
Countywide, the flood claimed 119 lives and caused hundreds of millions of dollars in property damage. More than a fifth of the deaths occurred at Camp Mystic, where 25 campers, two counselors and Dick Eastland, a camp owner and executive director, perished.
From The Texas Newsroom:
This article is co-published with The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan local newsroom that informs and engages with Texans.
The first 911 call from the historic Camp Mystic on the Guadalupe River came in at 3:57 a.m., when a caller told the dispatcher she was stranded on a hill and cabins around her were filling with water. Around the same time, the swelling river swept away Camp Mystic’s owner and his son, the family’s lawyer said, along with a number of campers.
But it wasn’t until 6:34 a.m. — more than two hours later — that a Kerr County sheriff’s office captain sent the first text message to a group of emergency response leaders about what he called potential “issues” at Camp Mystic.
As the hours went on and the road to the camp remained impassable, the texts show the leaders in the text thread received sparse and sometimes contradictory information about whether anyone from the camp was missing — and how many were missing. As nightfall neared, the officials were still struggling to understand the scope of the disaster there.
“NO confirmed dead bodies at mystic only searching,” Texas Ranger Chad Matlock texted the group just before 7 p.m.
Hundreds of newly-released text messages and emails, obtained through a public records request and published for the first time here, detail the frantic, dayslong exchange among senior leaders in the Kerr County Sheriff’s Office during the July 4 flood.
The text thread, which included Sheriff Larry Leitha, County Emergency Management Coordinator William “Dub” Thomas and other leaders from the office, shows confusion among those charged with responding to a devastating natural disaster. It appears to be the primary way Sheriff’s Office command staff communicated via text about the disaster — it’s unknown the extent of other discussions that happened in person or by phone.
At least seven phone numbers in the group that day were not identified in the records. Matlock’s number was identified using the voicemail on his phone, and confirmed by the Department of Public Safety.
The Texas Newsroom and Texas Tribune sent extensive questions to county officials regarding the communications. They did not respond. The lawyer for Camp Mystic and the owner’s family, Mikal Watts, said the camp on July 4 was focused on taking care of the surviving girls, identifying how many were missing and relying on first responders to search downstream.
























