Powerful spring storms kill 9 in Ark., Okla.
TUSHKA, OK
It was the deadliest storm of the season so far. At least one
tornado accompanied the onslaught, but much of the damage was
attributed to straight-line winds -- sudden, violent downbursts that
struck with hurricane force in the middle of the night.
As the storm howled through Crystal Springs, Eden Davis woke up,
grabbed her young child and sat on the edge of the bed waiting to
pull a mattress over both of them to shield the pair from flying
debris.
"I've never been so nervous about a storm," she said. "I was
asleep, but my fiancé called me and told me to wake up and that I
needed to watch the news because the weather was getting real
bad."
Forecasters warned of approaching danger as much as three days
beforehand, but the winds up to 80 mph and repeated lightning
strikes cut a path of destruction across a region so accustomed to
violent weather that many people ignored the risk -- or slept
through it.
Seven people died in Arkansas. Two more were killed in
southeastern Oklahoma, and dozens of others were hurt.
Arkansas Gov. Mike Beebe said he had never seen the state suffer
so many deaths from straight-line winds. Tornadoes and floods cause
most of Arkansas storm-related fatalities.
"Just trees blowing on people's residences -- I don't recall
anything even approaching this," Beebe said.
Unlike tornadoes, which develop from columns of rotating air,
straight-line winds erupt from a thunderstorm in unpredictable
downdrafts, then spread across the landscape in all directions.
Teams from the National Weather Service worked Friday to learn
more about what caused the damage.
At Crystal Springs, lightning split a tree that fell into a
home, killing an 18-month-old girl and her father as they slept. In
Little Rock, winds knocked a tree into a home, killing a woman and
her 8-year-old son in his bed.
In the Arkansas town of Bald Knob, 6-year-old Devon Adams died
when the top of a tree more than in diameter crashed through his
home while he was sleeping.
Residents of the small town of Tushka, Okla., wondered what
would become of their community after a twister damaged or
destroyed nearly every home along the two main streets. The only
school -- a collection of buildings housing grades K-12 -- was all
but gone.
"It's hard to deal with because we're a small community with
limited resources. It's hard to do the cleanup," Mayor Brickie
Griffin said.
At least 25 people were hurt as the tornado plowed through the
town of 350 before dawn. At least a dozen homes and businesses were
destroyed.
Stacy George, who lives across the street from the school,
slowly recovered items from the rubble of her home, which had
shattered windows and a collapsed roof. A pickup truck had been
blown into the side of the house. But George's husband and
20-month-old son survived.
"We're basically starting over," she said, laying out clothes,
cowboy boots, a penny jar, a lamp and a chair in her driveway.
"We're trying to salvage what we can," she said. "It's
devastating. It's just horrible. Thank God we have so much help."
Easton Crow, a junior at Tushka High School, drove by the
building after the storm. He saw missing roofs, crushed vehicles
and textbooks scattered everywhere.
"I'm heartbroken. This is where most of us grew up," Crow
said. "I'm just in awe that in a few seconds, memories that have
been built were taken."
The school was to stay closed for the rest of the academic year,
and officials were looking for an alternate place to hold classes.
Gilbert Wilson, Atoka County's emergency management director,
said witnesses reported seeing two tornadoes that merged into a
single twister. The weather service confirmed a tornado hit the
area.
The owner of the Atoka Trailer Manufacturing plant said it would
cost millions of dollars to rebuild the factory, which made
trailers for hauling heavy equipment.
"Twenty-four hours ago, this was an 80,000-square-foot heavy
manufacturing facility. At the moment, it's a pile of rubble,"
Ryan Eaves said. "This building was a shining bright spot for the
community. To think it could be overtaken like this is
overwhelming."
He said he would shift work for the plant's 60 employees to
another factory three miles away.
By midday Friday, the storm system marched into Tennessee,
Louisiana and Mississippi. A tornado touched down in Clinton,
Miss., causing widespread damage but no serious injuries.
Back in Crystal Springs, authorities surveyed the damage at the
home of 24-year-old Jeffrey Gibbs, who died with his 18-month-old
daughter, Rylin, after lightning struck a tree and the top of it
fell into their house.
Davis is a friend to Gibbs' wife, Rebecca.
"It's been a complete tragedy," Davis said. "No one expects
to lose a child and a husband at the same time."
Neighbor Melissa Wright, who lives in a mobile home across the
street with her mother and daughter, said her mother was outside
and saw the lightning strike.
"I have a 3-year-old girl, and that's my worst fear," she
said. "You don't think that when you're lying in your bed,
something like this could happen to you."
Authorities said a strong downburst of wind apparently
overturned a mobile home, killing a 64-year-old woman in St.
Francis County, in eastern Arkansas.
In Little Rock, the storms intensified shortly before 2 a.m.,
catching many people asleep. But the city's sirens were wailing
when the weather hit.
One man was killed when a tree fell on his recreational vehicle.
A woman identified as a nurse and her 8-year-old son died when
an oak tree fell into the boy's bedroom. A baby sleeping in a
nearby room was not injured, police said.
At daybreak, the tree still leaned against the home's back
bedroom, exposing some of the little boy's treasures: a stuffed
frog, a toy truck.
A few of the woman's fellow nurses huddled around her sister
outside the home.
"She doesn't even want to come near the house," said Theresa
Travis, a doctor who worked with the dead woman, who had not been
publicly identified.
Friends and authorities piled some of the surviving baby girl's
things in the driveway: a pink Disney princess suitcase, a baby
doll, a Huggies box filled with clothes. Chain saws buzzed as
workers hacked away at the tree.
"You'd think that doing hospice, we'd be ready for death,"
Travis said. She shook her head.