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A Texas man described the moment he was camping along the Guadalupe River when the waters began to flood, forcing him to flee.
The death toll rose to 109, including at least 27 children and counselors from the beloved Camp Mystic, a storied Christian girls camp in Kerr County, where flooding hit the hardest beginning July 4.
More than 100 people have died across six counties after flash flooding from heavy rain began affecting the state last week.
Texas inspectors signed off on Camp Mystic’s emergency planning just two days before catastrophic flooding killed more than ...
More than 160 people remain missing in Texas after flash floods over the July Fourth weekend killed over 100 people. Governor ...
Kerr County officials say they are still focused mainly on the search for survivors with hundreds still missing and weren't ...
Back-to-back floods have devastated the American Southwest, with New Mexico’s Ruidoso hit by a sudden 15-foot river surge, ...
Flash floods in Texas killed at least 82 people over the Fourth of July holiday weekend and left others still missing, ...
New satellite images show the aftermath of the devastating flood that swept through the area along the Guadalupe River.
Meanwhile, Texas authorities have pledged to continue search and rescue operations until every missing person is found.
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