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Home » Judge rules on Camp Mystic fully reopening one year after deadly flood – UK Times
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Judge rules on Camp Mystic fully reopening one year after deadly flood – UK Times

By uk-times.com9 March 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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Judge rules on Camp Mystic fully reopening one year after deadly flood – UK Times
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Following last year’s catastrophic floods that killed 25 girls and two counsellors, a Texas judge has ordered Camp Mystic to preserve damaged cabins and parts of its grounds.

The order follows a lawsuit by the family of 8-year-old Cile Steward, who was swept away in the flood last Fourth of July and whose body still has not been recovered. District Judge Maya Guerra Gamble ordered Camp Mystic to halt any construction or alterations after the family argued that any changes at the camp could destroy evidence needed for their lawsuit.

Gamble ruled that Camp Mystic’s owners must not alter or demolish the cabins where campers were housed during the floods, and said they must not use the portion of the camp closest to the Guadalupe River where those cabins were located.

“What we’re trying to do is preserve the evidence that’s there so that we can understand, so that future campers will never be put in a situation like this again,” Will Steward, Cile’s father, told reporters after the hearing.

The campers and counselors were killed when the fast-rising floodwaters roared through a low-lying area of the summer camp before dawn on the Fourth of July. All told, the destructive flooding killed at least 136 people, raising questions about how things went so terribly wrong.

The camp, established in 1926, did not evacuate and was hit hard when the river rose from 14 feet (4.2 meters) to 29.5 feet (9 meters) within 60 minutes.

The judge ruled that Camp Mystic’s owners must not alter or demolish the cabins where campers were housed during the floods

The judge ruled that Camp Mystic’s owners must not alter or demolish the cabins where campers were housed during the floods (Austin American-Statesman)

“The worst thing you can do is put a bunch of 8-year-olds on a bus and try to drive them out of there. They all would have drowned,” said Mikal Watts, an attorney for Camp Mystic and its family of owners.

In a packed courtroom Wednesday, family members of the deceased girls wore buttons depicting their images as lawyers for Camp Mystic displayed pictures of trees planted in their memory and architectural renderings of plans to rebuild parts of the camp outside a 1,000-year flood zone.

Attorneys for Camp Mystic have expressed sympathy for the girls’ families but maintained there was little they could have done during the catastrophic flooding that quickly overcame the camp. Pictures of the rising floodwaters were shown in court Wednesday.

“Nobody had ever seen a prior flood anything like we saw in 2025,” Watts said.

More than 850 campers have already signed up to attend camp this summer, he said. The camp still needs to be approved for a license by state regulators to operate this summer.

Edward Eastland, the son of camp owner Richard Eastland, who died in the flooding, testified Wednesday that his mother, his wife and their children as well as another staff member were at a camp house when “the double doors of the house broke open” from floodwaters. They had to break out a separate window to climb out and evacuate to higher ground. All survived.

The camp had security cameras around the campus, Eastland said, but no one was watching the live feed in the middle of the night as the waters rose. When he tried to pull it up about 3 a.m., he wasn’t able to.

The judge ruled that Camp Mystic’s owners must not alter or demolish the cabins where campers were housed during the floods

The judge ruled that Camp Mystic’s owners must not alter or demolish the cabins where campers were housed during the floods (AFP/Getty)

And when pressed about the camp’s flood plans, Eastland said he didn’t know if there was anything more detailed than a one-paragraph slide shown in the hearing. Will and Cici Steward said they don’t believe the camp has adequate safety measures in place to welcome new campers while they still search for their daughter.

“They didn’t have a plan, and they don’t have a plan moving forward,” Cici Steward said.

The camp’s decision last year to partially open and to construct a memorial on the grounds drew outrage from many of the girls’ families who are mourning their loved ones and who said they weren’t consulted on the plans.

Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick has asked Texas regulators not to renew the license for Camp Mystic while the deaths are being investigated and cited legislative probes that are expected to begin in the spring.

Families of several of the girls who died have sued the camp’s operators, arguing that camp officials failed to take necessary steps to protect the campers as life-threatening floodwaters approached.

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