Camp Mystic, an all-girls Christian camp in Texas, has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganization nearly a year after catastrophic floods killed 28 people, including 25 girls and two teenage counselors. According to paperwork filed with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Houston, the camp listed its debt as exceeding $10 million and assets between $100,001 to $500,000. The bankruptcy filing comes weeks after the camp halted plans to reopen this summer amid outrage from victims' families and lawmakers.
Key Takeaways
Camp Mystic has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy nearly a year after floods killed 28 people, including 25 girls and two counselors. The camp listed over $10 million in debt and assets between $100,001 to $500,000. Families of the victims are suing for more than $1 million in damages.
Source Claims Check
1 Difference Found| Claim | Status | Reason | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lawsuits Filed | 0 Differences | Majority reports lawsuits filed; no conflicting claims found. | ▼ |
| Fatalities | Broad Agreement | 28 people killed in floods at Camp Mystic | |
| Debt Amount | Broad Agreement | $10 million+ debt listed by Camp Mystic | |
| Assets Value | Broad Agreement | $100,001 to $500,000 assets range for Camp Mystic | |
| Camp Owner Death | Broad Agreement | Camp owner Richard Eastland died in the flood |
The floods along a several-mile stretch of the Guadalupe River raised questions about how things went so terribly wrong, with investigations revealing that Camp Mystic lacked detailed planning for a flood emergency and relied on poorly trained staff. Families of the victims filed a lawsuit in November seeking more than $1 million in damages, alleging that camp operators failed to take necessary steps to protect the girls as life-threatening floodwaters approached on July 4.
The bankruptcy filing comes days after a new investigative report into the failed evacuation of Camp Mystic during the deadly floods identified a series of missteps that led to the deaths at the camp. Investigators told a joint Texas House and Senate committee that they reached four conclusions in their exhaustive review of what contributed to the deaths, including inadequate emergency planning and chaotic reunification efforts.
In April, Texas lawmakers sharply criticized the camp's operators for their evacuation planning ahead of the storm. Camp Mystic withdrew its application for a summer 2026 camp license after that first public hearing. Mary Elizabeth Eastland, the camp's chief health officer, saw her nursing license temporarily suspended following allegations of inadequate emergency planning procedures and failure to report deaths within the required timeframe.
After the tragedy at Camp Mystic on July 4th, state lawmakers approved a new law with various requirements for summer camps to prevent similar incidents. However, State Rep. Wes Virdell noted that only nine out of approximately 300 camps have been approved for a license for this coming summer due to the new legislation's costly requirements.
How this summary was created
This summary synthesizes reporting from 4 independent publishers using AI. All sources are cited and linked below. NewsBalance is a news aggregator and media literacy tool, not a news publisher. AI-generated content may contain errors or inaccuracies — always verify important information with the original sources.
