
Signs of lost campers litter riverbanks amid search for the missing in 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.
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Yewalta is just one recent example of the persecution of Christians in Nigeria. Sixty-eight Christians were murdered in Fulani raids two weeks earlier. One of the attacks was on the hometown of Catholic Bishop Wilfred Anagbe of Makurdi, who had recently testified before the U.S. Congress about atrocities in his diocese. Over 170 Christians in Nigeria's Middle Belt were killed earlier this year during Lent and Holy Week. Last week, three young Catholic seminarians were kidnapped at gunpoint in their seminary, more evidence of the growing targeted assaults on priests and seminarians. Open Doors, the Christian relief agency, includes Nigeria among the worst affected countries in its World Watch List, reporting that in 2024 over 3,000 Christians were killed there and more than 2,000 were kidnapped. Also, staggeringly large numbers of Christians in Nigeria have been driven from their homes by violence and conflict and are now live in displacement camps. Pope Leo XIV, who visited Nigeria several times as Prior General of the Order of Saint Augustine, prayed for the victims of the 'terrible massacre' in Yewalta the following Sunday during his Sunday Angelus prayer in St. Peter's Square. The United States Catholic Conference of Bishops similarly called for prayers for 'our brothers and sisters in Nigeria who are suffering violent religious conflict' during Religious Freedom Week celebrated last month. Christian relief organizations are responding to the grave humanitarian crisis that is unfolding. World leaders must follow suit. Having vowed to rid anti-Christian bias from the U.S. federal government, President Trump and his administration are perfectly poised to take the lead. 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Given the uptick in numbers and the increasing barbarism of recent killings, I fear that that a mere designation is not enough. Maybe there is a better label for what's happening to Christians in Nigeria: genocide. Genocide has been declared in at least six other situations: Bosnia (1993); Rwanda (1994); Iraq (1995); Darfur (2004); against Yazidis, Christians and Muslims in areas of the Middle East under the control of the Islamic State (2016 and 2017); against the Uyghur in the Xinjiang region of China (2021); and Sudan (2025). More recent declarations include instances where non-state actors targeted victims because of their religious identity — which is what is happening in Nigeria. Although there are no specific or immediate required consequences that follow a declaration of genocide, it does carry moral weight. An acknowledgment that the violence against Christians in Nigeria has reached the level of genocide could inspire a global response of humanitarian aid, economic sanctions, diplomatic isolation and even intervention by the UN Security Council, not to mention action by the International Criminal Court to prosecute individuals and regimes responsible. The awful, inescapable truth is that in Nigeria, Christians are being relentlessly persecuted, kidnapped, tortured and killed for their faith. They have confidence in what Jesus promised in His Sermon on the Mount to those who are persecuted on account of their faith — 'your reward will be great in heaven.' If we remain silent to their plight, I shudder to think of what we merit.