At least 22 dead after US tornado (AP) Updated: 2005-11-07 07:29
A tornado tore across western Kentucky and Indiana of the United States early
Sunday, killing at least 22 people as it cut through a mobile home park and
obliterated trailers and houses as residents slept.
The tornado, with winds of at least 158 mph, hit a horse racing track near
Henderson, Ky., then jumped into Indiana around 2 a.m.
"It was just a real loud roar. It didn't seem like it lasted over 45 seconds
to a minute, then it was calm again," said Steve Gaiser, who lives near the
Eastbrook Mobile Home Park in Evansville.
At least 17 people were killed in the mobile home park, according to Eric
Williams of the Vanderburgh County Sheriff's Department.
More people were believed to still be trapped in the debris, and National
Guard units were called in to help with search-and-recovery efforts. At least
200 people were injured during the storm.
"They were in trailer homes, homes that were just torn apart by the storm, so
they're just now getting in there trying to find people," said deputy
Vanderburgh county coroner Annie Groves. "It's just terrible."
Rescuers on the scene since 2 a.m. reported seeing children wandering the
area looking for their parents and parents searching for missing children.
Children's bicycles and other toys were strewn amid the debris of aluminum
siding, mattresses, chairs and insulation.
Five other people were confirmed dead in neighboring Warrick County, east of
Evansville, where the Ohio River city of Newburgh was hit. No deaths were
reported in Kentucky.
The storm reduced homes to splinters and scattered debris across the
countryside. Entire blocks of buildings were nothing but rubble.
Indiana homeland security spokeswoman Pam Bright said about 100 of the 350 or
so homes in at the Evansville mobile home park were destroyed and 125 others
there were damaged.
Larry and Christie Brown rode out the storm inside one mobile home.
"Man, it was more than words can say," Larry Brown said. "We opened the door
and there wasn't anything sitting there."
Chad Bennett, assistant fire chief in Newburgh, told CNN that sirens sounded,
but most people didn't hear them because it happened in the middle of the night.
The tornado developed in a line of thunderstorms that rolled rapidly eastward
across the Ohio Valley. The National Weather Service had posted severe
thunderstorm warnings for sections of northern Ohio.
Ryan Presley, a weather service meteorologist in Paducah, Ky., said a single
tornado touched down near Smith Mills in western Kentucky, jumped the river and
cut a 15- to 20-mile swath through Indiana's Vanderburgh and Warrick counties.
The tornado appeared to be at least an F3 on the Fujita scale, which ranges
from F0, the weakest, to F5, the strongest. An F3 has winds ranging from 158 mph
to 206 mph, and the tornado that hit on Sunday may have been even stronger,
Presley said.
Warrick County Sheriff Marvin Heilman said the victims included a woman who
was eight months' pregnant, her husband and a young child in the rural town of
Degonia Springs. A teenage girl was also killed near Boonville, and her father
was critically injured, he said.
Tim Martin, 42, was at his parents' mobile home when they heard the wind and
then the tornado picked up the home and shoved into the neighbor's yard.
He and his parents escaped unharmed, but they heard several neighbors calling
for help. A nearby mobile home was overturned, and another appeared to have been
obliterated.
"All I could see was debris," he said. "I thought it was a bad dream."
Patty Ellerbusch, 53, said she and her husband were in bed at their hilltop
home in Newburgh when a relative called and warned them of the tornado. They
heard a low roar and ran for the basement.
She made it downstairs, but her husband did not. He was blasted with
shattered drywall, wood and other debris as the tornado shredded the home's
roof.
"He was running down the hallway, and it knocked him down and ripped his
glasses off. He said it felt like being in a wind tunnel," she said. The storm
stripped the roof off the couple's home and destroyed their barn.
Bright said it was the deadliest tornado in Indiana since April 3, 1974, when
an outbreak of several tornadoes killed 47 people and destroyed 2,069 homes.
The Ellis Park racetrack, between Evansville and Henderson, Ky., had
significant damage to barns, the grandstand and other buildings, and some
workers were injured, said Paul Kuerzi, the track's vice president and general
manager.
"It appears at this point that three horses have died from injuries suffered
in storm. It's too early to know if any other horses were injured," Kuerzi said.
About 150 horses in training were stabled there.
Mike Roeder, a spokesman for utility company Vectren, said 25,000 homes were
without power Sunday. There also were reports of natural gas
leaks.
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