Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

‘Is God mad?’ Mississipp­i tornado wreaks havoc; kills 4

- By Jeff Amy and Rebecca Santana

HATTIESBUR­G, MISS. >> Rain was pouring down in the pre-dawn darkness, and the wind was picking up as Darryl McMorris ran for his daughters’ bedroom. The windows started blowing out as he dove on top of his girls, grabbing one under each arm as he tried to protect them.

“As soon as I did that it seemed like we were flying in the air,” he recalled Saturday. Walls began to collapse and the house began to blow apart as his daughters screamed. But he held on tight.

When the tornado finished ripping its way through their Hattiesbur­g home he and the two girls were under a wall. Their house appears to be a total loss, bedding tossed 50 feet into a tree and their oldest daughter asking, “Is God mad at us?” But they’re alive.

“I don’t see how we survived this,” said his fiancee Shanise.

Across the tornado’s devastatin­g path, families were taking stock of the damage, hugging friends and neighbors, grieving over the remains of their homes and in many cases mourning those killed.

Authoritie­s said four people died when the twister touched down around 3:35 a.m. Saturday. Shannon Hefferan, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service, says damage reports indicate it touched down in Lamar County before ripping into Forrest County and skirting just south of downtown Hattiesbur­g — the state’s fourth largest city.

The tornado continued across the Leaf River into neighborin­g Petal. Emergency management officials said the severe weather also damaged Perry and Jones counties.

Teams are out assessing the damage. Already they know that the tornado was accompanie­d by a deluge of rain — 3.42 inches over a six to seven hour period Saturday morning — Hefferan said.

And the bad weather isn’t over yet.

The weather service anticipate­s another round Saturday night. A tornado watch was already in effect until 9 p.m. in parts of southeaste­rn Louisiana and southern Mississipp­i, warning that hail, gusting winds and tornadoes are possible.

Forrest County Coroner Butch Benedict on Saturday afternoon released the names of the dead: Earnest Perkins, 58; Cleveland Madison, 20; David Wayne McCoy, 47 and Simona Cox, 72.

Monica McCarty lost her father — Perkins — who died in the same trailer park where she and her boyfriend live and her son — Madison — who was apparently crushed to death while in bed at her mother’s house where he lived.

Standing amid the tornado’s carnage, McCarty wept as her boyfriend, Tackeem Molley, comforted her.

“They couldn’t get him out of the house. They said he was lying in the bed,” McCarty said of her son.

Molley said he and McCarty were in a trailer when the storm hit. Molley, whose bare foot was bandaged, said he climbed out through a hole in what had either been the trailer’s roof or wall.

“I had a little hole I could squeeze out of,” he said.

In the surroundin­g neighborho­od, power company trucks ran up and down the streets and city backhoe plowed debris from the road. Dozens of homes were damaged.

Sheet metal was strewn everywhere. Trees turned into spindly sticks were lying across power lines. At least three nearby churches had sustained damage.

Mayor Johnny DuPree has signed an emergency declaratio­n for the city, which reported “significan­t injuries” and structural damage.

Greg Flynn of the Mississipp­i Emergency Management Agency said “massive damage” was reported. At least 50 people have been treated for injuries at two area hospitals, he said. Gov. Phil Bryant visited the damaged areas Saturday. Insurance Commission­er Mike Chaney says insured damaged is likely to top $200 million.

 ?? ROGELIO V. SOLIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Shanise McMorris grieves on the slab of her Hattiesbur­g, Miss., home after an early tornado hit the city, Saturday. The tornado was part of a wall of stormy weather traveling across the region, bringing with it rain and unstable conditions.
ROGELIO V. SOLIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Shanise McMorris grieves on the slab of her Hattiesbur­g, Miss., home after an early tornado hit the city, Saturday. The tornado was part of a wall of stormy weather traveling across the region, bringing with it rain and unstable conditions.

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