Updated
Updated · NBC News · Jun 24
Camp Mystic Owner Files Chapter 11 With $10 Million-$50 Million Debt After 28 Flood Deaths
Updated
Updated · NBC News · Jun 24

Camp Mystic Owner Files Chapter 11 With $10 Million-$50 Million Debt After 28 Flood Deaths

3 articles · Updated · NBC News · Jun 24

Summary

  • An eight-page Chapter 11 filing in Houston lists Camp Mystic’s debts at $10 million to $50 million and assets at $1 million to $10 million, nearly a year after the Texas Hill Country disaster.
  • A 115-page state report released earlier this month blamed the camp for inadequate emergency planning, storm preparation, evacuations and incident management during the July 4 floods.
  • The report said the evacuation effort fell largely to three men — co-owner Dick Eastland, his son and a security guard — and Eastland died in the flooding.
  • In late April, Camp Mystic withdrew its application to reopen for the summer a day after a legislative hearing where parents of the dead girls pressed lawmakers.
  • The nearly 100-year-old camp has become a focal point of the wider Guadalupe River tragedy, which killed at least 136 people, including 25 girls and two teenage counselors at the camp.

Insights

With Camp Mystic bankrupt, what will justice for the 28 victims and their grieving families actually look like?
As new safety laws force camp closures, are Texas children paying the price for one camp's failure?
Beyond one camp's mistakes, are outdated flood maps and climate change the real culprits behind the Texas tragedy?