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Death toll now 24 in Guadalupe River floods. Search continues for more than 20 girls still missing.

Death toll now 24 in Guadalupe River floods. Search continues for more than 20 girls still missing.

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Rescuers raced against the clock overnight in their frantic search for more than 20 missing girls from a private Christian camp and anyone else who may have survived the deadly, unprecedented, and catastrophic floods when the Guadalupe River burst its banks in Kerr County. The floods claimed at least 24 lives.

Forecasters warned more rain was coming to the region, nicknamed “flash flood alley.” Additional rainfall may only worsen a mass casualty event that swept away entire buildings and sent cars swirling through the gray and brown waters.

The state deployed hundreds of search and rescue personnel and more than dozen helicopters into the inundated region, with a focus on boys and girls summer camps, parks, and low-lying subdivisions. On Friday evening, Gen. Thomas Suelzer, commander of the Texas Military Department, reported 237 people were rescued.

Officials warned people along the Guadalupe River between Comfort and Canyon Lake to evacuate through Saturday morning as debris-filled floodwaters flowed downstream. They warned campers and others anywhere between Comfort and Canyon Lake to stay away from the river. They also asked residents to not fly drones over the area.

A somber assemblage of Texas National Guard commanders, state troopers, and emergency management joined Gov. Greg Abbott and Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick on Friday night in a livestreamed update. Abbott stressed that Texas would send all its resources to aid the rescuers.

The floodwaters in Kerrville on Friday, July 4, 2025.

“So many people have been swept up into an extraordinary catastrophe. It needs God, but it also needs a robust response by the state and local governments and by people who live in these communities impacted by this,” the governor said.

Abbott continued: “[The rescues] will continue in the darkness of night. They will be taking place when the sun rises in the morning. They will be nonstop seeking to find everybody who is unaccounted for. We will stop at nothing to ensure that every asset and person and plane and whatever is needed is going to be involved in the process of rescuing every last person and assure everybody involved in this is going to be fully accounted for.”

He signed a disaster declaration for Kerr and 13 other counties impacted by Friday’s flooding, enabling them to access state resources for the emergency operations.

At the press conference, state and local officials updated the number of fatalities but did not have new information on the missing girls, who were from Camp Mystic, which contained about 750 campers. Officials said earlier on Friday that some of those campers may be stranded and unable to call for help.

The view down Francisco Lemos Street as it crosses the Guadalupe River on Friday, July 4, 2025.

The view down Francisco Lemos Street as it crosses the Guadalupe River on Friday, July 4, 2025.

Reunifications and shelters

Reunification centers in Kerrville were set up at these locations:

  • Arcadia Live Theater — 717 Water St, Kerrville, TX 78028
  • Ingram Elementary School — 125 Brave Run W, Ingram, Texas, 78025

Shelters for those displaced by the flooding have been set up in Kerrville at:

  • First United Methodist Church — 321 Thompson Drive Kerrville, TX 78028
  • Calvary Temple Church — 3000 Loop 534 Kerrville, TX 78028
  • Notre Dame Catholic Church — 929 Main Street Notre Dame Catholic Church Kerrville, TX 78028
  • Schreiner University — Event Center, 2100 Memorial Boulevard

Authorities also advised people to call the Red Cross at 800-733-2767 if they were trying to locate a loved one.

But not all of Friday saw tragedy and uncertainty. By Friday evening, some children were back in their relieved families’ arms. Sympathetic people on social media also shared fragments of information or photos of dazed and nervous children safely gathered in rooms, like a fire station, awaiting reunion with their loved ones.

Floodwaters

Camp Mystic

Camp Mystic is an all-girls summer camp on the banks of the Guadalupe River.

Its website explained that ‘Doc’ Stewart, a coach at the University of Texas at Austin, established the camp in 1926. Agnes Stacy sent her daughter to the camp in 1933, and six years later she and her husband bought it.

The U.S. government leased the camp as a rehab center for aviator veterans from 1944 to 1945.

Dick and Tweety Eastland own and are the current executive directors of the camp, which they’ve enjoyed since 1974. Its Facebook page explained that “Each summer, Mystic challenges its campers to meet the Mystic ideals: 1. Be a better person for being at Mystic; 2. Let Mystic bring out the best in them; 3. Grow spiritually”

‘There was not a lot to absorb it.’

Kerrville City Manager Dalton Rice asked residents to conserve water because floodwaters affected the city’s surface water source.

“We are operating off well water currently,” he explained. “We do encourage everybody to exercise extreme conservation. We are currently not in a boil water notice, but that could change.”

Both Kerrville and Kerr County issued disaster declarations.

Patrick said in a press conference earlier on Friday that the river rose quick after a foot of rain fell on some spots. “That river rose 26 feet in 45 minutes,” he said. “It was a dry bed. It had been dry. There was not a lot to absorb it. It went down the rocks, and it was a destructive flood.”

The National Weather Service (NWS) said most of the floodwaters will flow into Canyon Lake and should not affect potential water recreation in New Braunfels. As of Friday afternoon, Canyon Lake was approximately 46% full.

“Currently, Canyon Lake has a lot of storage capacity,” explained Meteorologist Jason Runyan. “It’s at pretty low levels, so the lake can take all this rainfall without having to release it farther downstream into New Braunfels, so no additional big rise is expected from this heavy rainfall into New Braunfels.”

Patrick was confident the dam at Canyon Lake could withstand the influx of floodwaters. He explained that the Army Corps of Engineers would monitor the structure.

Patrick also said that he was in contact with the Trump administration, and he was reassured that Texas would receive all necessary assistance.

Wreckage from Friday's floods.

Wreckage from Friday’s floods.

Rescue operations

Texas game wardens were among the search and rescue teams conducting rescue operations across the region.

“Our Aviation Unit and rescue swimmers are assisting from the air, while the Unmanned Aircraft Systems Program provides live aerial feed to our emergency management partners at the State Emergency Operations Center, which is now operating at an escalated response level,” officials said in a post on social media.

Bexar County and the San Antonio Fire Department both sent personnel and equipment to Kerr County to assist operations.

“First responders from Bexar County Emergency Services Districts 2, 3, 5, 7, 10, 11, and 12 have been mobilized, bringing ambulances, rescue teams, drones, and boats equipped with trained Swiftwater Rescue Technicians,” officials explained in a statement.

The San Antonio Fire Department dispatched its AMBUS — an ambulance bus and emergency medical technicians.

Preparation before the storm

Kerrville city officials pushed back against criticism on Friday afternoon that more could have been done to evacuate before the flood hit the region, known as Flash Flood Alley.

Rice, the Kerrville city manager, told reporters the flooding situation evolved quickly. He said the north and south fork that feed into the Guadalupe River reached peaks at about 3:30 on Friday morning.

“I was on the river trail at that time and everything was fine,” he explained. “Within an hour [or] two hour period, the water was up almost to the bridge.”

Rice said the city had crews out early in the morning to prepare for the Fourth of July celebration, and they were also caught off guard.

“Despite flood warnings, despite everything that was going on, there were some things that happened very fast,” he added.

When asked if a warning system was in effect Thursday night when the flooding started. Rob Kelly, the Kerr County judge, said, “We do not have a warning system on the river. … We didn’t know this flood was coming. Rest assured, no one knew this kind of flood was coming. We have floods all the time.”

He also said that “this is the most dangerous river valley in the United States” but that county officials had “no reason to believe that this was going to be anything like what’s happened here. None whatsoever.”

The NWS had estimated on Thursday that the region might see five to seven inches of rain with the possibility of storm clusters forming over the region. However, the area ended up seeing more than a foot of rain.

How it happened

Runyan, the meteorologist with the NWS, explained the storms were the result of two different factors:

“The first being some high amounts of moisture for this time of year — some near records of moisture — vertically into the atmosphere. The second were the remnants of a midlevel disturbance from what used to be Tropical Storm Barry. So a combination of that disturbance and these record levels of moisture have led to the very heavy rainfall, especially over Kerr County.”

All that rainfall from overnight and early morning drained into the Guadalupe River Basin. He said it started up by the headwaters near Hunt, Texas, in western Kerr County and “traveled downstream through Kerrville where it crested” and then traveled toward Comfort.

The reunification center at Ingram Elementary School in Kerrville on July 4, 2025.

The reunification center at Ingram Elementary School in Kerrville on July 4, 2025.

“We saw some pretty sharp and steep rises on the river,” he added, “in some cases rivaling the 1987 flood, the famous 1987 flood.” The 1987 flood dropped 11 inches of rain, and 10 teenagers died when their church bus ran into flood waters.

Friday’s floods, Runyan said, were so high and forceful that some of the river instrumentation and gauges were affected or washed out. “So it’s a pretty catastrophic type flood wave coming down the Guadalupe River.”

Because of the damaged river gauges, it may take the U.S. Geological Survey a few days to get accurate data on how high the river crested in the Hunt and Kerrville area.

He said some parts of the Hill Country were placed under a rare flash flood emergency, which is different from a flash flood warning.

“Typically most people are familiar with flash flood warnings,” he said. “Our typical flash flood warnings are when we expect imminent flooding in areas — rises and streams and creeks that go over low water crossing.”

Flash flood emergencies, Runyan explained, are “saved for days where we’re expecting catastrophic type damage or widespread damage or even loss of life.”

The flash flood emergency expired at 2 p.m.

The days ahead

The NWS warned more rain may fall on the region on Saturday. There was a moderate chance for more rain for the Hill Country, including Kerr County, and in San Antonio through Saturday.

Floodwaters were expected to cross over the U.S. 281 bridges at Spring Branch late Friday night.

The National Weather Service reported an upper level disturbance that produced Friday’s flooding is falling apart as it pushes to the southeast across South Texas.

The weather system is expected to also move faster than it was on Friday, reducing the potential for additional flooding.

Forecasters said sunnier skies should return by Sunday.

This is a developing story that will be updated.

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Mark Cuban Predicts AI Will Create The First Trillionaire And ‘It Could Just Be One Dude In The Basement’

Mark Cuban Predicts AI Will Create The First Trillionaire And ‘It Could Just Be One Dude In The Basement’

Billionaire entrepreneur Mark Cuban said that he believes artificial intelligence (AI) could lead to the creation of the world’s first trillionaire.

What Happened: Cuban, aged 66, predicted this during the “High Performance” podcast by CNBC on Sunday. He highlighted that the future trillionaire will likely be someone who innovatively harnesses AI.

He remarked, “We haven’t seen the best, or the craziest, of what [AI] is going to be able to do.” He also speculated that this groundbreaking innovation might emerge from an unexpected source, noting, “Not only do I think it’ll create a trillionaire, but it could be just one dude in the basement.”

Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc. CEO Scott Boatwright recently pointed out AI’s effectiveness in cutting down hiring time by 75%, according to Fortune. Cuban compared AI’s potential to the early days of personal computers and smartphones, predicting it will become essential.

See Also: Mark Cuban Talks About His Struggles During His First Company: ‘I Didn’t Take A Vacation For…7 Years’

Despite AI’s promising future, Cuban acknowledged potential challenges, including job displacement and environmental impacts. He encouraged people to engage with AI tools like ChatGPT to better understand and improve them, emphasizing the importance of familiarizing oneself with this rapidly evolving technology.

Subscribe to the Benzinga Tech Trends newsletter to get all the latest tech developments delivered to your inbox.

“I’m not saying that all of a sudden, there are going to be robots that are smarter than people … But we’ll find ways to make our lives better,” Cuban added.

Why It Matters: Mark Cuban has long been a vocal advocate for technological innovation. His insights into AI’s potential to create unprecedented wealth come amid a broader conversation about the transformative power of technology.

Cuban’s entrepreneurial journey, which began with the founding of MicroSolutions at age 24, underscores his belief in hard work and innovation as keys to success. He has previously shared his struggles, including not taking a vacation for seven years while building his first company.

Check out more of Benzinga’s Consumer Tech coverage by following this link.

Read Next:

Disclaimer: This content was partially produced with the help of AI tools and was reviewed and published by Benzinga editors.

Photo courtesy: Joe Seer / Shutterstock.com

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3-Month-Old Black Baby Dies After His Dad Drowned Him in Bucket of Laundry Detergent | FROUSA Media | FROUSA Media | FROUSA Media

3-Month-Old Black Baby Dies After His Dad Drowned Him in Bucket of Laundry Detergent | FROUSA Media | FROUSA Media | FROUSA Media

Nationwide — A heartbreaking tragedy unfolded in Lafayette, Indiana when a 3-month-old African American baby named Jacob Moneus was found dead after being drowned by his father in a bucket of laundry detergent. On Tuesday, a judge sentenced 29-year-old Eliasard Moneus to 92 years in prison for the infant’s death, which occurred in August 2024. The sentencing comes after a series of disturbing events that shocked the Lafayette community and made headlines statewide.
KGNS News reports that according to court documents, the incident began on August 5, 2024, when Eliasard and his wife had an argument and stopped speaking to each other. While the mother sat in their bedroom watching a church service and holding baby Jacob, Eliasard entered the room, took the child, and walked out the front door. He returned about 30 minutes later and brutally attacked his wife with a heavy object, believed to be a tire iron or wrench, fracturing her skull before leaving again.
The injured mother managed to drive herself to the hospital, where doctors treated her for multiple injuries. When officers arrived to speak with her, they realized baby Jacob was missing and not at the hospital. Police immediately began searching for the infant and issued a Silver Alert on August 10, citing that the baby was in grave danger and required urgent medical care.

Sadly, the search ended in tragedy the following day when officers returned to the family’s apartment for a second, more thorough search. It was during this visit that they discovered Jacob’s body hidden in a sealed bucket beside the kitchen trash can — a location authorities described as “very well hidden where a normal person wouldn’t think to look.”

Lafayette Police confirmed that the bucket contained laundry detergent and that Jacob had been drowned in it. The devastating discovery led to Eliasard’s arrest and ultimately his conviction. As part of a plea agreement, additional charges — including aggravated battery, criminal confinement, and domestic battery — were dropped in exchange for the lengthy sentence.

The case has drawn national attention, not only for the brutality of the crime but also for the resilience of Jacob’s mother, who survived a brutal assault and helped authorities uncover the truth.

Great Job Felicia Ray Owens & the Team @ FROUSA Media Source link for sharing this story.

#FeliciaRayOwens #TheFeliciaFiles #FROUSA #LocalVoices #IndependentMedia #HerSheSquad

Great Job Felicia Ray Owens & the Team @ FROUSA Media Source link for sharing this story.

#FeliciaRayOwens #TheFeliciaFiles #FROUSA #LocalVoices #IndependentMedia #HerSheSquad

Great Job Felicia Ray Owens & the Team @ FROUSA Media Source link for sharing this story.

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Wimbledon: Madison Keys latest star to suffer early exit

Wimbledon: Madison Keys latest star to suffer early exit

Wimbledon: Madison Keys latest star to suffer early exit

Madison Keys of the U.S. reacts during her women’s singles third round match against Laura Siegemund of Germany at the Wimbledon Tennis Championships in London, Friday, July 4, 2025.(AP Photo/Alastair Grant)

Australian Open champion Madison Keys became the latest star to crash out of Wimbledon as the American sixth seed was stunned by Laura Siegemund on Friday.

Keys slumped to a 6-3, 6-3 loss against the German world number 104 in the third round on Court Two.

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READ: Wimbledon: Record-tying 23 seeds gone in the first round

The 30-year-old is the fifth player among the top six seeds in the women’s draw to suffer a surprise exit from this year’s tournament.

Coco Gauff, Jessica Pegula, Jasmine Paolini and Zheng Qinwen had already bowed out, though world number one Aryna Sabalenka is still alive.

Keys, who beat Sabalenka to clinch her maiden Grand Slam crown in Melbourne in January, is yet to make it past the quarter-finals in 11 visits to the All England Club.

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She made 31 unforced errors in a lacklustre display against Siegemund.

It was a miserable way to spend the fourth of July for Keys while her compatriots celebrated the Independence Day holiday back in the United States.

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Siegemund, who beat former US Open finalist Leylah Fernandez in the second round, is through to the Wimbledon last 16 for the first time.

At 37, she is the oldest player left in the women’s tournament, with her best Grand Slam singles run coming when she made the French Open quarter-finals in 2020.

“When you beat a great player like Madison you have to be really happy,” said Siegemund. “I managed to keep my nerve in the end. If you don’t have nerves in this moment you are probably dead.



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“It was a big opportunity. You just take a deep breath and remember your strategy.

“All the girls on the tour are perfectionists. I’m the same but there was no pressure for me. I don’t feel like I need to prove anything anymore.”

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Beloved Heart O’ The Hills camp director killed in Hill Country flooding

Beloved Heart O’ The Hills camp director killed in Hill Country flooding

Jane Ragsdale, the longtime co-owner and director of Heart O’ The Hills summer camp, died Friday in the historic flooding that hit the Texas Hill Country.

On Friday night, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott confirmed the death toll from the Fourth of July flooding in the Hill County had risen to 24 people.

Authorities have not identified all the victims, but an all-girls camp in Kerrville said its camp director and co-owner was one of the people killed. Heart O’ The Hills posted on its website that its camp director and co-owner, Jane Ragsdale, died during the catastrophic flooding.

“We have received word that Jane Ragsdale did not make it. We are mourning the loss of a woman who influenced countless lives and was the definition of strong and powerful,” said the camp in a statement.

The camp was not in session and those who were there have been accounted for or are on higher ground, the camp said.

Ragsdale was described as the “heart and soul” of Heart O’ the Hills, an all-girls camp. According to their website, she was once a camper before becoming a counselor. She served as a program director from 1978 to 1987 and became the camp director in 1988.

According to their website, she’s been a co-owner of the camp since 1976.

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This July 4, Let’s Resolve to Win an Actual Democracy

This July 4, Let’s Resolve to Win an Actual Democracy

The bicentennial of the Declaration of Independence began early for many Americans. On a chilly December morning in 1973, a reenactment of the Boston Tea Party, sponsored by the City of Boston, transformed into protests over contemporary concerns. Barrels labeled “Gulf Oil,” “Exxon,” and “Shell” were tossed into the harbor to denounce environmental destruction. Marchers carried signs condemning the war in Vietnam and the then recent coup in Chile. Chants of “Down with King George” mingled with “Down with King Richard,” ensuring that President Richard Nixon, then facing the Watergate scandal and the resignation of his vice president Spiro Agnew, would not be forgotten.

The cheekily named “Boston Oil Party” was organized by the People’s Bicentennial Commission, an offshoot of the New Left and the antiwar movement that sought to deploy American cultural and political symbols for progressive ends. The commission emphasized the promises in the Declaration of Independence, arguing that its “message of equality and inalienable rights” was still relevant. Its demands included economic democracy and changes to the school curriculum to teach the “real history of the [American] people.”

The official bicentennial festivities began in 1975 and included the American Freedom Train — a museum on wheels that brought historic documents and artifacts, including George Washington’s draft of the Constitution, moon rocks, and the first American Bible — to every state during its staggering twenty-one-month tour. The Freedom Train was heralded by the aptly named Preamble Express, which was “dispatched to scout the route and court host city officials.”

Fireworks displays in major cities were broadcast nationally, and a large international fleet sailed through waterways in New York City and Boston. Johnny Cash, Queen Elizabeth II, and Prince Philip visited the capital, Disney World presented America on Parade every day for a year, and the Super Bowl halftime show featured “200 Years and Just a Baby: A Tribute to America’s Bicentennial.” Meanwhile, Schoolhouse Rock! released several related educational shorts, including “I’m Just a Bill.”

Yet the bicentennial’s glare was dimmed by American defeat in Vietnam, Watergate, the civil rights movement, the feminist movement, militant indigenous activism, and multiple anti-colonial struggles. In response, the administration used spectacle, nostalgia, and a “grand reading of American history” to shore up the country’s damaged reputation. Reflecting on the fall of Saigon, Henry Kissinger, then Ford’s secretary of state, reasoned, “We can’t change the past, but we can shape the future.”

By most accounts, the Ford administration succeeded in shaping the bicentennial’s narrative. The Left had its moments, including a series of multi-coalition events in Philadelphia that the Times described as “echoes of the protest days of the 1960s.” But the official celebrations went off without a hitch and drew far larger audiences.

John Bodnar argues that, for most Americans, the celebrations “marked an end to a period of social unrest and dissent and a renewal of American consensus and patriotism.” Jason Tebbe concludes, “The corporate ‘buy-centennial’ that the People’s Bicentennial Commission and many less radical Americans wanted to avoid, won out. The red, white and blue beer cans you can still find at antique stores today tell the tale.” Commenting on the period, Aziz Rana observes a “widespread public desire to close the book on the recent past” and an “emerging cross-party climate of constitutional rededication” that continued for decades. Only a few years earlier, Congresswoman Barbara Jordan had spoken for many when, during the Watergate hearings, she declared her indisputable faith in the Constitution. Meanwhile, the People’s Bicentennial Commission was accused of “Communist activity” and attempting to “steal the Bicentennial.”

Just over a decade later, the Constitution celebrated its own two-hundredth birthday in 1987 with much fanfare. Chief Justice Warren Berger retired from the Supreme Court to chair the events, concluding that it was “more important that we have an adequate celebration” than for him to remain on the bench.

In the year 2000, a groundbreaking ceremony was held for the National Constitution Center, which continues to uphold its namesake as “the greatest vision of human freedom in history.” Just twenty years ago, Mark Tushnet argued that Americans viewed the Constitution as “entirely adequate to meet the needs of contemporary society.”

Almost fifty years since the Boston Oil Party and the release of “I’m Just a Bill,” another milestone looms. Within days of his closed-door inauguration, Donald Trump promised to throw a “spectacular birthday party” to celebrate the nation’s semiquincentennial on July 4, 2026. His opening moves included reinstating an executive order targeting “pro-Hamas-related vandalism of historically significant public monuments” and “vandalism of the Christopher Columbus Memorial Fountain and Freedom Bell at Union Station.”

As in 1976, the state-directed semiquincentennial is set to be another ostentatious display of American pride. Congress has authorized commemorative coins and postage stamps as well as the commissioning of patriotically named naval cruisers. In Philadelphia, a time capsule will be buried with a scheduled unearthing planned for the quincentennial. George W. and Laura Bush, alongside Barack and Michelle Obama, will serve as the honorary national cochairs of the official commission.

Half a century ago, most Americans, including many on the Left, were under the impression that the United States was a democracy with a political system that would eventually represent majority interests. Neither the civil rights movement nor the New Left and its various offshoots, including the People’s Bicentennial Commission, identified the Constitution as the main obstacle to progressive policies.

But much has changed. Today constitutional veneration is nowhere near as strong as it was when the Freedom Train and Preamble Express were chugging across the country. In fact, the Constitution’s role in our current political crisis and rising authoritarianism has become “a kind of truism, both within the sort of left of center constitutional law academy, and also . . . the commentariat more generally,” says Rana. “That’s a big shift.”

Martin Luther King Jr called the Declaration of Independence’s universalist promise of equal rights a “promissory note to which every American was to fall heir.” Yet that promise has yet to materialize. Two hundred and fifty years since the Declaration was written, we still lack a constitution based on universal suffrage, equal representation, and enforceable social rights such as affordable health care, equal pay for equal work, and self-determination for indigenous peoples. The American Revolution might have helped bring about the downfall of kings, aristocracy, serfdom, and eventually slavery, but it did not lead to a political system in which “we the people” rule.

Next year will bring a deluge of hymns to America and its founding documents. But we should really be talking about the need for a new democratic founding that will allow for actual majoritarian rule: a constitution that places supreme authority in a single federal legislature (elected through universal and equal suffrage) and establishes civil and political rights for all. Two hundred and fifty years without democracy is long enough.

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3-Month-Old Black Baby Dies After His Dad Drowned Him in Bucket of Laundry Detergent | FROUSA Media | FROUSA Media

3-Month-Old Black Baby Dies After His Dad Drowned Him in Bucket of Laundry Detergent | FROUSA Media | FROUSA Media | FROUSA Media

Nationwide — A heartbreaking tragedy unfolded in Lafayette, Indiana when a 3-month-old African American baby named Jacob Moneus was found dead after being drowned by his father in a bucket of laundry detergent. On Tuesday, a judge sentenced 29-year-old Eliasard Moneus to 92 years in prison for the infant’s death, which occurred in August 2024. The sentencing comes after a series of disturbing events that shocked the Lafayette community and made headlines statewide.
KGNS News reports that according to court documents, the incident began on August 5, 2024, when Eliasard and his wife had an argument and stopped speaking to each other. While the mother sat in their bedroom watching a church service and holding baby Jacob, Eliasard entered the room, took the child, and walked out the front door. He returned about 30 minutes later and brutally attacked his wife with a heavy object, believed to be a tire iron or wrench, fracturing her skull before leaving again.

The injured mother managed to drive herself to the hospital, where doctors treated her for multiple injuries. When officers arrived to speak with her, they realized baby Jacob was missing and not at the hospital. Police immediately began searching for the infant and issued a Silver Alert on August 10, citing that the baby was in grave danger and required urgent medical care.

Sadly, the search ended in tragedy the following day when officers returned to the family’s apartment for a second, more thorough search. It was during this visit that they discovered Jacob’s body hidden in a sealed bucket beside the kitchen trash can — a location authorities described as “very well hidden where a normal person wouldn’t think to look.”

Lafayette Police confirmed that the bucket contained laundry detergent and that Jacob had been drowned in it. The devastating discovery led to Eliasard’s arrest and ultimately his conviction. As part of a plea agreement, additional charges — including aggravated battery, criminal confinement, and domestic battery — were dropped in exchange for the lengthy sentence.

The case has drawn national attention, not only for the brutality of the crime but also for the resilience of Jacob’s mother, who survived a brutal assault and helped authorities uncover the truth.

Great Job Felicia Ray Owens & the Team @ FROUSA Media Source link for sharing this story.

#FeliciaRayOwens #TheFeliciaFiles #FROUSA #LocalVoices #IndependentMedia #HerSheSquad

Great Job Felicia Ray Owens & the Team @ FROUSA Media Source link for sharing this story.

#FeliciaRayOwens #TheFeliciaFiles #FROUSA #LocalVoices #IndependentMedia #HerSheSquad

Great Job Felicia Ray Owens & the Team @ Felicia Ray Owens Source link for sharing this story.

3-Month-Old Black Baby Dies After His Dad Drowned Him in Bucket of Laundry Detergent | FROUSA Media

3-Month-Old Black Baby Dies After His Dad Drowned Him in Bucket of Laundry Detergent | FROUSA Media | FROUSA Media | FROUSA Media

Nationwide — A heartbreaking tragedy unfolded in Lafayette, Indiana when a 3-month-old African American baby named Jacob Moneus was found dead after being drowned by his father in a bucket of laundry detergent. On Tuesday, a judge sentenced 29-year-old Eliasard Moneus to 92 years in prison for the infant’s death, which occurred in August 2024. The sentencing comes after a series of disturbing events that shocked the Lafayette community and made headlines statewide.

KGNS News reports that according to court documents, the incident began on August 5, 2024, when Eliasard and his wife had an argument and stopped speaking to each other. While the mother sat in their bedroom watching a church service and holding baby Jacob, Eliasard entered the room, took the child, and walked out the front door. He returned about 30 minutes later and brutally attacked his wife with a heavy object, believed to be a tire iron or wrench, fracturing her skull before leaving again.

The injured mother managed to drive herself to the hospital, where doctors treated her for multiple injuries. When officers arrived to speak with her, they realized baby Jacob was missing and not at the hospital. Police immediately began searching for the infant and issued a Silver Alert on August 10, citing that the baby was in grave danger and required urgent medical care.

Sadly, the search ended in tragedy the following day when officers returned to the family’s apartment for a second, more thorough search. It was during this visit that they discovered Jacob’s body hidden in a sealed bucket beside the kitchen trash can — a location authorities described as “very well hidden where a normal person wouldn’t think to look.”

Lafayette Police confirmed that the bucket contained laundry detergent and that Jacob had been drowned in it. The devastating discovery led to Eliasard’s arrest and ultimately his conviction. As part of a plea agreement, additional charges — including aggravated battery, criminal confinement, and domestic battery — were dropped in exchange for the lengthy sentence.

The case has drawn national attention, not only for the brutality of the crime but also for the resilience of Jacob’s mother, who survived a brutal assault and helped authorities uncover the truth.

#FROUSA #HillCountryNews #NewBraunfels #ComalCounty #LocalVoices #IndependentMedia

Great Job Felicia Ray Owens & the Team @ FROUSA Media Source link for sharing this story.

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3-Month-Old Black Baby Dies After His Dad Drowned Him in Bucket of Laundry Detergent

3-Month-Old Black Baby Dies After His Dad Drowned Him in Bucket of Laundry Detergent

Nationwide — A heartbreaking tragedy unfolded in Lafayette, Indiana when a 3-month-old African American baby named Jacob Moneus was found dead after being drowned by his father in a bucket of laundry detergent. On Tuesday, a judge sentenced 29-year-old Eliasard Moneus to 92 years in prison for the infant’s death, which occurred in August 2024. The sentencing comes after a series of disturbing events that shocked the Lafayette community and made headlines statewide.

KGNS News reports that according to court documents, the incident began on August 5, 2024, when Eliasard and his wife had an argument and stopped speaking to each other. While the mother sat in their bedroom watching a church service and holding baby Jacob, Eliasard entered the room, took the child, and walked out the front door. He returned about 30 minutes later and brutally attacked his wife with a heavy object, believed to be a tire iron or wrench, fracturing her skull before leaving again.

The injured mother managed to drive herself to the hospital, where doctors treated her for multiple injuries. When officers arrived to speak with her, they realized baby Jacob was missing and not at the hospital. Police immediately began searching for the infant and issued a Silver Alert on August 10, citing that the baby was in grave danger and required urgent medical care.

Sadly, the search ended in tragedy the following day when officers returned to the family’s apartment for a second, more thorough search. It was during this visit that they discovered Jacob’s body hidden in a sealed bucket beside the kitchen trash can — a location authorities described as “very well hidden where a normal person wouldn’t think to look.”

Lafayette Police confirmed that the bucket contained laundry detergent and that Jacob had been drowned in it. The devastating discovery led to Eliasard’s arrest and ultimately his conviction. As part of a plea agreement, additional charges — including aggravated battery, criminal confinement, and domestic battery — were dropped in exchange for the lengthy sentence.

The case has drawn national attention, not only for the brutality of the crime but also for the resilience of Jacob’s mother, who survived a brutal assault and helped authorities uncover the truth.

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4Ps beneficiaries urged to maximize gov’t aid for long-term gains

4Ps beneficiaries urged to maximize gov’t aid for long-term gains

4Ps beneficiaries urged to maximize gov’t aid for long-term gains

GOING TO THE NATIONALS. The Saguilot family of Tinglayan, Kalinga bagged first place in the regional search for the “4Ps Huwarang Pamilya” held in Baguio City on Thursday (July 3, 2025). (Photo courtesy of PIA-CAR)

BAGUIO CITY – Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) – Cordillera Director Maria Aplaten on Friday encouraged beneficiaries of the Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program (4Ps) to fully utilize the assistance they receive to improve their lives and secure a better future for their families.

“To the children of 4Ps, study hard and finish school to increase your chances of employment or livelihood opportunities that will uplift your lives,” Aplaten said in a phone message to the Philippine News Agency.

She noted that while 4Ps provides financial aid, educational support, and livelihood opportunities, beneficiaries must take the initiative to actively improve their circumstances.

READ:

Over 115,000 4Ps beneficiaries in Central Visayas to graduate from program

DSWD to add over 1 million households to 4Ps program

DSWD: 4Ps not a dole-out program

 

“They won’t be in the program forever. They have to help themselves while support is still available,” she said.

On Thursday, the DSWD-Cordillera awarded outstanding 4Ps families and students during the regional search for the “Huwarang Pamilya” and “Huwarang Estudyante.”

The Saguilot family of Tinglayan, Kalinga, who joined the 4Ps in 2008, was declared the regional winner and will represent the Cordillera in the national search.

Parents Rebecca and Henrick raised six children, three of whom have already finished college and are now pursuing postgraduate studies.

Rebecca, a designated “Parent Leader,” credits the 4Ps for transforming her family’s life and building her leadership and community involvement skills.

“We are ready to graduate from the program,” she said.

The region’s outstanding student representative, Lex Francis Leigh Salibad of Lubuagan, Kalinga, said that 4Ps support helped him excel academically.

“I value self-discipline and education most. They can never be taken away,” he said.

Salibad and the Saguilot family now serve as examples of how the 4Ps can be a springboard for lasting change.  (PNA) 



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