Albuquerque Journal

At least 20 killed as storms, tornadoes strike Deep South

More than 5,000 customers still without power across Georgia

- BY LAUREN FOREMAN THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON

ATLANTA — Power was out, schools were closed and cleanup was underway Monday after deadly storms and possible tornadoes ripped through southern Georgia over the weekend.

The storms killed at least 20 people in the Deep South, according to The Associated Press. Fifteen of those deaths were in Georgia.

Seven people died at a mobile home park in the small community of Adel, Cook County Coroner Tim Purvis told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on. Four people were killed after a suspected tornado struck east Albany on Sunday afternoon, Dougherty County Coroner Michael Fowler said. And Berrien and Brooks counties each reported two deaths, officials told The AJC.

More than 5,360 customers statewide were without service Monday, according to Georgia Power. Georgia’s electric cooperativ­es, which provide electricit­y and other services to 4.4 million people, reported 16,000 customers were without power at 7:30 a.m., down from a peak of 45,000 Sunday night.

Gordon County Schools were closed because of downed trees and power lines, Channel 2 Action News reported.

From early Saturday to Sunday night, 39 possible tornadoes were reported across the Southeast, Patrick Marsh with the Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Okla., told the AP. Of that number, 30 were reported in Georgia.

Georgia averages 20 tornadoes a year.

In Adel, storms demolished half of the 40 homes at a mobile home park, Channel 2 reported. People may still be missing, the television station reported. Search crews were expected to return to the area Monday morning.

“Trailers are just f lat, just laid on top of people,” rescue worker Debbie Van Brackel said Sunday. “You need a bulldozer to pull it off. Trailers are upside down.”

Van Brackel, who is both a school bus driver, and a volunteer firefighte­r and EMT, said she had assisted in removing bodies from the wreckage. Torn wreckage bore no resemblanc­e to the homes they once were. Cadaver dogs, and a continuing stream of utility trucks and lumber trucks rolled into and out of the park.

The storms led Gov. Nathan Deal to declare a state of emergency in seven counties in the southern part of central Georgia. President Donald Trump on Sunday called Deal to offer condolence­s and later pledged his support.

“We’ll be helping out the state of Georgia,” he said.

 ?? BRANDEN CAMP/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A rescue worker carries a dog that had been trapped inside a mobile home at Big Pine Estates that was damaged by a tornado on Monday in Albany, Ga.
BRANDEN CAMP/ASSOCIATED PRESS A rescue worker carries a dog that had been trapped inside a mobile home at Big Pine Estates that was damaged by a tornado on Monday in Albany, Ga.

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