Camp Mystic Bankruptcy

The Texas girls' camp filed for bankruptcy after deadly flood deaths and lawsuits.

L 33%
3 of 9 articles on this topic (33%) were written by left-leaning sources.
C 45%
4 of 9 articles on this topic (45%) were written by centrist sources.
R 22%
2 of 9 articles on this topic (22%) were written by right-leaning sources.

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Camp Mystic, an all-girls Christian summer camp in Texas, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganization nearly a year after catastrophic flash flooding along the Guadalupe River killed 28 people, including 25 girls and two teenage counselors. The filing in the Southern District of Texas lists debts exceeding $10 million, though reports vary on the camp’s stated assets, and it allows the Eastland family-owned camp to restructure while continuing through bankruptcy proceedings. The move comes as Camp Mystic faces multiple wrongful death lawsuits tied to the deadly July 4 flood, with the bankruptcy filing pausing or complicating those claims. The filing also follows scrutiny of the disaster, including a recent Texas flood report and the camp’s earlier decision to halt plans to reopen for the summer.

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