Like 'giant knife,' tornadoes slash
eastern Alabama, killing 23
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[March 05, 2019]
By Deborah Bloom
BEAUREGARD, Ala. (Reuters) - Alabama
residents and rescue teams on Monday sifted through the splintered
remnants of homes torn apart by a string of tornadoes that killed at
least 23 people, including three children, in the deadliest burst of
twisters to hit the United States since 2013.
The tornadoes, spawned by a late-winter "supercell" thunderstorm, ripped
through Lee County on Sunday with cyclonic winds of up to 170 miles (274
km) per hour, at step four of the six-step Enhanced Fujita (EF) scale of
tornado strength.
Mobile homes were tossed on their sides and ripped open, their contents
strewn over a ravaged landscape littered with debris and gnarled,
uprooted trees. In some places, shreds of houses hung from the limbs of
the few trees left standing.
"It looks almost as if someone took a giant knife and just scraped the
ground. There are slabs where homes formerly stood, debris everywhere,
trees are snapped," Lee County Sheriff Jay Jones told a morning news
conference.
At least three twisters struck the area, in eastern Alabama near the
Georgia border, within a few hours on Sunday afternoon.
The worst of the damage and all of the known fatalities occurred in and
around the tiny community of Beauregard, about 10 miles (16 km)
southeast of Auburn, said Chris Darden, chief meteorologist for the
National Weather Service office in Birmingham.
Besides one EF-4 tornado, storm trackers have confirmed two smaller
twisters classified as EF-1, each of which packed winds of up to 110 mph
(177 km per hour), according to Darden. "We'll be examining more areas
tomorrow," he said.
In addition to 23 confirmed deaths, more than 50 people were reported
injured, authorities said, marking the greatest loss of life from a
tornado since an EF-5 storm tore through Moore, Oklahoma, in May 2013,
killing 24 people and injuring 375 others.
Three of the dead were children, ages 6, 9 and 10, County Coroner Bill
Harris said at an afternoon news conference. Family members identified
two of the young victims.
An initial canvass of the stricken area turned up no additional bodies,
but Jones left open the possibility that more victims could be found
once the search was completed.
Darden said in an interview that "a few people" remained unaccounted
for, though he said he did not know the precise number. All the dead
were in the Beauregard area, he said.
All but six of the victims were identified, and investigators think they
know the identities of the others, Harris said.
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A Coca-Cola truck is seen tipped over on its side after two deadly
back-to-back tornadoes, in Beauregard, Alabama, U.S., March 4, 2019.
REUTERS/Elijah Nouvelage
'THAT'S HALF MY HOME'
Jenifer Vernon, a 40-year-old grocery store attendant, surveyed the
wreckage of her flattened home, spread in piles on either side of
her Beauregard street.
"That's half my home," said Vernon, pointing to the debris. "That's
the other half." She was in the nearby town of Opelika with her
husband and 14-year-old daughter when the tornadoes hit.
Looking over splintered pieces of wood and the remains of kitchen
appliances, Vernon said she had lost another home to fire last year.
"We'll bounce back from this," she added.
U.S. President Donald Trump wrote on Twitter on Monday that the
Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) would be helping.
"FEMA has been told directly by me to give the A Plus treatment to
the Great State of Alabama and the wonderful people who have been so
devastated by the Tornadoes," Trump said.
The death toll was more than double the 10 people killed by
tornadoes in the United States for all of 2018, according to
government data.
Darden said the latest twisters, which are common to the Gulf Coast
region this time of year, grew out of a larger storm system that
swept out of the Plains to bring thunderstorms to the Deep South and
a wintry mix of precipitation to the Ohio Valley, mid-Atlantic
region and Northeast.
Julie Morrison, a 61-year-old produce manager who has lived in
Beauregard for 19 years, said she survived the storm by hiding in a
bathtub with her husband.
On Monday, all that remained of her home was its concrete
foundation, piled under heaps of wood and broken furniture, with the
tattered remainders of a trailer wrapped around a tree.
"It's just devastating to see this," Morrison said. "I just thank
God that me and my husband survived."
(Additional reporting by Joseph Ax and Gabriella Borter in New York
and Rich McKay in Atlanta; additional reporting and writing by Steve
Gorman in Los Angeles; editing by Frank McGurty and Jonathan Oatis)
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