Death toll reaches 134, search continues for missing
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At least 132 people have died. State and local leaders say getting an exact figure of the missing is difficult because so many people were visiting the Guadalupe River on the holiday weekend.
Kerr County Judge Rob Kelly, the county’s top official, said during a county commissioners court meeting earlier Monday that local officials don’t know the exact number of how many visitors who traveled to the Guadalupe for the holiday weekend had been caught in the flood.
4hon MSN
William Dewitt Huston, 61, is originally from North Carolina but lived a mostly nomadic life as a construction superintendent, often traveling in his RV to live near worksites, a close
As tears streamed down their faces, community members looked at the photos attached to a growing memorial wall.
David Muir reports on the Kerrville, Texas, youth softball team competed in a national tournament in Oklahoma City just days after floods devastated their hometown.
Harley Moeller and her parents, Megan and Jake Moeller, had visited a campsite by the Guadalupe River for the Fourth of July.
Kerrville residents who turned out in force Friday to welcome President Donald Trump said his visit brought hope and comfort — and marked an important step in the town’s long road to healing and rebuilding.
AMY VANLANDINGHAM, a resident of Kerrville, Texas, on why she is participating in the search for those still missing from the July 4 floods.