
Number of missing from floods in Texas county drops from nearly 100 to 3
Numbers of those missing in natural disasters are often fluid and can decline dramatically. Overwhelmed local officials can struggle to obtain an accurate count, especially when those missing involve visitors to the affected region or people without stable housing.
Get Starting Point
A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday.
Enter Email
Sign Up
Some of those initially described as unaccounted for in Kerr County — the county most impacted by the deadly flooding on July 4 — did not live in the area but had traveled there for the holiday weekend.
Advertisement
That so many had remained missing more than two weeks after the devastating flooding deepened the horror of the tragedy, which left at least 135 people dead, dozens of them children. Texas Governor Greg Abbott, a Republican, has pledged to continue the search until every person is found.
'Our thoughts remain with the families still awaiting news, and we will continue to stand with them as efforts persist,' Kerrville Mayor Joe Herring Jr. said Saturday.
Advertisement
On Monday, the Texas legislature is expected to convene in Austin for a special session in which lawmakers will discuss the catastrophic flooding. State legislative leaders have formed committees to examine flood warning systems, relief efforts, and disaster preparedness. They plan to hold a hearing in Kerrville on July 31.
Jonathan Lamb, spokesman for the Kerrville Police Department, said in a statement Sunday that investigators had engaged in an 'exhaustive effort to verify the status of each individual who was reported missing,' narrowing hundreds of names down to three.
'This process takes time, but it is essential to ensure that every lead is thoroughly followed and each person is properly accounted for,' Lamb said.
When flash floods surge through rural areas with rugged terrain, it can take days or even weeks to locate missing people and uncover the bodies of those who were washed away. After Hurricane Helene slammed into western North Carolina in September, the American Red Cross received more than 9,000 reunification requests from family members seeking loved ones.
The vast majority were ultimately discovered trapped in isolated locations or lost in the shuffle at shelters, and within a few weeks, the number of people unaccounted for dropped from the thousands to the single digits.
The force of the flood waters also complicated the search: The body of one man reported missing from a campground in North Carolina was found six months later at a spot about 12 miles away. At least two other women from the state still have not been found.
A similar dynamic unfolded after the devastating 2023 wildfire in Maui, which killed 102 people. More than 1,000 others were initially unaccounted for a week later. A month after the fire, the figure dropped from 385 to 66. Two people remain missing.
Advertisement
For weeks, more than 1,000 local, state, and federal responders, along with thousands of volunteers, have combed 60 miles of the Guadalupe River through communities in Kerr County and farther south. As hope of finding survivors faded, the massive effort essentially became a search for remains.
For those whose loved ones disappeared in the flood waters, the agonizing wait goes on. Sherry McCutcheon, 66, works for the Texas Department of Public Safety. Her mother and one of her brothers died when the rising waters overtook their home in Leander, about 25 miles north of Austin, she said. Another brother, Gary Traugott, 60, remains missing.
Frustrated by the lack of information from local officials, McCutcheon and her neighbors compiled their own list of the missing, which they posted on Facebook. Most were found dead; seven were found safe. Three remained missing Sunday, including Traugott.
On Friday, McCutcheon was at a funeral home planning the burial services for her mother and brother when officials called to say that a body had been found under a washed-out bridge. On Sunday, McCutcheon was awaiting the results of DNA tests to see whether it was her brother Gary.
'If this person isn't Gary, I don't know what we're going to do,' she said.
Some living near the Guadalupe said they feared the true number of the dead and missing would never be known. Lorena Guillen, who owns Blue Oak RV Park in Kerrville, said she had heard there were Honduran and Mexican undocumented immigrants who were afraid to report the missing for fear of being apprehended by Immigration and Customs Enforcement. 'There's a whole underground community here,' Guillen said.
Advertisement
Kevin LaFond, southern region commander for United Cajun Navy volunteers, said it wasn't clear why the number of missing dropped so quickly in Kerr County, adding that his team was still working to search more inaccessible areas devastated by the floods.
'It's hard to have any confidence in a number until those areas are reached,' LaFond said. 'The numbers have fluctuated since the beginning, and probably are going to fluctuate at the end.'

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


USA Today
22 minutes ago
- USA Today
Gov. Ron DeSantis calls for Trump to release Epstein files: 'Let people see'
DeSantis' remarks come as a range of critics, including progressive Democrats and conservative firebrands, have accused the Justice Department of botching a review of files on the disgraced financier. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis called on the Trump administration to release all the files related to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, claiming that Epstein and his former partner Ghislaine Maxwell didn't act alone. DeSantis' remarks come as a range of critics, including progressive Democrats and conservative firebrands, have accused the Justice Department of botching a review of files on the disgraced financier. The calls for openness follow the news last week from The Wall Street Journal that Trump sent a lewd letter to Epstein on his 50th birthday in 2003. Trump has denied the report and sued the Journal over it. For years, President Donald Trump and top Republican officials have called for transparency about Epstein's alleged "client list" and said that Epstein didn't die by suicide in 2019. Many of the same people are upset that the Justice Department report indicated there was no such list and that he took his own life. 'What I would say is just release it, let people see. But I do think there's a desire for justice because Jeffrey Epstein and (Ghislaine) Maxwell didn't just do this amongst themselves. I mean, there were obviously other people involved, and yet no one's been brought to justice,' DeSantis told Fox News on July 20. Last year, DeSantis signed legislation that would authorize 'the public release of grand jury documents,' including those related to a 2006 Florida investigation into Epstein's abuse of underage girls. In July 2006, Epstein was indicted by a grand jury on a felony charge of soliciting prostitution. He was arrested and spent one night in the Palm Beach County jail. He was released the following day on $3,000 bond. He pleaded guilty in 2008 to solicitation of prostitution and solicitation of a minor for prostitution in Florida. He served a 13-month stint in county jail and was regularly allowed to leave as part of a generous work release program. He died in a New York federal detention center in 2019 before he could be tried on sex trafficking charges. Amid public clamor over the Justice Department's report, Trump directed Attorney General Pam Bondi on July 17 to produce grand jury testimony from Epstein's sex-trafficking case, assuming a court will allow it. Contributing: Kinsey Crowley and Holly Baltz, USA TODAY Network


The Hill
an hour ago
- The Hill
Mark Levin: Republicans ‘can't waste our time on Epstein'
Fox News host Mark Levin said late Sunday that Republicans should not 'waste our time' focusing on Jeffrey Epstein ahead of the midterms. In an interview with Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) on 'Life, Liberty & Levin,' the conservative host urged Johnson to focus the GOP message on the achievements of the Trump administration with Republican control in Congress. 'We have a lot to run on and you have a lot to run against, given the other party. But I will tell you this: We better be united, we better be strong, we better be focused, we better be articulate,' Levin said to the Republican House leader. 'We can't waste our time on Epstein and other stuff that are going on here, that some people want us to focus on. I about had it with all that stuff,' he continued. 'We better focus on who we are, what we're doing, where we want to take the country, and what they want to do to the country.' The Trump administration has faced growing calls from his base of supporters for greater transparency on the Epstein case and for the government to release more information on the disgraced financier, who was charged with sex trafficking crimes before he died by suicide in his jail cell in 2019 while awaiting trial. Trump has expressed clear frustration at his supporters' focus on the case and has sought to redirect their focus on Democrats, asking why past administrations didn't release more information on Epstein if there was a 'smoking gun.'


San Francisco Chronicle
an hour ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
New Hampshire's new law protecting gunmakers faces first test in court over Sig Sauer lawsuit
CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — A new state law in New Hampshire that makes it harder to take gunmaker Sig Sauer to court is getting its first test before a judge on Monday. The 2-month-old law was created by the Republican-led Legislature in response to mounting lawsuits faced by the Newington-based manufacturer over its popular P320 pistol. The lawsuits say that the gun can go off without the trigger being pulled, an allegation Sig Sauer denies. Sig Sauer, which employs over 2,000 people in New Hampshire, said the gun is safe and the problem is user error. Several large, multi-plaintiff cases filed since 2022 in New Hampshire's federal court representing nearly 80 people accuse Sig Sauer of defective product design, marketing, and negligence, in addition to lawsuits filed in other states. Many of the plaintiffs are current and former law enforcement officers who say they were wounded by the gun. They say the P320 design requires an external mechanical safety, a feature that is optional. The most recent New Hampshire case, representing 22 plaintiffs in 16 states, was filed in March. It's the focus of Monday's hearing. The new law on product liability claims against Sig Sauer and other gun manufacturers covers the 'absence or presence' of the external safety and several other optional features. Claims can still be filed over manufacturing defects. Attorneys for Sig Sauer argue it should apply to the March case, even though the law didn't exist at the time. 'New Hampshire has a clearly articulated position against such claims being cognizable in this state,' they argue in court documents for breaking up the cases and transferring them to court districts where the plaintiffs live. Lawyers from a Philadelphia-based firm representing the plaintiffs, disagree, saying the law 'has zero implication' on the case and only applies to future lawsuits. New Hampshire was the chosen location because federal rules allow lawsuits against a company in its home state, the plaintiff's attorneys say. Those lawsuits have been assigned to one federal judge in Concord. Sig Sauer is trying to decentralize the case, they say. Sig Sauer has prevailed in some cases. It has appealed two recent multimillion-dollar verdicts against it, in Pennsylvania and Georgia. A judge recently allowed the Pennsylvania verdict to stand, but vacated $10 million in punitive damages awarded to the plaintiff.