Teen dies in flooding on way home from prom; 12 people still missing in Texas

At 18, Alyssa Renee Ramirez’s accomplishments read like a list of many teenagers’ dreams: Homecoming queen. Student council president. Cheerleader. Star athlete.

Her storied high school career was nearing an end with one final rite of passage — her senior prom. But as Ramirez was driving home from prom over the weekend, her car was swept away by floodwater in Texas, ending her short but illustrious life.

“She did the right things,” her aunt Roberta Ramirez told CNN affiliate WOAI. “She called 911. She called her father, but it was just too much and too quick.”

Ramirez is one of six people who died in Texas and Oklahoma in the past four days as epic rainfall and flooding wracked both states.

More threatening weather looms

Heavy rain and “significant flash flooding” continued in parts of Harris and Fort Bend counties in Texas on Tuesday morning, the National Weather Service said.

“This continues to be an extremely dangerous and life-threatening situation,” the weather service said. “Do not attempt to travel unless you are fleeing an area subject to flooding or under an evacuation order.”

Bad weather has hampered the search for missing people. Rescuers used helicopters to heave stranded residents off the rooftops of buildings surrounded by flood lakes, where fields normally stand.

12 people still missing

In Texas, 12 people remain missing in Hays County, San Marcos Emergency Coordinator Ken Bell said.

Complicating search efforts: The county still has Internet problems, and cell phone networks are overwhelmed.

“People outside our community know more about what’s going on than people inside our community,” Bell said.

Up to 400 homes have washed away in Hays County, not far from the Texas capital of Austin.

“We do have whole streets that have maybe one or two houses left on them, and the rest are just slabs,” emergency management coordinator Kharley Smith said.

Victims include firefighter

Of the six fatalities, four people died in Oklahoma.

On Saturday, a woman in Tulsa, died after her car hydroplaned. In Claremore, a firefighter got swept into a storm drain while attempting a high-water rescue Sunday. In Sapulpa, a 37-year-old man died in the severe weather Monday, but the exact circumstances were not yet clear.

CNN affiliate KXII reported a fourth death in Oklahoma. Sandra Callicoat Swinney, 48, was killed when a tornado touched down in the community of Blue, the affiliate said.

The other two deaths were in Texas. In addition to Ramiriez’s death in Devine, one person died in San Marcos, officials said.

Devine High School seniors will now have to celebrate their graduation June 5 without their homecoming queen and student body president. But classmates say they’ll remember Ramirez, an aspiring optometrist, for her positive spirit.

“Every time you walk by her, she was smiling,” said classmate Shay Agbert told WOAI. She “lightened up everybody’s mood.”

13 killed in Mexico

The same storm system that tormented Texas also killed 13 people in Mexico.

In six seconds, a tornado ripped through the border city of Ciudad Acuña, Mexico, with a ferocity that officials said hasn’t been witnessed in more than 100 years.

The 13 killed included three children, Acuña Mayor Evaristo Lenin Perez said. Another 200 were injured.

Acuña is a historic border city that people outside of Mexico know as the setting for Robert Rodriguez’s films “El Mariachi” and “Desperado,” and George Strait’s song, “Blame it on Mexico.”

The part of Acuña where the tornado struck is densely populated, making the damage all that more severe.

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