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Texas representatives face the mounting questions about when the residents of Kerwil reported the deadly outbreaks of the flood, which killed 96 locals, and more than 160 others were missing.
Asked about the possible failures of the police at the press conference on Thursday – almost a week after the flood July 4 – a police officer Kerwil Jonathan Lamb said: “I have no information so far.”
On the eve of the interrogation, there was a tense exchange before, when journalists repeatedly asked the officials about the possible lag in emergency communication.
At the beginning of Friday, the Guadalpepe river rose a few meters in minutes, after about 100 billion rain.
At least 120 people were killed in the Texas flood. The Kerwil district, which included the main devastated, was devastated, with 96 confirmed deaths, including 36 children, many of whom were present at a neighboring Christian camp.
County County representatives were pressed for various reasons for the tragedy.
According to the audio recording received by the ABC News branch, the firefighter, located up on the current from Kerwil, asked the office of the Ker’s Sheriff’s office to announce the nearby residents about the lifting of water at about 4:22 on July 4.
But, according to ABC News, Ker’s county officials did not report the residents almost six hours after hundreds of people were covered by a flood.
The first warning from the cadeted system of Ker’s county came up to about 90 minutes, the news reports.
“Guadalupe Schumacher’s sign is underwater on the state highway 39,” the firefighter said in a dispatch audio received by ABC News. “Is there a way we can send coded hunting residents, asking them to find higher land or stay home?”
“Become, we have to get this approved with our head,” said the Kerr Sheriff’s dispatcher.
During the press conference on Wednesday, officials were asked about any delay in emergency.
Ker Lari Leit Sheriff said that he had first reported that he had been reported for the first time about “four” and said that “we were trying to set terms in the process.”
“It will take a little time,” he continued. “This is not my priority this time.”
He said he was instead concentrated on the search for the missing and identification of victims. More than 160 people were still contributed to the missing Thursday morning, including five tourists and one adviser with Camp Mystic, the closest Christian camp.
Ker’s County representatives say they have not saved anyone from the flood.
The summons about the weather was preceded by storms. The National Meteorological Service has directed several about the rains and the possible flood, starting through Thursday, and the Texas Division on Extraordinary Situations (TDEM), which activate state resources from flooding problems.
Officials referred to the lack of mobile phone service, no sense of intensity of thunderstorms and public desensitization to such alerts in the prone to floods, since the causes that some did not evacuate.
President Donald Trump has signed a federal declaration on the disaster at the request of Governor Texas Greg Ebot. This allowed the Federal Emergency Agency to be located in Central Texas and open the Car Center for the Car.
Rescue efforts included more than 2100 respondents on Earth, private helicopters, drones, boats and dogs that allocate the corpse. They are looking for missing and dead, buried under mounds imbued with dirt.
“These large fields (from debris) can be very obstructive, and deepening into these fields is very dangerous,” said Lieutenant Colonel Ben Baker on Wednesday of the Texas Parks and Wildlife.
“It’s extremely insidious, a lot of time. It’s dirty work. It is still.