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This aerial photo shows damage from flash floods along the Guadalupe River in Kerr County, Texas, July 10, 2025. (AP) This aerial photo shows damage from flash floods along the Guadalupe River in Kerr County, Texas, July 10, 2025. (AP)

This aerial photo shows damage from flash floods along the Guadalupe River in Kerr County, Texas, July 10, 2025. (AP)

Maria Briceño
By Maria Briceño July 14, 2025

No, Kerr County Sheriff did not say he would apply for green cards for Mexican rescue team

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If Your Time is short

  • There are no news reports that say Kerr County Sheriff Larry Leitha said that he is applying for green cards for a Mexican rescue team that saved his family during the July 4 Texas floods. 

  • PolitiFact found no instances where he said that when we watched multiple press conferences about flooding recovery in Kerr County, Texas.

The devastating Kerr County, Texas, flooding on July 4 left more than 100 county residents dead. About a week later, social media posts told a heartfelt rescue story involving the Kerr County sheriff’s family and Mexican rescuers.

But the story about Sheriff Larry L. Leitha did not happen.

"Larry Leda (sic) says to apply for a green card for the Mexican rescue team that rescued his family and that they will not be restricted from entering or exiting the U.S. border in the future," a voice styled as a female newscaster says in a July 12 X post. The X version of the video, which originated on TikTok, misspells Leitha’s name, and had more than 810,000 views as of July 14.

The video’s narrator also says the sheriff "who is known for being tough on immigrants has finally broken his silence by standing in front of camera with a solemn look on his face saying ‘I owe them my family’s life.’"

A July 13 Instagram post shared the same video with the same misspelling in the caption, "Kerr County Sheriff Larry Leda said he would apply for a green card for the Mexican rescue team that saved his family."

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(Screenshot of X post.)

We found no evidence that Leitha made the comments in multiple press conferences where he gave updates about flood recovery.

The Kerr County’s Sheriffs’ Office website also has no information backing the video. PolitiFact reached out to the office but did not receive an immediate response.

PolitiFact also found no news reports saying that Leitha’s family was affected by the floods.

The videos’ credibility issues go beyond misspelled names, sketchy narrators that sound like they were made with artificial intelligence and baseless details. The videos don’t list any sources. PolitiFact looked on TVEyes, a TV monitoring service, to see if a newscast aired with the Leitha story, but we found no results.

Hive Moderation, a program that detects whether footage was AI generated, revealed that 95% of the audio in the video is likely to be AI generated. 

The video also said that Mexico’s president sent "a specialized rescue team" to help with recovery and that the team "marched across the border." There is no evidence or official government statements that show Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum deployed rescuers to Texas. 

According to local Texas reports, the Mexican rescue teams that went to help during the disaster’s aftermath, such as Los Jaguares, Los Topos and the Civil Protection and Fire Department of Ciudad Acuña, Coahuila, did it as independent organizations. Radio station KUT 90.5 said that Fundación 911, a binational nonprofit that works with firefighters on both sides of the border, helped the Acuña firefighters get humanitarian permits. 

Snopes also reported that the deployment of these groups was in response from "the U.S. based organization, Texas EquuSearch, and was not coordinated by the Mexican federal government." 

During a July 8 press conference, a reporter asked Sheinbaum about a July 7 post by the actress Viola Davis praising Sheinbaum for sending rescue teams to Texas, but she did not take the credit. Sheinbaum said in Spanish, "Honor where honor is due. The personnel who went to Texas are the firefighters from Acuña in Coahuila. I'm going to name them because they truly deserve all our recognition." 

Since there is no evidence that Leitha said that Mexican rescue teams saved his family from the Texas floods or that he applied for green cards for the rescuers, we rate the claim False. 

Our Sources

X post, July 12, 2025

Instagram post, July 13, 2025

Viola Davis Instagram post, July 7, 2025 

Snopes, Did Mexican president send rescue teams to Texas after deadly flooding?, July 9, 2025

KUT 90.5, Mexican volunteers rushed in to help after floods in Texas. Some want to continue recovery efforts., July 13, 2025

Gobierno de México, Relaciones Exteriores, accessed July 14, 2025 

Google Maps, accessed July 14, 2025

Gobierno de México, #MañaneraDelPueblo desde Palacio Nacional. Martes 08 de julio 2025, July 8, 2025

CNN, Disaster response under scrutiny after catastrophic Texas floods, July 14, 2025

KSAT 12, FULL PRESS CONFERENCE: Kerr County officials deliver Wednesday update amid flood recovery, July 9, 2025 

Sky News, Kerr County Sheriff updates reporters in the aftermath of deadly flash floods, July 8, 2025

WFAA, Deadly Texas flooding | Kerr County full press conference (July 7, 2025), July 7, 2025

KSAT 12, At least 27 killed, more than 850 evacuated in Guadalupe River flooding, Kerr County sheriff says, July 5, 2025   

Nexis, Search: Kerr County Sheriff said Mexican rescuers saved his family and is applying for green cards, accessed July 14, 2025

Kerr County Sheriff’s Office, Latests News, accessed July 14, 2025 

TV Eyes, Search, Kerr County Sheriff, accessed July 14, 2025

ABC News, Texas flooding live updates: Search continues for missing with 130 dead, July 14, 2025

Hive Moderation, July 14, 2025

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No, Kerr County Sheriff did not say he would apply for green cards for Mexican rescue team

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