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Emergency crews searched through wreckage on Sunday from violent storms that killed at least 22 people in Missouri, Oklahoma and Georgia.
In Missouri, tornadoes tore through small towns in the southwestern section of the state, overturning cars and smashing buildings. Capt. Tim Hull of the Missouri Highway Patrol said Sunday morning that 14 people had been confirmed killed by the storm, which struck just after 6:30 p.m. on Saturday. He did not have a total number of people injured, but said area hospitals were treating people from the storm.
“Search and rescue is still continuing,” Captain Hull said in an interview.
Captain Hull said several of those killed were in their cars when the tornado touched down and others were killed when their houses were hit. Twelve of the confirmed deaths occurred in Newton County.
“It’s a rural area,” he said. “There are some small towns that were hit hard.”
The tornadoes first touched down on Saturday evening in Oklahoma. One roared through the small town of Picher, tearing buildings off their foundations and killing at least seven people, according to a statement from Oklahoma state emergency officials. The officials said 150 people in the town were injured.
The tornado destroyed a 20-block area in the town, ripping down trees, power lines and utility poles, the officials said.
”I swear I could see cars floating,” Herman Hernandez, 68. told The Associated Press. ”And there was a roar, louder and louder.”
The same storm system then moved into southwest Missouri and into Georgia, where at least on other person was killed in the town of Dublin, about 120 miles south of Atlanta, The A.P. reported.
On Sunday morning, Jane Lant was sorting through the debris of her bridal shop about 10 miles north of Seneca, The A.P. reported. A body wrapped in blue tarp lay next to the shop. Her husband’s feed store and a home across the road were also destroyed.
Ms. Lant said she was relieved that the store had closed an hour before the twister hit.
”We would have had people in here at 6 when it hit,” she said.
The National Weather Service estimated that at least eight tornadoes had been spawned in Oklahoma along six storm tracks, The A.P. reported. Three teams were dispatched to assess damage, a meteorologist, Steve Amburn, said.
This weekend’s tornadoes follow several outbreaks of violent weather earlier this year: 22 people were killed by tornadoes that touched down in four states on Feb. 5; two were killed in Georgia on March 14, and another seven were killed in Arkansas on May 2.




