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1987: When the Guadalupe River turned deadly

1987: When the Guadalupe River turned deadly

COMFORT, Texas – Nearly 40 years ago, a flash flood resulted in one of the worst tragedies to ever strike the Texas Hill Country. On the night of July 16, 1987, just outside Comfort, the kids at Pot O’ Gold Christian Camp were settling in for their final night of the retreat, while 30 miles up the Guadalupe River, at the other end of Kerr County, heavy rainfall would turn what had been a sleepy river into a wall of water.

While trying to evacuate the camp, a bus carrying 43 campers never made it across. Sadly, 10 of those on the bus drowned.

>> 2025: Kerr County sheriff says at least 13 people killed in connection with severe weather along Guadalupe River

A report released by the National Weather Service in New Braunfels said, “The group was at exactly the wrong place at exactly the wrong time.”

In the predawn hours, camp leaders made the decision it was time for the nearly 300 campers to leave. Kids from Seagoville Baptist Church in Balch Springs, near Dallas, had spent the week at the camp.

As the campers prepared to leave just after 7 a.m., overhead was news helicopter pilot Mike Rice. He had gotten the call early that morning about flooding in the Hill Country.

“It was a storm that cooked up over Kerrville and Comfort, Center Pointe and Hunt, those areas, and just stayed there and rained like crazy,” he said.

Guadalupe River flood on July 16 & 17th, 1987 (National Weather Service)

Rice said everything looked normal, he made a few passes around the camp and continued northwestward to Kerrville.

Roy Harris, the camp’s caretaker, led the way in his truck. He would tell investigators when he started driving across Hermann Sons Road he did not see any water but had approximately 18 inches of water under his truck by the time he has driven almost 300 yards. Behind him was the final bus, driven by assistant pastor Richard Koons and behind that was a van.

The bus stalled and trapped the van behind it. With seconds to decide what to do, Koons told the kids to get out of the bus, link together and try to make it across the rapidly rising river.

Without notice, and not moving along river’s path, a wall of water from an old “historic channel” hit the stalled vehicles from the left.

‘’The van began floating and then we got out and it started sinking,’’ Jeremy Morris said during an interview with The Associated Press. ‘’Kids were screaming and everything. We got out of there and the kids were holding hands in a line.’’

“A few seconds earlier and they escape the worse of the flood wave,” the NWS report said. “A few seconds later, and they see the floodwater(s) and don’t drive into them.”

Rice said that within minutes of the bus being taken over by water, he was hailed down by a police officer from Ingram, who told him there were kids in the water who needed help.

“I expected to see a bus half in, half out,” Rice said as he once again flew over the camp. “There was nothing. Then as we got really close, we could see five kids clinging to a treetop. These are 75-foot trees, but there is only 15 feet of tree sticking out of the water. There is another group of seven or eight on another tree, four or five in the river. There is nothing that prepares you for something like that.”

One of the many responders that day was Luther Vanlandingham Jr. He is now a reserve deputy for the Kendall County Sheriff’s Office but was a full-time deputy in 1987.

“It was just a loud rushing noise,” he said when he saw the river for the first time that day. “I have never seen the river that high before … Unbelievable how fast it was going.”

Rice remembers much of that day, including the many efforts to save a teenage girl.

“We spotted a girl in the river, right in the middle. Little girl named Melanie (Finley),” he said as he recounted the three times, he tried to save her before his helicopter ran low on fuel. Finley was finally rescued by a DPS helicopter, only to fall to her death as they carried her to dry ground. “I am sure she was worn out by then; she just could not hang on any longer,” Rice said.

Within two hours, more than a dozen DPS helicopters and other first responders had descended on the river to save the campers, many who clung to trees

As the rescue became a recovery, Vanlandingham Jr. and other KCSO deputies had the gruesome task of searching the riverbanks for those who died.

“We did a ground search on the river from Comfort all the way to Sisterdale Crossing, over a number of days,” he said. “We were looking for clothing. Any personal items that might identify any of the victims.”

Both men still carry the memory of one victim in particular, John Bankston Jr., 17.

“He was able to help multiple of his friends,” Rice said. “Get them off a tree (or) out of a river and onto a bank. And he did it again. And again. And again. One friend was in a full cast, a full leg cast, and he was able to get him out of the water. A huge struggle to do that. He went back a final time and never came back.”

“It is frustrating. He was considered a hero and saved some kids,” Vanlandingham said.

A year after the tragedy, a memorial plaque was erected at the entrance of Pot O’ Gold. It bears the names of the kids who were on the bus that day. More changes came years later, when the Texas Department of Transportation demolished the old river crossing. Now, the Hermann Sons Camp Road rises at least 15 feet above the water and out of the river’s lowest flood plain.

This story originally aired in 2017.

Copyright 2025 by KSAT – All rights reserved.

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9 Best Moments as Oasis Reunite at Triumphant Comeback Show in Cardiff, Wales

9 Best Moments as Oasis Reunite at Triumphant Comeback Show in Cardiff, Wales

The great wait is over. After 16 years away, Oasis are back together onstage.

“The stars have aligned,” they wrote in their announcement back in August 2024, which sent the U.K. — and the world — into a frenzy. “Come see,” they added, for this miracle “will not be televised.”

It was Cardiff, Wales, that emerged as the city lucky to be chosen for opening night, their first live concert since August 2009. The last time Noel and Liam Gallagher were in a stadium together, a fight erupted and the former called time on the band. On Friday night (July 4), they strode onstage together united, again. They walked in hand-in-hand as “F-kin’ in the Bushes” blared over the speakers; it was like old times.

The build-up has been dominated by silence. Aside from one press photo, the brothers had not been seen together in public. They’ve given no interviews, released no new music, and only communicated with fans through terse statements released by their management. Rumors about the lineups and setlists have swirled, and still… nothing. So much of this Live ‘25 tour – 41 shows in total, 19 in the U.K. and Ireland – was a mystery. It’s a hark back to when, back in 1993, the band skulked onstage at Glasgow’s King Wah-Wah Hut as complete unknowns, a moment etched into folklore as their star was about to go supernova.

But as they said, a new dawn is here. These were the biggest moments from Oasis’ comeback show in Cardiff, Wales.

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Texas flooding updates: 13 dead, more than 20 campers unaccounted for

Texas flooding updates: 13 dead, more than 20 campers unaccounted for

Children account for some of those dead in catastrophic Texas flooding, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick told reporters Friday.

There are several major camps in the area near the Guadalupe River that has been overtaken by floodwaters and at one of them — Camp Mystic — about 23 of its 750 campers are unaccounted for, Patrick said.

“That does not mean they’ve been lost — they could be in a tree, they could be out of communication. We are praying for all of those missing to be found alive,” Patrick said at a news conference.

Camp Mystic said in a letter to parents, “If your daughter is not accounted for, you have been notified. If you have not been personally contacted, then your daughter is accounted for.”

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Dr. Phil’s Merit Street Media company files for bankruptcy less than 2 years after launch

Dr. Phil’s Merit Street Media company files for bankruptcy less than 2 years after launch

Merit Street Media, the multiplatform network owned by former daytime talk show host Dr. Phil McGraw, has filed for bankruptcy less than two years after its launch.

The television and entertainment company filed the motion for Chapter 11 protection on Wednesday in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in the Northern District of Texas. The filing comes just weeks after the struggling company laid off 40 employees in a second wave of job cuts following the dismissal of roughly a third of its staff in August of 2024. 

Merit Street Media launched in 2023 with ambitions of becoming “one of the most widely distributed startup networks in modern history,” according to an announcement at the time. The company’s broadcast network, formed in partnership with Christian-based Trinity Broadcasting Network (TBN), offered a broad lineup of programming featuring popular TV personalities including Nancy Grace, Bear Grylls and Steve Harvey, in addition to McGraw, the face of the network.  

“Merit Street Media will be a resource of information and strategies to fight for America and its families, which are under a cultural ‘woke’ assault as never before,” said McGraw at the time of the announcement. “I love this country and I believe family is the backbone of our society. Together we are going to stand strong and fight for the very soul and sanity of America and get things that matter back on track.”

In its bankruptcy filing, the Fort Wort, Texas-based company reported assets and liabilities of between $100 million and $500 million, court records show. 

The company on Wednesday also filed a lawsuit against TBN, according to a Merit Street spokesperson.

“Trinity Broadcasting Network is being sued by Merit Street Media for failing to provide clearly agreed upon national distribution and other significant foundational commitments critical to the network’s continuing success and viability,” the spokesperson told CBS News in a statement. “The suit is part of a restructuring proceeding also initiated by MSM.”

Merit Street Media did not immediately reply to a request for comment from CBS MoneyWatch. Both live and streaming content were still available on the Merittv.com website as of Wednesday.

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At least 13 dead in Texas floods and more than 20 children missing from a girls summer camp

At least 13 dead in Texas floods and more than 20 children missing from a girls summer camp

Months worth of heavy rain fell in a matter of hours on Texas Hill Country, killing at least 13 people and leaving more than 20 girls attending a summer camp unaccounted for Friday as search teams conducted boat and helicopter rescues in the fast-moving flood water.

Desperate pleas peppered social media as loved ones sought any information available about people caught in the flood zone.

Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick said somewhere between 6 and 10 bodies had been found so far in the frantic search for victims. Meanwhile, during a news conference conducted at the same time as Patrick’s update, Kerr County Sheriff Larry Leitha reported that there were 13 deaths from the flooding.

At least 10 inches (25 centimeters) of rain poured down overnight in central Kerr County, causing flash flooding of the Guadalupe River and leading to desperate pleas for information about the missing.

“Some are adults, some are children,” Patrick said during a news conference. “Again, we don’t know where those bodies came from.”

Teams conducted dozens of rescues, and emergency responders continued to search for those who were unaccounted for. That includes more than 20 girls missing from summer camps.

“I’m asking the people of Texas, do some serious praying this afternoon. On-your-knees kind of praying, that we find these young girls,” Patrick said.

Comments on a Facebook post from the Kerr County sheriff’s office were riddled with photos of people in the flood zone. Loved ones posted there, hoping someone could offer an update on the whereabouts of those they hadn’t heard from. One woman said she couldn’t reach her daughter, who had rented a cabin in Hunt for her husband and two children, and pleaded for someone to post the names of those already evacuated.

Judge Rob Kelly, the chief elected official in the county, confirmed fatalities from the flooding and dozens of water rescues so far. He said he was advised not to cite specific numbers and said authorities are still working to identify those whose lives were lost.

“Most of them, we don’t know who they are,” Kelly said during a news conference. “One of them was completely naked, he didn’t have any ID on him at all. We’re trying to get the identity of these folks, but we don’t have it yet.”

One family survives a terrifying ordeal

Erin Burgess’ home sits directly across from the river in the Bumble Bee Hills neighborhood, west of Ingram. When she woke up to thunder at 3:30 a.m. Friday morning, “it was raining pretty heavy, but no big deal,” she said.

Just 20 minutes later, Burgess said water was coming in through the walls and rushing through the front and back doors. She described an agonizing hour clinging to a tree and waiting for the water to recede enough that they were able to walk up the hill to a neighbor’s.

“My son and I floated to a tree where we hung onto it, and my boyfriend and my dog floated away. He was lost for a while, but we found them,” she said, becoming emotional.

Of her 19-year-old son, Burgess said: “Thankfully he’s over 6 feet tall. That’s the only thing that saved me, was hanging on to him.”

A flood watch issued Thursday afternoon estimated isolated amounts up to 7 inches (17 centimeters) of rising water. That shifted to a flood warning for at least 30,000 people overnight.

When asked about the suddenness of the flash flooding, Kelly said “we do not have a warning system” and that “we didn’t know this flood was coming,” even as local reporters pointed to the warnings and pushed him for answers about why more precautions weren’t taken.

“Rest assured, no one knew this kind of flood was coming,” he said. “We have floods all the time. This is the most dangerous river valley in the United States.”

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott said the state was providing resources to Hill Country communities dealing with the flooding, including in Kerrville, Ingram and Hunt.

The Texas Hill Country, a scenic and rocky gateway to booming vineyards and vacation rentals, begins west of the state capital and is a popular outdoor summer getaway. Parts of the region are prone to flash flooding.

Dozens of people posted on Facebook asking for any information on their children, nieces and nephews attending one of the many camps in the area, or family members that went camping during the holiday weekend.

Ingram Fire Department posted a photo of a statement from Camp Mystic, saying the private Christian summer camp for girls experienced “catastrophic level floods.” Parents with a daughter not accounted for were directly contacted, the camp said.

Two other camps on the river, Camp Waldemar and Camp La Junta, said in Instagram posts that all there were safe.

The Guadalupe’s river gauge at the unincorporated community of Hunt, where the river forks, recorded a 22 foot rise (6.7 meters) in just about two hours, according to Bob Fogarty, meteorologist with the National Weather Service’s Austin/San Antonio office. Fogarty said the gauge failed after recording a level of 29 and a half feet (9 meters).

“This is the kind of thing that will catch you unaware,” Fogarty said. “The water’s moving so fast, you’re not going to recognize how bad it is until it’s on top of you.”

Areas east along the Guadalupe River were preparing for their own flooding as the rapid waters rushed downstream from Hunt and Kerrville. In Kendall County, home to the unincorporated community of Comfort, the sheriff’s office sounded the alarm.

“We regret to inform everyone that the flood situation in Comfort is not improving,” the post read. “We have sounded the flood sirens and urge all residents in low-lying areas of town to evacuate immediately.”

New Jersey also sees deaths due to severe weather

Meanwhile, strong thunderstorms were being blamed for at least three deaths in central New Jersey, including two men in Plainfield who died after a tree fell onto a vehicle they were traveling in during the height of a storm there, according to a city Facebook post.

The men were ages 79 and 25, officials said. They were not immediately publicly identified.

“Our hearts are heavy today,” Mayor Adrian O. Mapp said in a statement. “This tragedy is a sobering reminder of the power of nature and the fragility of life.”

The city canceled its planned July Fourth parade, concert and fireworks show. Mapp said the “devastating” storms had left “deep scars and widespread damage” in the community of more than 54,000 people and it was a time to “regroup and focus all of our energy on recovery.”

Continuing power outages and downed trees were reported Friday throughout southern New England, where some communities received large amounts of hail. There were reports of cars skidding off the road in northeastern Connecticut.

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Raleigh hits Nos. 34 and 35 to match Griffey’s Mariners record for HRs before All-Star break

Raleigh hits Nos. 34 and 35 to match Griffey’s Mariners record for HRs before All-Star break

Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved

Seattle Mariners designated hitter Cal Raleigh tosses his bat after hitting a two-run home run during the first inning of a baseball game against the Pittsburgh Pirates, Friday, July 4, 2025, in Seattle. (AP Photo/Ryan Sun)

Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

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

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Media Matters weekly newsletter, July 4

Media Matters weekly newsletter, July 4

Fox News’ propagandists aren’t terribly interested in the contents of the Republican tax and spending bill, which passed Congress on Thursday, or on the devastating impacts it might have on their viewers. But they know that President Donald Trump wants it to pass, and so they’re greasing the skids with their viewers to help it over the finish line. 

MAGA media revolves around Trump and his desires, but its personalities tend to be more invested in waging the culture war than in the nitty-gritty of policymaking. With regards to the Republican bill, Fox hosts have tended to be supportive of the bill while not dwelling on it. 

Throughout the week, right-wing media personalities continuously pointed out problems with the bill, only to then advocate for its passage. Newsmax host Rob Finnerty called the bill “highly average mediocre,” The Daily Wire’s Ben Shapiro acknowledged the bill had a lot of “pork,” and Newsmax’s Rick Santorum said the bill is “not incredibly fiscally sound.” 

Republicans hoped to pass the bill quickly in order to minimize the grueling political damage caused by enacting legislation that is wildly unpopular — and likely to become more so as the public finds out what is in it. Fox’s job in this pursuit is to ensure that viewers remain placid about the impact of the bill before it passes. The messaging dilemma for Trump supporters is that bumper-sticker claims of the bill being “great for the working class” and working to “reform Medicaid” won’t hold up to scrutiny. 

With the bill’s final passage, the goal of MAGA media will pivot from telling viewers that the legislation needed to pass to hiding its role in those crushing impacts.

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

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Do WHAT?! Reginae Carter Goes Viral After Dropping Truth On Proposing To A Man (VIDEO)

Do WHAT?! Reginae Carter Goes Viral After Dropping Truth On Proposing To A Man (VIDEO)

Whew! The girls are speaking loud and clear when it comes to what they will and won’t do for love — and baby, Reginae Carter just made her stance crystal. While some folks are open to flipping traditional gender roles, she’s letting it be known: there’s one thing she’s never doing, and the internet is buzzing about it.

RELATED: Not Mouthin’ Off! Reginae Carter Reacts As Lil Wayne Fan Shades Her At The Airport (VIDEO)

Reginae Is NOT The One!

Miss Reginae Carter had the girls talking after a convo with content creator, Shank. During a Twitch livestream clip posted to his page on Wednesday, Reginae was looking fly rocking her iconic ‘R’ chain — and that’s exactly why she said she’s never chasing a man. While chilling in a park, the two got into the topic of women proposing to men, and Reginae made her stance very clear — she’s not here for it, not now, not ever.

When Shank asked if she’d ever pop the question, Reginae didn’t miss a beat and responded:

“Oh baby I would never. Oh my gosh, I would literally pick every piece of grass off this whole f**kin’ field before I propose to a man. Pick it one by one, like this, before I ever get on my knees to propose to a man.”

While Shank said it’s not “that deep,” Reginae clapped back with, “It is very much deep.

Social Media Is Cuttin’ Up

Whew, the Live Bitez comments are cutting up under Reginae’s take! Some are backing her 100%, alluding to doing questionable acts before ever proposing to a man, while others are calling her mindset outdated. Either way, the debate is loud — and the gender role convos are in full swing!

One Instagram user @ohthatskj said, “Cause baby it’s a no for me too!

And, Instagram user @queenp_vibez added, “I agree with her

Instagram user @juszslatt wrote, “I wouldn’t either tf

This Instagram user @she_palms_treez said, “He must going to take my last name if I’m proposing

Then, Instagram user @iamvictoriajordan joked, “I would scrape my Titties across the concrete before I propose to a man.

Meanwhile, Instagram user @mainpageisback added, “I wouldn’t but I don’t see anything wrong w/ it

While, Instagram user @dj_blvdskino wrote, “I don’t see anything wrong wik women proposing to a man dey chose to Be wik fi lengthy time

 

Rita Ora Said “Plot Twist!”

Rita Ora had social media in a chokehold recently after revealing she was the one who proposed to her man. And yes, she even planned the whole thing herself! On the podcast, ‘Begin Again with Davina McCall,’ Rita shared that the moment went down in a hotel room in Palm Springs during summer 2022, where she set the scene with balloons, her favorite cake, and a full romantic vibe. She even had custom wedding bands made — nothing flashy, just meaningful. “I just did the whole thing,” she said, recalling how she got down on one knee and asked the big question.

@beginagainpod

To watch, search ‘Begin Again with Davina McCall’ on Youtube, Spotify and Apple Podcasts. In this episode, global music artist, Rita Ora, shares the full exclusive story of how she proposed to her husband, Taika Waititi. #proposal #ritaora #femalepower #engagement #rings #wedding #husband #wife #music #singer #celebritynews #exclusive @Davina McCall @Rita Ora

♬ original sound – Begin Again

RELATED: Social Media Reacts As Rita Ora Reveals How She Proposed To Husband Taika Waititi (VIDEO)

What Do You Think Roomies?

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Red Sox vs. Nationals Highlights | MLB on FOX

Red Sox vs. Nationals Highlights | MLB on FOX

Check out the best moments between the Boston Red Sox and Washington Nationals.

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Sakana AI’s TreeQuest: Deploy multi-model teams that outperform individual LLMs by 30%

Sakana AI’s TreeQuest: Deploy multi-model teams that outperform individual LLMs by 30%

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Japanese AI lab Sakana AI has introduced a new technique that allows multiple large language models (LLMs) to cooperate on a single task, effectively creating a “dream team” of AI agents. The method, called Multi-LLM AB-MCTS, enables models to perform trial-and-error and combine their unique strengths to solve problems that are too complex for any individual model.

For enterprises, this approach provides a means to develop more robust and capable AI systems. Instead of being locked into a single provider or model, businesses could dynamically leverage the best aspects of different frontier models, assigning the right AI for the right part of a task to achieve superior results.

The power of collective intelligence

Frontier AI models are evolving rapidly. However, each model has its own distinct strengths and weaknesses derived from its unique training data and architecture. One might excel at coding, while another excels at creative writing. Sakana AI’s researchers argue that these differences are not a bug, but a feature.

“We see these biases and varied aptitudes not as limitations, but as precious resources for creating collective intelligence,” the researchers state in their blog post. They believe that just as humanity’s greatest achievements come from diverse teams, AI systems can also achieve more by working together. “By pooling their intelligence, AI systems can solve problems that are insurmountable for any single model.”

Thinking longer at inference time

Sakana AI’s new algorithm is an “inference-time scaling” technique (also referred to as “test-time scaling”), an area of research that has become very popular in the past year. While most of the focus in AI has been on “training-time scaling” (making models bigger and training them on larger datasets), inference-time scaling improves performance by allocating more computational resources after a model is already trained. 

One common approach involves using reinforcement learning to prompt models to generate longer, more detailed chain-of-thought (CoT) sequences, as seen in popular models such as OpenAI o3 and DeepSeek-R1. Another, simpler method is repeated sampling, where the model is given the same prompt multiple times to generate a variety of potential solutions, similar to a brainstorming session. Sakana AI’s work combines and advances these ideas.

“Our framework offers a smarter, more strategic version of Best-of-N (aka repeated sampling),” Takuya Akiba, research scientist at Sakana AI and co-author of the paper, told VentureBeat. “It complements reasoning techniques like long CoT through RL. By dynamically selecting the search strategy and the appropriate LLM, this approach maximizes performance within a limited number of LLM calls, delivering better results on complex tasks.”

How adaptive branching search works

The core of the new method is an algorithm called Adaptive Branching Monte Carlo Tree Search (AB-MCTS). It enables an LLM to effectively perform trial-and-error by intelligently balancing two different search strategies: “searching deeper” and “searching wider.” Searching deeper involves taking a promising answer and repeatedly refining it, while searching wider means generating completely new solutions from scratch. AB-MCTS combines these approaches, allowing the system to improve a good idea but also to pivot and try something new if it hits a dead end or discovers another promising direction.

To accomplish this, the system uses Monte Carlo Tree Search (MCTS), a decision-making algorithm famously used by DeepMind’s AlphaGo. At each step, AB-MCTS uses probability models to decide whether it’s more strategic to refine an existing solution or generate a new one.

Different test-time scaling strategies Source: Sakana AI

The researchers took this a step further with Multi-LLM AB-MCTS, which not only decides “what” to do (refine vs. generate) but also “which” LLM should do it. At the start of a task, the system doesn’t know which model is best suited for the problem. It begins by trying a balanced mix of available LLMs and, as it progresses, learns which models are more effective, allocating more of the workload to them over time.

Putting the AI ‘dream team’ to the test

The researchers tested their Multi-LLM AB-MCTS system on the ARC-AGI-2 benchmark. ARC (Abstraction and Reasoning Corpus) is designed to test a human-like ability to solve novel visual reasoning problems, making it notoriously difficult for AI. 

The team used a combination of frontier models, including o4-mini, Gemini 2.5 Pro, and DeepSeek-R1.

The collective of models was able to find correct solutions for over 30% of the 120 test problems, a score that significantly outperformed any of the models working alone. The system demonstrated the ability to dynamically assign the best model for a given problem. On tasks where a clear path to a solution existed, the algorithm quickly identified the most effective LLM and used it more frequently.

Sakana AI’s TreeQuest: Deploy multi-model teams that outperform individual LLMs by 30%
AB-MCTS vs individual models Source: Sakana AI

More impressively, the team observed instances where the models solved problems that were previously impossible for any single one of them. In one case, a solution generated by the o4-mini model was incorrect. However, the system passed this flawed attempt to DeepSeek-R1 and Gemini-2.5 Pro, which were able to analyze the error, correct it, and ultimately produce the right answer. 

“This demonstrates that Multi-LLM AB-MCTS can flexibly combine frontier models to solve previously unsolvable problems, pushing the limits of what is achievable by using LLMs as a collective intelligence,” the researchers write.

AB-MTCS can select different models at different stages of solving a problem (source: Sakana AI)
AB-MTCS can select different models at different stages of solving a problem Source: Sakana AI

“In addition to the individual pros and cons of each model, the tendency to hallucinate can vary significantly among them,” Akiba said. “By creating an ensemble with a model that is less likely to hallucinate, it could be possible to achieve the best of both worlds: powerful logical capabilities and strong groundedness. Since hallucination is a major issue in a business context, this approach could be valuable for its mitigation.”

From research to real-world applications

To help developers and businesses apply this technique, Sakana AI has released the underlying algorithm as an open-source framework called TreeQuest, available under an Apache 2.0 license (usable for commercial purposes). TreeQuest provides a flexible API, allowing users to implement Multi-LLM AB-MCTS for their own tasks with custom scoring and logic.

“While we are in the early stages of applying AB-MCTS to specific business-oriented problems, our research reveals significant potential in several areas,” Akiba said. 

Beyond the ARC-AGI-2 benchmark, the team was able to successfully apply AB-MCTS to tasks like complex algorithmic coding and improving the accuracy of machine learning models. 

“AB-MCTS could also be highly effective for problems that require iterative trial-and-error, such as optimizing performance metrics of existing software,” Akiba said. “For example, it could be used to automatically find ways to improve the response latency of a web service.”

The release of a practical, open-source tool could pave the way for a new class of more powerful and reliable enterprise AI applications.


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