5 Camp Mystic campers, 1 counselor still missing
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Molly Claire DeWitt "had a heart as expansive as her imagination," her obituary shares. She is one of 109 people who died in Central Texas due to floods in Kerr, Travis, Kendall, Burnet, Williamson and Tom Green counties.
The senior minister of Houston's First Unitarian Universalist Church is publicly distancing himself from the controversial remarks made by his partner about the Camp Mystic flood disaster that killed 27 campers and counselors over the Fourth of July weekend.
Inside the sanctuary, sorrow was thick in the air as the community came together to honor the campers of Camp Mystic, which is a cherished girls’ summer camp along the Guadalupe River. Many campers tragically lost their lives, while others remain missing.
Texas Hill Country's Camp Mystic was a refuge until the floods came – one made of water, the other made of lies. Grieving parents face social media rumors, Internet hoaxes and
Vigil held at Church of St. John for Camp Mystic flood victims, with attendees sharing grief and unity through song.
A former member of Houston’s Food Insecurity Board was fired after she posted a racially tinged video mocking victims of
Former Houston appointee Sade Perkins is facing backlash after claiming Camp Mystic, devastated by flooding with multiple deaths, is a "Whites-only" camp on TikTok. (Source: TikTok/@sades_world8)
Nearly 30 campers at the 99-year-old Hill Country institution are still missing after flooding devastated the area on Friday.