
Missing Texas flood victims quadruples to 161 overnight — and number likely to increase
Abbott updated the total of unaccounted for victims after taking a helicopter tour of the affected area, and noted the grim milestone that the death toll from the floods — which now stands at 109 — has surpassed the number of Texans killed in Hurricane Harvey in August 2017, in which 103 people from the Lone Star State lost their lives.
Eighty-seven of the deaths occurred in Kerr County, where rescuers are continuing their search for five girls still missing from Camp Mystic, an all-girls Christian summer camp that has reported 27 deaths so far.
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Texas Gov. Greg Abbott confirmed 161 people are missing after the Texas floods as the total quadrupled overnight.
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Abbott said the new total of missing was based on people reported unaccounted for by friends, neighbors and relatives.
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'We will not stop until every missing person is accounted for,' Abbott told reporters. 'There could very likely be more people added to the list.'
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Abbott said the new total of missing was based on people reported unaccounted for by friends, neighbors and relatives.
Asked about an investigation into the number of dead in the storm, Abbott bristled, characterizing the question, which included the phrase 'who's to blame?' as 'the word choice of losers,' before launching into a football analogy.
'Every football team makes mistakes,' the governor said.
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'The losing teams are the ones that try to point out who's to blame. The championship teams are the ones that say, 'Don't worry, ma'am, we've got this.''
This is a developing story. Please check back for more information.

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San Francisco Chronicle
13 minutes ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Trump is attending the FIFA Club World Cup final
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump on Sunday will attend the FIFA Club World Cup final, a match that will offer Trump a preview of the globe's premier soccer tournament that North America will host next year. Trump and first lady Melania Trump will travel from their golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey, to East Rutherford 40 miles (64 kilometers) away to watch the final match of the U.S.-hosted tournament between Paris Saint-Germain and Chelsea at MetLife Stadium. Trump's trip Sunday falls on the first anniversary of the assassination attempt he survived in Butler, Pennsylvania, while campaigning for president. The president did not have any public plans to mark the date beyond participating in a taped Fox News Channel interview with his daughter-in-law Lara Trump that aired Saturday night. Sporting events have made up the bulk of Trump's trips in the U.S. since taking office this year. In addition to his visit this weekend to the soccer tournament, he's attended the Super Bowl in New Orleans, the Daytona 500 in Florida, UFC fights in Miami and Newark, New Jersey, and the NCAA wrestling championships in Philadelphia. The president, who has a warm relationship with FIFA President Gianni Infantino, has said he plans to attend multiple matches of the World Cup tournament next year.
Yahoo
19 minutes ago
- Yahoo
The Texas way: why the most disaster-prone US state is so allergic to preparing for disasters
Greg Abbott, the Republican governor of Texas, has had plenty of consoling words to offer following the tragic flash floods in the Hill Country that have killed more than 120 people, including 27 girls and counsellors at the stricken Camp Mystic. 'Our hearts grieve for this community and surrounding areas,' he wrote on social media. 'May God bring comfort to every family affected.' Amid such refrains, Abbott's response so far has been notably lacking in one regard: any assurance that Texas will tackle the problems that contributed to the calamity in Kerr county over the Fourth of July weekend, when the Guadalupe River rose like a torrent 26ft in 45 minutes. Accosted by reporters, the governor has indicated he will allow debate in the Texas legislature on the state's flood warning systems, but has given no guarantees on the outcome. Texas lawmakers came painfully close to introducing a statewide initiative to improve emergency alerts just a few months ago. The bill, HB 13, would have set up a network of outdoor sirens of the sort that were fatally lacking in the Hill Country, but the plan was killed in the state senate where members griped about its cost. To observers of what might be called the 'Texas way' – the singular devotion of its political leaders to rugged individualism and their equally passionate disdain for government action – there is a familiarity to all this. Take the massive winter storm Uri that struck Texas in 2021, which brought the state's notoriously eccentric power grid to a standstill, leaving almost 5 million people without heat and more than 200 dead. After that catastrophe the state did make limited efforts to prepare power generators for further extreme weather, allowing Abbott to boast that 'everything that needed to be done was done to fix the power grid in Texas'. Yet four years later, the state's main grid operator, Ercot, is still warning that a repeat Uri would carry with it an 80% likelihood of rolling blackouts. The same pattern of relative governmental inaction stretches back to 2008, when Hurricane Ike battered the Texan coast. It only narrowly bypassed Houston, then home to 2 million people, avoiding a catastrophe of monumental proportions. In the wake of the storm, there were calls for the construction of a barrier across Galveston Bay to protect the city from future storm surge. Seventeen years on, 'Ike Dike' remains on the drawing board. For Andrew Dessler, a professor of atmospheric sciences at Texas A&M University, this repeating cycle of environmental disaster followed by scant preparation for future events is not coincidental. 'Texas will spend a lot of money recovering from disasters, but they'll spend very little trying to avoid the next disaster,' he said. Such an absence of forethought would be less serious were it not for Texas being, literally and metaphorically, in the eye of the storm. The state's long Gulf coastline renders it vulnerable to hurricanes and sea level rise, its southern location makes it hot and growing hotter, the west of the state is in the desert south-west region which is liable to droughts, and the Hill Country, as has been seen with such heart-wrenching results, is home to 'flash flood alley', one of the most dangerous flood-prone areas of the US. 'We have everything other than maybe avalanches,' Dessler said. 'Every other climate disaster you can think of, like wildfires – you name it, we have it.' The state's vulnerable topography is reflected in the statistics. Texas is the most disaster-prone state in the country, recording 190 extreme weather events between 1980 and 2024, each inflicting more than $1bn in damage. Now the climate crisis has begun to bear down on Texas, turning this perennially at-risk state into a calamity zone. Warmer oceans are leading to greater atmospheric moisture and hence rain dumps and flooding, rising temperatures are exacerbating droughts and wildfires, and all of it is supercharging both the frequency and intensity of extreme weather events. That has combined with the state's steadily rising population, which is straining resources and putting more people in harm's way. Despite the perils, large numbers of Americans continue to pour into Texas, attracted by its zero income tax and open spaces; since 2010 it has grown by 5 million people, to 30 million. This moment begs for a political culture that can confront the challenge head on, experts say. But that is not the prevailing mood in Texas. 'Our elected representatives are not forward looking on climate issues,' Dessler said. Dessler, who specialises in climate change, traces the source of the resistance to the fossil fuel industry, which with its mega-donations to Republican politicians wields a big stick. 'It's the political power of fossil fuels, and their ability to keep everybody in line.' The official platform of the Texas Republican party is explicit. It proposes the abolition of the federal Environmental Protection Agency, supports the reclassification of carbon dioxide as a 'non-pollutant', and opposes what it calls 'environmentalism, or 'climate change' initiatives that obstruct legitimate business interests and private property use'. Abbott and other top state Republicans are openly skeptical of climate crisis science. In 2022, when Dallas was hit by colossal floods, reporters tried and failed to get the governor even to utter the words 'climate change'. 'Texas Republicans are increasingly opposed to the idea that climate change is man-made, and therefore there's nothing we can do about it,' said Calvin Jillson, a political scientist at Southern Methodist University in Dallas. 'They see climate issues as requiring more taxes, more regulation, more spending – and as a party of small government and deregulation they don't want to deal with it.' The combination of small government ideology and climate crisis denial has distorted the politics of the state to the extent that basic decisions that might bolster climate resilience are shunted aside. The impact is seen at all levels, from the state capital in Austin down to local neighborhoods. Almost half of Texas's 254 counties have no mitigation plan in place to lessen the blow of environmental disasters, the Texas Tribune found. Rob Kelly, a local elected official in Kerr county at the epicenter of the Hill Country floods, said that warning systems had been considered but were rejected on grounds of cost. 'Taxpayers won't pay for it,' he told the New York Times. Wes Virdell, the Republican representative whose Texas house district covers much of the devastated flooded area, voted against HB 13, the failed bill which would have set up a siren alarm system. He told the Texas Tribune three days after the tragedy that his experience of such grief and suffering had shaken his confidence in his decision. 'I can tell you in hindsight, watching what it takes to deal with a disaster like this, my vote would probably be different now.'


Hamilton Spectator
26 minutes ago
- Hamilton Spectator
One year after Trump assassination attempt, changes at Secret Service but questions remain
WASHINGTON (AP) — In many ways, the assassination attempt against Donald Trump at a Pennsylvania campaign stop was a perfect storm of failings coming together that allowed 20-year-old Michael Thomas Crooks to climb on top of a nearby building and take eight shots at the once and future president. One attendee was killed, two others wounded and a bullet grazed Trump's ear before a Secret Service counter sniper opened fire on Crooks and killed him. That day jolted an already chaotic race for the White House and solidified Trump's iconic status in his party and beyond. It also became a turning point for the agency tasked with protecting the president. As more details emerged about what went wrong, questions multiplied: What happened to the Secret Service's planning? Why was a rooftop with a clear line of sight to Trump left unguarded? What motivated the shooter? Another incident in September where a gunman camped in the shrubbery outside one of Trump's golf courses before being spotted and shot at by a Secret Service agent also raised questions about the agency's performance. A year after Butler, multiple investigations have detailed the breakdowns that day. Under a new leader hired by Trump, the agency has been pushing to address those problems but key questions remain. 'This was a wake-up call for the Secret Service,' said retired supervisory agent Bobby McDonald, who's now a criminal justice lecturer at the University of New Haven. Here's a look at what went wrong, what's been done to address problems and the questions still unanswered. How'd he get on that roof? Who was talking to who? All the investigations zeroed in on a few specific problems. The building with a clear sight line to the stage where the president was speaking only 135 meters (157 yards) away was left unguarded. Crooks eventually boosted himself up there and fired eight shots with an AR-style rifle. The Secret Service's investigation into its own agency's conduct said that it wasn't that the line-of-sight risks weren't known about ahead of time. It was that multiple personnel assessed them as 'acceptable.' Supervisors had expected large pieces of farm equipment would be situated to block the view from the building. Those ultimately weren't placed, and staffers who visited the site before the rally didn't tell their supervisors that the line-of-sight concerns hadn't been addressed, the report said. Another glaring problem: fragmented communications between the Secret Service and the local law enforcement that the agency regularly relies on to secure events. Instead of having one unified command post with representatives from every agency providing security in the same room, there were two command posts at the rally. One investigation described a 'chaotic mixture' of radio, cell phone, text, and email used to communicate that day. 'Ensure such an event can never be repeated' The Secret Service issued a report Thursday about what it has done to address problems laid bare at Butler. 'Since President Trump appointed me as director of the United States Secret Service, I have kept my experience on July 13 top of mind, and the agency has taken many steps to ensure such an event can never be repeated in the future,' said Sean Curran, whom Trump tasked with leading the agency. Curran was one of the agents standing next to Trump as he was hustled off the stage after the shooting. The agency said it had implemented 21 of the 46 recommendations made by Congressional oversight bodies. The rest were either in progress or not up to the agency to implement. Some of what they've done involves new equipment and a greater emphasis on addressing threats from above. They've created a new Aviation Division to oversee aerial operations like drones. The agency said it has two armored ATVs for use on golf courses and is producing another three. And they're purchasing mobile command vehicles that will be pre-positioned around the country. But much of what the agency says it has done is about changing policies and procedures to address those July 13 lapses — things like revising their manual to 'advance procedures and communication practices' when it comes to coordinating with local law enforcement or clarifying who's responsible for events where protectees are appearing. They've updated their procedures about documenting line-of-sight concerns and how those concerns are going to be addressed. So far it doesn't appear that anyone has been or will be fired, although the agency's director at the time, Kim Cheatle, swiftly resigned . The agency said Thursday that six staffers have been disciplined with suspensions ranging from 10 to 42 days without pay; the six were placed on restricted duty or nonoperational positions. Their identities and positions were not released. What we still don't know In many ways Crooks and his motivations are still a mystery. He was killed by a Secret Service countersniper and did not leave much information about why he did what he did. Investigators say they believe he acted alone and they didn't find any threatening comments or ideological positions on social media that shed light on his thinking. And while it's clear what went wrong in Butler, questions linger about how things that were so clearly problematic — like that open roof — weren't addressed ahead of time. Anthony Cangelosi, a former Secret Service agent who is now a lecturer at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, said that without being able to read the interviews with the agents involved in the Butler planning it's hard to know exactly why they did what they did. A year later, he still struggles with how so many things went wrong. 'I can't understand how many errors were made on that site that day,' he said. 'If they agreed to leave that roof unoccupied, I can't ... understand it for the life of me.' The widow of Corey Comperatore , who died during the Butler assassination attempt, echoed some of that sentiment during an interview with Fox News this week. 'Why was that such a failure? Why weren't they paying attention? Why did they think that that roof didn't need covered? I want to sit down and talk to them,' Helen Comperatore said. Cangelosi said he still questions whether the agency asked for additional personnel to cover a busy election year and if they did, whether those requests were granted. He thinks the Secret Service needs better pay to retain agents tempted to leave the agency for other federal government jobs. McDonald said he suspects part of the problem ahead of the Butler rally was that the Secret Service might have had a hard time understanding that the type of protection Trump needed wasn't the same as for other former presidents. He said it 'boggles the mind' how Crooks was able to get on that roof and said that 'communication' and 'complacency' are the two issues that he thinks really went wrong in Butler. But he also said that he feels the agency is moving in the right direction. 'A lot of good people doing a lot good work there,' he said, 'and I hope they continue to move in the right direction.' Error! Sorry, there was an error processing your request. There was a problem with the recaptcha. 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