been stolen, an El Paso County Sheriff's Office news release issued by spokeswoman Priscilla I. Contreras stated. The investigation began on Monday, July 7, after a person walked into the sheriff's East Montana Patrol Station to file a report about property stolen across the street at Evergreen Cemetery East at 12400 East Montana Ave., the Sheriff's Office stated. Crime of the Week: Masked burglars bust into East El Paso smoke shop, steal nearly $3,000 in merch During the investigation, deputies found that about 70 graves were missing their copper flower vases, which appeared to have been systematically removed in thefts suspected of going on for several months, sheriff's officials said. Several piles of discarded flowers were also found in the desert near the cemetery in a possible attempt to conceal the thefts of the vases, which have a value of about $400 each, sheriff's officials said. As part of the investigation, deputies and detectives from the East Montana station contacted several local recycling centers. A center informed investigators that Sanchez was attempting to quickly sell a pair of copper vases, leading to the arrest of Sanchez in the theft case, officials said. Culture: El Paso ranks No. 4 for Día de los Muertos celebrations in the US Sanchez, of the far East Side, was arrested on one count of theft of property worth between $750 and $2,500. El Paso County Jail records show Sanchez was booked into the Downtown jail on Tuesday, July 8, and released that same day after posting a $1,000 surety bond. An investigation continues. Anyone with information or who may have been impacted by the cemetery flower vase thefts may call the El Paso County Sheriff's Office at 915-273-3814. Daniel Borunda may be reached at dborunda@ and @BorundaDaniel on X. This article originally appeared on El Paso Times: El Paso man arrested in theft of Evergreen Cemetery flower vases

Man guilty of murder after driving into 'Good Samaritan' Chris Marriott following wedding brawl in Sheffield
Man guilty of murder after driving into 'Good Samaritan' Chris Marriott following wedding brawl in Sheffield

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Man guilty of murder after driving into 'Good Samaritan' Chris Marriott following wedding brawl in Sheffield

A man who killed a "Good Samaritan" by driving into the middle of a wedding brawl has been found guilty of murder. Chris Marriott, 46, was out for a post-Christmas walk when he was hit by Hassan Jhangur's car and left trapped underneath. Jhangur used his Seat Ibiza as a weapon after a fight between two families at his sister's wedding reception on 27 December 2023. He first drove into the father of the Khan family, sending him over the bonnet, then crashed into a group of four people that included Mr Marriott. The devout Christian had stopped to help one of Jhangur's sisters, who was lying in the road unconscious in the Burngreave area of . Off-duty midwife Alison Norris and Jhangur's own mother and sister were also injured, Sheffield Crown Court was told. Jhangur, 25, stabbed his new brother-in-law Hasan Khan several times in the head and chest after getting out the car. The court heard Jhangur later told police: "That's why you don't mess with the Jhangurs." He denied the murder and manslaughter of Mr Marriott but pleaded guilty to death by dangerous driving. Prosecutor Jason Pitter KC told jurors that Jhangur was guilty of murder as he intended "at the very least to cause really serious harm". He said despite Jhangur targeting the Khan family, "the law says your intentions can be transferred from one person to another, even if he did not intend to hit that particular person". The jury agreed and convicted him of murder by a majority of 10 to two. Jhangur was also found guilty of wounding his brother-in-law but cleared of his attempted murder. He was further convicted of four charges of GBH with intent to Alison Norris, Ambreen Jhangur, Nafeesa Jhangur and Riasat Khan. His father was found guilty of perverting the course of justice after hiding a knife. The court heard the chaos erupted following the wedding of Hasan Khan and Amaani Jhangur, which took place the same morning. Mr Pitter said tensions over location and timing had escalated to Amaani falling out with her mother and sisters - and none of her family, including the defendant, attended the wedding. But her mother, Ambreen Jhangur, and sister Nafeesa Jhangur later turned up at the Khan home, sparking a row in the street that descended into violence and left Ms Jhangur unconscious. The trial heard Mr Marriott, who was out on a family walk, went over to help while his wife and children returned home. Midwife Alison Norris - who was also out with her family - did the same thing. Read more from Sky News: Prosecutors said Hassan Jhangur travelled to the scene after hearing about his sister's injuries - first driving at Hasan Khan's father, Riasat Khan, as he was in the road making a 999 call. He then hit the other four before coming to a stop in a nearby garden. Jhangur left the vehicle with the engine still running and stabbed Hasan Khan multiple times to the left side of his head and chest. The court heard Mr Marriott was wedged under the car and showed no signs of life when emergency services tried to reach him. Judge Mr Justice Morris told Jhangur - who was convicted of murder following a retrial - that he faced a life sentence. Mr Marriott's widow, Bryony Marriott, was in court for the verdict and the judge praised her and others in the public gallery for the "quiet dignity and courtesy you have shown throughout the trial". Jhangur's sentencing date is still to be announced.

Grandma, 76, killed when e-bike battery explodes like ‘blowtorch' inside NYC pizzeria on Fourth of July: FDNY
Grandma, 76, killed when e-bike battery explodes like ‘blowtorch' inside NYC pizzeria on Fourth of July: FDNY

New York Post

time4 hours ago

  • New York Post

Grandma, 76, killed when e-bike battery explodes like ‘blowtorch' inside NYC pizzeria on Fourth of July: FDNY

A 76-year-old grandmother was killed when an e-bike battery exploded like a 'blowtorch' inside a Queens pizzeria on the Fourth of July – trapping her as she tried to leave the bathroom, the FDNY said. Yuet Kiu Cheung, 76, was consumed by the flames when the device erupted inside Singas Famous Pizzeria on Kissena Boulevard near Cherry Avenue in Flushing around 3 p.m. on the holiday – marking the city's first deadly fire attributed to lithium-ion batteries this year, officials said Tuesday. 'These things take off very, very quickly with a blowtorch effect,' Chief Fire Marshal Daniel Flynn told reporters. 'This woman was in the bathroom. She went to the bathroom for one minute. She was trapped. She could not get out of the bathroom because the device was stored directly outside the bathroom.' 5 Yuet Kiu Cheung, 76, was killed in the July 4 blaze at Singas Famous Pizzeria in Flushing, officials said. FDNY Cheung — who was shopping with a friend when they decided to stop at the pizzeria — heard 'three explosions' and smelled a strange odor as she used the bathroom, her grief-stricken son Tommy Ou Yang told The Daily News. 'It was a weird smell and all of a sudden the black smoke comes out,' he said. Cheung had to pass the explosive flames on her way out of the restroom toward the exit – but couldn't get there quite fast enough, according to FDNY Commissioner Robert Tucker. 5 The fire was sparked by an exploding lithium-ion battery, fire officials said. Matthew Kushnick 'For me to find my mom burnt like a roast pig, almost 100 percent of her whole body, is a memory I cannot forget,' Yang told the News. The senior was rushed to a local hospital, where she succumbed to her extensive injuries the next day, the commissioner said. 'She's a very loving parent, a loving grandmother,' her son said. 'All her grandchildren, they all miss her.' 5 The deadly blaze marked the first time this year someone was killed in a fire sparked by an exploding lithium-ion battery. Brigitte Stelzer 'The neighborhood, everybody loves her,' he added. 'She's always very friendly with everybody, tries to help everyone.' The four other people inside the pizzeria at the time of the blaze managed to escape, officials said. The fire left the eatery in shambles, and the charred bike remained at the scene Tuesday. 'These fires are treacherous,' Tucker said. 'They move very quickly. They are very hot. And you know, you don't have many feet to move before you're overtaken by the fumes and the smoke and the flames.' 5 Six fatal fires were caused by exploding lithium-ion batteries last year, FDNY Commissioner Robert Tucker said. FDNY/Youtube In total last year, six fatal fires were caused by exploding lithium-ion batteries, and more than 20 in 2023, Tucker said. 'One is too many, and I will not stop talking about safety around lithium-ion batteries and e-mobility devices until the number is zero,' the commissioner said. 5 Chief Fire Marshal Daniel Flynn urged users of the devices to never store them in their homes or businesses. FDNY/Youtube Meanwhile, Flynn urged users of the devices never to store them inside a home or business, or near an entrance or exit. 'It's a tremendous tragedy, and the problem persists here,' the fire marshal added. 'This is has not gone away.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store