Shocking news from the police: A report just found by the rescue team at the summer camp warehouse, the number of missing girls is much larger than 27

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By Evan Marshall | U.S. Emergency Bulletin | July 16, 2025

In a disturbing development that has shaken the foundation of the ongoing investigation in Texas, authorities have confirmed that a previously undisclosed internal report was discovered this morning inside the warehouse structure at Camp Mystic — and it reveals something far more alarming:

The number of missing girls may not be 27 — but significantly higher.

The document, labeled “Mid-Session Attendance Log — Confidential”, was found tucked beneath a filing cabinet in the camp’s flooded administration zone. It appears to have been written by a senior counselor just 48 hours before the flood, and contains a detailed roster with 41 camper names — not 27.

Even more shockingly, 14 of those names do not appear on any official registration records, parent contact logs, or previous press briefings issued by the camp or state officials.

“We’re now working under the assumption that multiple girls were unaccounted for before the flood ever happened,” said Chief Investigator Lauren DeSoto. “Some may never have been officially reported missing — and that’s a failure of oversight at every level.”

❗ What the Document Reveals:

  • 41 names, including first and last, age, cabin assignment, and medical notes

  • Several entries labeled “Provisional” or “Referred — No Guardian on File”

  • A handwritten note in the margin reading:

    “Move list before state audit?”

Officials now believe Camp Mystic may have had unregistered or undocumented campers, possibly brought in through nonstandard channels such as church groups, shelters, or third-party organizations.

The revelation has sent shockwaves through the investigation, as families across Texas and neighboring states scramble to check names, cross-reference records, and reopen cases of previously reported runaways or missing children.

Multiple lawmakers are now demanding a federal probe into the camp’s management, funding sources, and ties to private entities.

“If this document is accurate, it means there are girls no one even knew to look for,” said Senator Rami Kleen of Texas. “That’s not just negligence. That borders on criminal.”

FBI forensic teams are now verifying the document’s authenticity, ink age, and handwriting origin. In parallel, investigators are expanding the official missing persons list — which may now rise well beyond the original 27.

This story is developing rapidly — and the nation is watching.

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