Albuquerque Journal

Death tally at six as storms sweep across Southeast

Quick decision saves 3 of 7 in Alabama mobile home

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As an apparent tornado bore down on them, seven people in a mobile home in southeaste­rn Alabama made a life-ordeath decision: Three ran into one bathroom for shelter and four ran in the opposite direction to another room seeking safety.

The three, including Lawana Henrich, survived without a scratch, according to Coroner Robert Byrd. But a big hardwood tree that slammed into the mobile home killed the four others, including Henrich’s daughter and sister, Byrd said.

The tree toppled over during a wave of severe weather that brought heavy rain and strong winds to the Southeast, and it couldn’t have hit in a worse spot when it fell Monday night near Rehobeth, Ala.

“It was dead center,” Byrd said. “You think, ‘What’s the chance of four people being so close in one area?’ But they were.”

Those four, a woman in Georgia, and a man who drowned in the Florida Panhandle died as a line of severe thundersto­rms moved across the southeaste­rn United States from Texas.

Teams of surveyors were headed out Tuesday to assess apparent tornado damage at three sites in southeaste­rn Alabama and southweste­rn Georgia, said Mark Wool, a meteorolog­ist at the National Weather Service in Tallahasse­e, Fla.

Wool said authoritie­s believe a tornado is responsibl­e for damage that left the four people dead in Alabama, but he said the weather service won’t be able to say for sure until experts visit the site.

Byrd, coroner in Houston County, Ala., said Michelle Lewis, 53, died along with her niece, 27-year-old Amanda Blair. Lewis was Henrich’s sister and Blair was Henrich’s daughter, Byrd said; both victims lived in the trailer where they died, he said.

Byrd said the storm also killed two family friends, Terina Brookshire, 51, of Hartford, Ala., and Carla Lambart, 53, who was originally from Opp, Ala.

In Florida, the Walton County Sheriff’s Office said the body of William Patrick Corley, 70, was found Monday.

 ?? RYAN MOORE/WDAM-TV VIA AP ?? A barn in Mount Olive, Miss., was destroyed during a storm Monday, part of a storm system with damaging winds, hail and flash flooding moving across the South.
RYAN MOORE/WDAM-TV VIA AP A barn in Mount Olive, Miss., was destroyed during a storm Monday, part of a storm system with damaging winds, hail and flash flooding moving across the South.

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