Ammonia gas leak from a tanker truck in Oklahoma sickens dozens and
forces evacuations
[November 14, 2025]
By CLIFF BRUNT, KATHY McCORMACK and SARAH BRUMFIELD
WEATHERFORD, Okla. (AP) — A leaking tanker truck spewed dangerous
ammonia gas outside a hotel overnight, filling its hallways with fumes
and forcing hundreds of nearby residents of a small Oklahoma city to
evacuate, authorities said Thursday. Several dozen people were treated
at hospitals.
Officials lifted a shelter-in-place order Thursday morning, hours after
firefighters wearing gas masks went door to door in Weatherford, waking
people up and telling them to leave because of the anhydrous ammonia
leak.
An oil field worker staying at the hotel where the truck had been parked
said he heard a “faint pop” Wednesday night and noticed a smell minutes
later. He and a coworker left their room and hustled into a hallway and
then an elevator filling up with a pungent odor.
Once outside, they saw their vehicles underneath a cloud of ammonia,
said Michael Johnson, of Nacogdoches, Texas. "The smell itself punched
me,” he said.
He took off running, but noticed his roommate wasn’t with him and saw
that he had run for their trucks. He said a police officer managed to
save his coworker.
“His lips were purple and frozen shut,” Johnson said. “His eyes were
bloodshot red. His skin was all red.”
Johnson found one person stumbling and gave him a shirt to put over his
mouth. At one point, he looked at the smoke and saw they were
surrounded, thinking “We’re going to die.”

Police said 34 people were treated at a local hospital and 11 patients
were taken to Oklahoma City area hospitals. Several victims remained in
intensive care late Thursday, but the majority were in stable condition,
police said in a statement. Dozens more received treatment at casualty
centers.
Five responding officers sustained chemical burns to their airways,
police said.
At least 500 to 600 people went to a shelter early Thursday while others
were ordered to remain inside their homes for several hours. Some
nursing homes were evacuated, and schools were closed for the day.
A leaking gasket from a tanker truck carrying 25,000 pounds (11,340
kilograms) of ammonia was responsible, the EPA said in a written
statement. The National Transportation Safety Board said it was
investigating.
Anhydrous ammonia is used as a farm fertilizer to help corn and wheat
grow. The colorless gas has a suffocating odor and can be deadly,
especially at high concentrations, or cause breathing problems and burns
to the skin and eyes.
[to top of second column]
|

The scene of an ammonia spill at the Holiday Inn Express in
Weatherford, Okla. on Thursday, Nov. 13, 2025. (AP Photo/Alonzo
Adams)

Just last week, an anhydrous ammonia leak forced evacuations near
Yazoo City, Mississippi, and two years ago, five people died in
Illinois when a tanker truck spilled anhydrous ammonia after it was
forced off a road by a passing minivan.
The cleanup in Weatherford — a city of 12,000 people about 70 miles
(115 kilometers) west of Oklahoma City — could take several days,
the police chief said.
“We pretty much got a lot of this stuff diluted right now,” Orefice
said, adding that authorities were working with environmental
officials.
The EPA said subsequent air monitoring did not detect any ammonia in
the local residential area. The levels of pH in the local creek were
within normal and the levels detected in the soil were expected to
“naturally neutralize over a short period.”
The driver of the truck carrying the gas had parked behind a Holiday
Inn Express to get a room there for the evening, Orefice said. The
cause seemed to be a mechanical failure on a valve or a faulty seal,
the police chief said.
Authorities said the air quality was being monitored and that the
tanker truck was no longer leaking. A number of agencies were
assisting, including hazmat crews and the Oklahoma National Guard.
Trisha Doucet called police for help when she learned the leak was
blocks away from where her mother was caring for her bed-bound
89-year-old grandmother. An ambulance was quickly dispatched to get
her to safety.
Her grandmother, who is on hospice, was reluctant to leave. “But
this is my house,” she said.
Doucet, who used to work as an EMT and knew the dangers of anhydrous
ammonia, recalled telling her grandmother, “That’s the hardest part.
I know it’s your house, but you really have to go.”
___
McCormack reported from Concord, New Hampshire, and Brumfield
reported from Cockeysville, Maryland. Associated Press writers
Heather Hollingsworth in Mission, Kansas, and John Seewer in Toledo,
Ohio, contributed.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved |