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Tragic stories emerge in Florence’s wake

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CHARLOTTE, North Carolina — Florence, which was once a hurricane and now is a tropical depression, is being blamed for at least 32 deaths. Fourteen were in North Carolina.

Officials are still worried about what’s to come, because it’s still raining and rivers are swelling. Several of the people who died in recent days were swept up in stormwater­s. Three small children have been killed, two from falling trees.

A 1-year-old boy was swept into floodwater­s Sunday when the car his mother was driving came upon rushing water.

The water from a nearby creek in Union County had risen quickly, and the current was swift. Dazia Lee told local media that she isn’t from the area and was unfamiliar with the roads. The water pushed her car off the road and left her stuck in a group of trees, authoritie­s said.

Lee was able to get Kaiden Lee-Welch out of the car, but the water caused her to lose her grip, she told Fox 46 WJZY.

“I was holding his hand, trying to hold him, trying to pull him up,” she told the TV station. “I couldn’t hold on anymore and he let go.”

She described him as “the sweetest boy”.

Little Kaiden’s body was found Monday.

A family member outside the home Monday said the mother was in the town of Monroe to return her son’s body to Charlotte. He said Lee was doing all right, but he teared up after a visitor spoke with him.

Lee said that she would never intentiona­lly put her baby in harm’s way. Lee said she is from Charlotte and said there was no barricade telling her about the dangerous situation ahead.

“I saw people coming in and out, so that’s when I thought, I was about to detour but I stopped I saw the cars coming in and out ... thought it was safe,” Lee told WCNC .

Lee said she was bringing the baby to visit his great-grandmothe­r.

Police had initially reported that the mother went around the barricades before entering the dangerous road.

Three-month-old Kade Gill, who was born on Father’s Day, was in his mother’s arms. They were sitting on the sofa when a tree crashed through the roof of the family’s mobile home, killing the child.

“The tree had divided us,” said father Olen Gill, who talked to The Gaston Gazette when he returned to the destroyed home with his wife after her release from the hospital. “I’m in the kitchen and she’s in the living room on the couch.”

The tragedy happened Sunday in Dallas, North Carolina, which is about 240 miles (385 kilometers) west of where Hurricane Florence made landfall Friday in Wrightsvil­le Beach.

Mother Tammy Gill said she called her son “Little Man” and that he was born premature.

“He was a fighter in the beginning. He came five weeks early, survived the NICU 10 days,” she said.

Her daughter Autumn Gill told The Charlotte Observer that her parents, who have been together 22 years, thought their family was complete after five children.

“They didn’t think she could have another,” Autumn Gill said. “Surprise! We got baby Kade.”

They’d later tell her they heard only a gust of wind before one of those towering pines smashed into their home. Olen Gill, standing in the kitchen, was unharmed but couldn’t reach his wife and baby. Tammy Gill, who told her daughter she had just settled on the couch to feed Kade, couldn’t move.

Both mother and child were trapped by the tree, a neighbor told the paper. Rescue workers had to cut the tree to free Tammy Gill. They tried to revive her infant, but doctors at a nearby hospital pronounced him dead.

 ?? JASON MICZEK /REUTERS ?? Houses sit in floodwater caused by Hurricane Florence, in this aerial picture, in Lumberton, North Carolina on Monday.
JASON MICZEK /REUTERS Houses sit in floodwater caused by Hurricane Florence, in this aerial picture, in Lumberton, North Carolina on Monday.

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