Texas Dad who found Dead Boy, 10, looking for missing daughter, gets the worst news possible
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A father who found a little boy’s body while he was looking for his missing daughter after the Texas Floods have now learned that she has also lost her life.
Ty Badon got the terrible news about his daughter Joyce Catherine Badon, 21, three days after she was swept away by floods in Hunt, Texas.
Joyce’s mother Kellye Badon broke the terrible news Facebook Monday afternoon.
“God showed us how we should go this morning!” She wrote.
‘We found our dear daughter who blessed us for 21 years! ❤️ We pray to find her three friends soon. Thanks to everyone for the prayers and support.
“God is good! ❤️❤️❤️ ”
Loved ones later confirmed News4Sanantonio And 12newsnow That Jocelyn had died.
The devastating news came after Joyce’s father Ty had found another dead child while he was fond of his daughter, who is at least eight.

Joyce Badon, 21, was found dead for three days after she had been swept away by the floods of Texas, her family said

Texas -Fader Ty Badon (photo) spoke about the moving moment that he discovered a little boy dead while looking for his own daughter in the aftermath of the horrible floods

News about Joyce’s death was shared by her mother Kellye Badon on Facebook and with local news stations by relatives
Ty Badon was the epicenter of the massacre in the rural town of Hunt searching during the weekend when he met the boy, who is one of the at least 89 people killed by the flood.
“My son and I walked, and what I thought was a mannequin … It was a little boy, about eight or 10 years old, and he was dead,” Badon told CNN.
The tormented father said he was looking for his 21-year-old daughter, Joyce Catherine, and his voice broke at the end of the interview when he asked for prayers.
Badon said the last time someone had contact with his daughter on July 4, when the floods struck, while she spoke with three of her friends on the phone.
The group of four stayed in a hut owned by another parent in the picturesque community, which is approximately 120 miles west of Austin, Texas.
Badon, a resident of Beaumont, said his daughter told the owner of the hut that two of the group Was washed away While she was on the phone.
“A few seconds later the phone died, and that’s all we know,” said Badon.

The group of four stayed in a hut owned by another parent in the picturesque community of Hunt (depicted after the flood), which is approximately 120 miles west of Austin, Texas
‘We assume that she was also washed away. If you go back to where the house is, it’s not a good sight. ‘
Badon said that the house in which the group was staying ‘is no longer’. “We pray that all four are still alive. They all miss, “he said.
His daughter is one of the dozens of people who are still missing, including 27 children, after the Guadalupe River rose more than 26 feet in just 45 minutes in the early hours of July 4 and sends a wall of water over different communities in Kerr County.
Governor Greg Abbott said on Sunday that 41 people were confirmed who are not responsible for the entire state and that more could be missed.
Hundreds of young girls in Camp Mystic, Christian Summer Camp on the shores of the river, and many people were on holiday in the rural area for the fourth weekend of July.

Badon said that the last time someone had contact with his daughter Joyce Catherine (photo) was on July 4, when the floods struck, while she spoke with three of her friends on the phone

Greg Abbott government said there were 41 people who are still not responsible for the whole state and more could be missing. (Shown: a volunteer is looking for missing people in Hunt on July 6)

Shown: a volunteer searches for survivors in a house that was lifted from his foundation and hit a tree during the devastating floods of the Guadalupe river in Kerrville
Residents started with the question why civil servants only warned them about the floods about the floods about the floods – the day they started – and framed them as only ‘moderate’ storms.
The National Weather Service escalated the warning to a flash flame warning at 1 am Friday, followed by a more serious emergency in the flash at 4.30 a.m.
But at this point, water was already flowing into the houses of families.
Many Texans have blamed the slow updates as part of the reason that the floods have been so deadly.
In recent months, the National Weather Service has fired around 600 people as part of the radical cuts of Donald Trump on federal services.
It had recently started hiring 100 new employees.
Trump has also proposed cutbacks for FEMA and Noaa, federal agencies that conduct climate research and help prepare states for natural disasters.
The Texas Hill Country in the central part of the state is naturally sensitive to flashes of floods due to the dry dirt packaged areas where the soil makes rain slip along the surface of the landscape instead of absorbing it.

Badon said that the last time someone had contact with his daughter Joyce Catherine (photo) was on July 4, when the floods struck, while she spoke with three of her friends on the phone
Friday’s floods started with a particularly bad storm that dropped most of its 12 centimeters of rain in the early morning hours.
Survivors have described the floods as a ‘pitch -black wall of death’ and said they have not received any emergency warnings.
Kerr County Judge Rob Kelly, who lives along the Guadalupe River, said on Saturday that “nobody saw this coming.”
Various officials have called it a ‘100-year-old flowers’, which means that the water levels were very unlikely on the basis of the historical record.
Although it is difficult to connect specific storms with a warming planet so fast after they occur, meteorologists say that a warmer atmosphere can retain more moisture and allow serious storms to dump even more rain.
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