Houston Chronicle Sunday

Woman, 4 kids killed as E. Texas creek rises

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PALESTINE — A 64-year-old woman and four grandchild­ren were killed early Saturday after a creek overflowed its banks, flooding an East Texas neighborho­od as many residents slept.

Capt. James Muniz of the Palestine Police Department said six to 10 homes in a Palestine culde-sac were severely damaged following heavy rainfall over the course of just a few minutes after midnight. All other residents of the cul-de-sac were accounted for, he said.

“The water got up here extraordin­arily quickly. The individual­s tried to get out; however, the water was already on the roof of the home,” Muniz said

The deceased were identified as 64-year-old Lenda Asberry and her grandchild­ren, 6-year-old Jamonicka Johnson; 7-yearold Von Anthony Johnson

Jr.; 8-year-old Devonte Asberry and 9-year-old Venetia Asberry.

A 30-year-old Palestine man, Giovani Olivas, 30, also died when he was swept under flood in the same area.

Merta White was waiting to be rescued from the roof of her house when she saw a bump in the water.

“I thought it was a mailbox, but then I realized what it really was, and I started screaming,” she told the Palestine HeraldPres­s. The bodies of two of the children were found in the front yard of a residence near the street. A continued search found the bodies Asberry and the two other children.

“The water came down the hill,” Muniz said. “The street was full of mud, so the water just came up. With the enormous amount of rain we had, we had people tell us that within minutes, the water was waist deep.”

City officials used a dump truck to rescue a man from the roof of a home, Muniz said. One neighbor told authoritie­s that he saw the family but lost sight of them as he waded through water.

The Red Cross has set up a makeshift shelter in Palestine, which is about 100 miles southeast of Dallas and home to about 18,000 residents. Between 20 and 30 people were displaced by the floods, according to Red Cross spokeswoma­n Anita Foster.

One person remained missing in rural Anderson County, Palestine police spokesman Nate Smith said in a release.

The storm largely missed the Houston area, dumping just 1.6 inches in The Woodlands area. The area continues to recover from a deadly storm just weeks ago that left at least seven dead and many areas under water.

“We got lucky,” said Francisco Sanchez, spokesman for the Harris County Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Management.

 ?? Melissa Phillip / Houston Chronicle ?? Paula Earls Price’s home in west Wharton has been flooded three times in the 40 years she’s lived there. This time, she expects repairs to cost $30,000.
Melissa Phillip / Houston Chronicle Paula Earls Price’s home in west Wharton has been flooded three times in the 40 years she’s lived there. This time, she expects repairs to cost $30,000.

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