Searchers continue hunt for people missing
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Nearly a week after deadly floods struck Central Texas, search and rescue teams are continuing to probe debris for those still missing.
ABC News Chief National Correspondent Matt Gutman is at one location along the Guadalupe River where officials are performing rescue and recovery missions.
The Indiana Task Force 1 was deployed on July 8 to assist in search and rescue operations in Kerr County, Texas.
Mexican firefighters trained in search and rescue have joined the efforts to find the victims of the tragic flooding in the battered Texas Hill Country.
The day after deadly flooding swept through Central Texas on July 4, search and rescue efforts continued. Early Friday morning, heavy rains pushed the Guadalupe River at Hunt to its second-highest height on record,
NASA’s high-altitude WB-57 aircraft took off from Ellington Field Joint Reserve Base in Houston on Tuesday, and will conduct aerial surveys using its DyNAMITE (Day/Night Airborne Motion Imager for Terrestrial Environments) sensor.
Miller County Office of Emergency Management Director Travis Loehr was at a command center on the Guadalupe River Tuesday when he received a grim text message from a volunteer.
The Guadalupe River flooded early July 4 as heavy rains prompted all in the area to evacuate. Additionally, emergency responders are frantically searching
The Texas Military Department’s MQ-9s have high-resolution cameras and infrared sensors that can provide real-time footage to those on the ground.
Major damage is being reported along the Guadalupe River in Kerrville after deadly flooding struck the area on the Fourth of July.RELATED: FL
Officials in flood-stricken central Texas on Wednesday again deflected mounting questions about whether they could have done more to warn people ahead of devastating flash flooding that killed at least 119 people on July 4.