
Sisters killed in Texas floods found with ‘their hands locked together' while grandparents remain missing
Blair and Brooke Harber, ages 13 and 11, died while on a family trip in Casa Bonita, a gated community in the town of Hunt that was struck by the devastating deluge early Friday.
4 Blair, 13, and Brooke, 11 Harber were found dead with 'their hands locked together.'
The rushing water woke up the girls' father, RJ Harber, around 3:30 a.m., his sister Jennifer told KLOU, and the rain was pounding so hard outside that it was nearly impossible to hear the water pouring through their cabin door.
Around the same time, Brooke texted RJ and her maternal grandparents 'I love you,' Jennifer wrote on a GoFundMe for the family.
RJ and his wife Annie shattered a window and clambered outside in a desperate bid to reach their daughters, who were staying in a separate cabin.
But the raging waters prevented them from reaching the other home. In a last-ditch effort, Annie and RJ hurried to another neighbor's house and woke the family up to borrow their kayak and paddle through the flood.
The waters, however, were too rough, and the parents wound up being rescued alongside five surviving neighbors, Jennifer wrote.
When the sisters were found 12 hours later and 15 miles away, 'their hands were locked together,' Jennifer told KLOU.
Blair and Brooke attended St. Rita's Catholic School in Dallas, Texas where their mother Annie Harber works as an instructional specialist.
The siblings were 'believers,' Jennifer said, and had taken their rosary beads with them on the trip.
'[Blair] was a gifted student and had a generous kind heart. [Brooke] was like a light in any room, people gravitated to her and she made them laugh and enjoy the moment,' RJ told CNN.
4 The girls both attended St. Rita's Catholic School in Dallas, where their mother teaches.
GoFundMe
Their grandparents, Mike and Charlene Harber, are still unaccounted for.
The Harber family had been staying in two separate cabins. Mike and Charlene's neighbors, who were out of town, offered up their home for them to stay in with the girls since it was more spacious than the couple's one-bedroom home.
4 RJ and Annie Harber tried to paddle over in a kayak to save their daughters.
4 Their paternal grandparents, Charlene and Mike Harber, are still missing.
GoFundMe
At least 80 people have died in the catastrophic flood and more than 40 are still missing. Evacuation orders are still in place as the Hill Country area anticipates more rain.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Newsweek
2 hours ago
- Newsweek
Homeowner's Solution to Neighbor's Dog Using Their Lawn as Toilet Applauded
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. What started as a polite request turned into a neighborhood "smear campaign" that left one pet owner rethinking his habits—and his landscaping. A Reddit user who goes by the name VryCuteAjaBharDuChut shared how their neighbor's dog, a large golden retriever named Duke, repeatedly defecated in the center of their front lawn. Causing a Stink After asking the dog's owner, Rick, to address the issue, the original poster (OP) was met with indifference. "It's all nature, bro. You don't own the Earth," Rick apparently replied, wearing a tank top that read "Weekend Warrior" and holding a Coors Light at 10 a.m., according to the post. Unwilling to let it continue, the homeowner escalated matters creatively. They collected two weeks' worth of Duke's waste in a bucket and redecorated the perimeter of Rick's backyard with it, especially around his fire pit. "Smells like nature, bro," the OP said when Rick noticed the stench. Stock image: Person picking up dog waste in a grass field, while a dog looks on. Stock image: Person picking up dog waste in a grass field, while a dog looks on. iStock / Getty Images Plus The campaign didn't stop there. The homeowner began posting "Lost Dog Poop" updates in the local Facebook group and planted tiny handmade signs with glitter and googly eyes that read, "Dear Duke the Pooper/This is not your golden throne/My grass feels betrayed." Rick confronted the OP, accusing them of trying to embarrass him. "Buddy, I don't need to try," the homeowner replied. As more neighbors chimed in with similar complaints, Rick eventually built a fenced dog run and began walking Duke on a leash. Dog waste disputes are more than just a neighborhood nuisance. According to DoodyCalls, "dealing with a neighbor's dog that poops in your yard can be unpleasant and quite irritating," and they suggest direct communication as the first step. The service also recommends motion-activated sprinklers and natural repellents to deter unwanted visits, though the homeowner in the Reddit post noted that Rick laughed at the sprinkler, claiming "Duke's built different." Countermeasures Another guide from Reolink outlines legal and community-based methods to handle such issues, including installing cameras for evidence, placing warning signs and contacting local animal control. While the Reddit poster's approach might not be in any handbook, the result aligned with what Reolink advocates: evidence-backed neighbor accountability. Responses to the Reddit thread included similar stories and support. As one user wrote, "I had a neighbor that did this. "After repeatedly asking them politely to keep their dog out of my yard I started picking up the poop, putting it in a bag and leaving it in their driveway... I finally started throwing it from my shovel all over their front yard." Another supporter added, "I've always hated folks leaving their dog poop without cleaning 'em. Now that I'm a dog owner, I hate it even more." The Smell of Victory The OP now makes poop-themed haiku signs as a hobby: "Victory smells like fresh-cut grass and not dog crap," they wrote. "I have some dehydrated dog poop remnants from Duke's mischief," VryCuteAjaBharDuChut told Newsweek in reply to an invitation to comment via Reddit. "As [the] story went viral, those should go up in value. I'd sell those samples to anyone who wanna acquire it for $1,000." Newsweek's "What Should I Do?" offers expert advice to readers. If you have a personal dilemma, let us know via life@ We can ask experts for advice on relationships, family, friends, money and work, and your story could be featured on WSID at Newsweek. To read how Newsweek uses AI as a newsroom tool, click here.


New York Times
5 hours ago
- New York Times
Why Do We Still Need to Talk to the Dead?
Two years after Andy O'Donnell's father died of Alzheimer's in 2021, O'Donnell decided he wanted to hear his voice again. He downloaded some videos of his father from Facebook, edited out other voices, and then uploaded to an A.I. voice platform the pure audio of his father talking. Then he copied in the text of the Lord's Prayer — something he'd heard his father recite hundreds of times in his life — and 'The Night Before Christmas,' and asked the artificial intelligence to create an audio file of his father reading both poems. 'After getting over the initial shock of hearing the incredibly accurate representation of his voice, I definitely cried,' he said, 'but it was more of a cry of relief to be able to hear his voice again because he had such a comforting voice.' There was no feeling of eeriness one might associate with hearing voices from the dead, he said. And when he shared his recording with his siblings, they all had a similar reaction. 'It definitely aided us in our grieving process in a positive way.' O'Donnell, who lives in Montgomery, Ala., then experimented with recording A.I. speaking in his father's voice with simple words of encouragement for his family members. O'Donnell, now 50, was raised Catholic and believes in some form of life after death, but not necessarily the traditional conception of heaven that he was raised with. But even though he knew this was not his father speaking to him from beyond the grave, it remained a powerful experience. 'I don't know that it brings closure but it definitely brings a measure of comfort to hear his voice again,' he said. A belief that our loved ones are still accessible in some form after death is one that's found in nearly every culture around the globe, from Japanese Buddhists to the Gullah people of South Carolina. In the Hebrew Scriptures, Saul tried to outlaw the practice of employing mediums to speak to the dead, but in time, he violated his own prohibition, secretly visiting a medium to contact Samuel, who had anointed him the first king of Israel. The desire to reach out across the divide between life and death remains one of the most primal desires we have. The A.I. 'griefbot' is just the latest iteration of that desire, often involving technology in some form, and based on a fundamental belief in life after death. According to a Pew Research report from 2023, over half of American adults said they had been visited by a dead relative, and 30 percent said they had talked back. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.
Yahoo
12 hours ago
- Yahoo
Aussie dad's startling 26kg find while locking up home: 'Some big ones out there'
An Aussie dad was locking up his family home before heading to bed on Tuesday night when he heard an unusual noise coming from the yard. As the man headed back inside, he quickly glanced to his left and was immediately stunned by what he saw. 'I know we don't get anacondas, but this is an anaconda. He's like a dinosaur,' the startled homeowner told Jay Everdeen from Close Encounters Reptile Removal over the phone just minutes later. After jumping in the car and heading to the property in Mareeba, a rural town outside of Cairns, for what he believed was a routine 11.30pm call-out, the snake catcher soon understood the dad's astonishment. An enormous 5.2-metre-long scrub python weighing a whopping 26.4kg had tightly coiled itself around a downpipe — and it wasn't budging. 'When I saw him I was like, 'oh geez, this is big',' Jay told Yahoo News Australia on Thursday, adding the snake was 'thicker than a two-litre Coke bottle' and appeared to be trying to climb into the roof. 'When I had hold of him, my fingertips didn't touch,' he recalled. With the help of his 12-year-old daughter, who he's training to follow in his footsteps, Jay worked for an hour to unwrap the non-venomous python from the pipe. 'He wrapped half of his body around one way and the other half the other way so it's like a U shape. So when you're pulling one way, the other part of the body's coming around with it,' he said. Jay, a landscaper who is used to lifting heavy items, said the snake was so strong he wondered if he'd be able to remove it at all. 'He's just got that much power, and that's why it took an hour,' he told Yahoo. 'Snakes like that you can get tangled up in and you're stuck, you won't get out of it.' ☀️ Tradies' wild discovery after opening underground vault in Aussie outback 🚙 Aussie's startling find hidden in 4WD after driving home from the beach 🐍 Deadly find on roadside in iconic Aussie suburb sparks wild theory After much perseverance, Jay was able to place the scrub python — Australia's largest snake species — into a bag, but it was too large to move. 'The person who owns the house got me this really big beach towel to put my bag on top of and tie the towel up because with my bag, I just couldn't pick him up,' he said, noting snakes can still bite through the fabric, which ultimately ripped during transit. The next day the snake catcher and his four children held up the reptile to show his neighbour's kids the sheer size of the reptile before relocating it. 'A good snake is a beautiful snake to see in the wild,' he said. And while the python's hefty weight was impressive, Jay told Yahoo there are undoubtedly 'bigger ones' lingering in mountain scrub or near rivers. 'There's some big ones out there, and people just haven't come across them.' Do you have a story tip? Email: newsroomau@ You can also follow us on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Twitter and YouTube.