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Families wait for word of missing as Texas floods death toll nears 120

  • Writer: The San Juan Daily Star
    The San Juan Daily Star
  • Jul 10
  • 4 min read

Volunteers and members of law enforcement comb through debris in an area where cadaver dogs indicated the scent of decomposition on the riverbank on the Guadalupe River outside of Comfort, Texas, on Wednesday, July 9, 2025. No survivors have been found since Friday in Kerr County, where the worst flooding occurred. The statewide death toll rose to 119, with at least 173 unaccounted for statewide. (Callaghan O’Hare/The New York Times)
Volunteers and members of law enforcement comb through debris in an area where cadaver dogs indicated the scent of decomposition on the riverbank on the Guadalupe River outside of Comfort, Texas, on Wednesday, July 9, 2025. No survivors have been found since Friday in Kerr County, where the worst flooding occurred. The statewide death toll rose to 119, with at least 173 unaccounted for statewide. (Callaghan O’Hare/The New York Times)

By Edgar Sandoval


Officials in Kerr County struggled to provide answers Wednesday morning about their response to a devastating flood that swept through the Texas Hill Country nearly a week ago, killing at least 119 people statewide.


The bulk of those deaths were in Kerr County, where the death roll reached 95 on Wednesday and officials said 161 people were still missing — a major increase from the numbers they were citing earlier in the week.


Statewide, 173 people were unaccounted for, Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas said, as searchers continued to sift through the muddy remains of cabins, campers and trailer parks.


Facing questions about a lack of warning sirens and other disaster plans, officials in Kerr County gave an extensive account of their rescue efforts as the Guadalupe River rose early Friday, saying hundreds of people had been saved by local emergency crews.


“They rescued people out of vehicles. They rescued people out of homes that were already flooded, pulling them out of windows,” Officer Jonathan Lamb with the police department in Kerrville, the county’s largest city, said at a Wednesday news conference. He added, “I know that this tragedy, as horrific as it is, could have been so much worse.”


But officials said other answers about preparations and response would have to wait for an extensive review. “If improvements need to be made, improvements will be made,” the county sheriff, Larry Leitha, said at the news conference.


Pressed about the timeline for when increasingly urgent warnings from the National Weather Service were shared with residents, the sheriff asked for more time. “I believe those questions need to be answered,” he told reporters, adding, “We’re going to get that answer. We’re not running. We’re not going to hide.”


Abbott, when asked similar questions Tuesday about investigating what went wrong, referred to such inquiries as the “words of losers” and compared disaster response to football, saying only losing teams focused on their failures.


The governor said state lawmakers, who cut property taxes by $51 billion this year while funding only a small portion of a backlog of flood management projects totaling some $54 billion across the state, would be focused on solutions instead.


As the grim search for the missing spread farther across Hill Country on Wednesday, some family members received the news they had been dreading. A woman who survived the floods, but whose mother, stepfather, aunt, uncle and cousin were missing, learned that the bodies of her mother and stepfather had been found.


“To have her as a mother was a treasure I will forever cherish,” the woman, Hailey Chavarria, wrote in a Facebook post about her mother, Michelle Crossland. “I’m sorry it’s not the update anyone wanted.”


Jermaine Jarmon, 52, who lives north of Austin in Travis County, was among those awaiting news Wednesday. His 16-year-old daughter, Felicity Jarmon, was still missing. Jermaine Jarmon, also known as “JJ,” had already received word that his longtime partner, Alissa Martin, 54, and his son Braxton Jarmon, 15, had died in the floods.


The family was caught up in the fast-moving floodwaters that surged out of the creek running through their backyard. Jarmon said the family had heard no official warnings that the flood was coming. A neighbor alerted him, he said, not the fire department a mile away.


“They could have gone up and down the street with sirens on,” he said.


For now, as he waits for word of his daughter, Jarmon said he was trying to survive one day at a time. “That’s all I can do,” he said. “For the rest of my life.”


The floods, striking at a region filled with summer camps and vacationing families, now stand among the deadliest U.S. disasters for children in several decades. In Kerr County alone, 36 children were killed, including many from Camp Mystic, a Christian summer camp for girls.


Twenty-seven campers and staff members have been confirmed dead, according to the camp. The bodies of five campers and a 19-year-old counselor had not yet been recovered as of Wednesday morning, officials said.


Earlier on Wednesday, Abbott ordered Texas flags to be lowered to half-staff until July 14 to honor the flood victims. “Texas stands united in mourning and in our resolve to support those who strive to heal and recover,” he said in a statement.


In addition to the deaths in Kerr County, at least seven people were killed in Travis County, eight in Kendall County, five in Burnet County, three in Williamson County and one in Tom Green County.


Stories of the lost continued to emerge Wednesday. The daughter of Katheryn Eads, who was camping in Kerr County when the floods swept through, described her mother in an email to The New York Times, saying Eads had worked in early education as a psychologist, helping children in the foster care system, and then spent time as a college professor.


“She was an incredible wife, daughter, mother, grandmother and person who spent her life helping kids,” wrote Eads’ daughter, Victoria Eads. Katheryn Eads was camping in a trailer with her husband, Brian Eads, who survived by clinging to a tree.


“We both got swept away, and then I lost her,” Brian Eads said while searching for his wife at a church shelter on the day of the floods. He tried to swim through the swift-moving dark water toward her voice, he said, but lost track of her when he was struck in the head by flood debris.

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