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Videos shot by the family show how quickly the cottage filled with water and how they had to flee to the attic and then the roof.
Search crews continued the grueling task of recovering the missing as more potential flash flooding threatened Texas Hill Country.
The death toll has now climbed to at least 129, making it America's deadliest rainfall-driven flash flood since 1976.
Camp Mystic owners successfully appealed to the Federal Emergency Management Agency to redesignate some buildings that had ...
Mike DeWine issued the following statement regarding the work of the Ohio State Highway Patrol and Ohio Department of Natural ...
Bob Canales spent the early morning hours of July 4 frantically trying to help people near the Kerrville RV park he and his ...
A Texas family, their friend and her 1-year-old daughter were forced to escape rising floodwaters by clinging to a cabin roof ...
The organizations working together to help the flood victims said that 'no additional in-kind donations (clothing, food, ...
Six BORSTAR agents and three canines from the Tucson Sector are assisting in the search for over 100 people still missing after the July 4th Guadalupe River floods in the Texas Hill Country.
In response to an appeal, FEMA in 2013 amended the county’s flood map to remove 15 of the camp’s buildings from the hazard ...
At least 129 people are dead from the devastating flooding in the Texas Hill Country. Kerr County was hit the hardest, with at least 103 deaths, including 36 children. President Donald Trump signed a ...
A week after deadly flash floods, as rescue turns to recovery, more than 160 people remain missing in Kerr County, Texas.
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