Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Severe storms in the South and Midwest were blamed for 11 deaths.

Texas, Louisiana and Alabama struck hard

- By Juan A. Lozano

HOUSTON — Severe storms sweeping across southern portions of the U.S. and up into the Midwest were blamed Saturday in the deaths of at least 11 people, including two first responders, as high winds, tornadoes and unrelentin­g rain battered large swaths of the country.

Storm-related fatalities were reported in Texas due to icy weather, in Alabama from a deadly tornado and in Louisiana, where winds were so strong that a trailer home was lifted off its foundation and carried several hundred feet.

A man drowned in Oklahoma, and the storms even touched the Midwest, with at least one death on an icy highway in Iowa. Hundreds of thousands of people were left without power from Texas to Ohio, parts of highways were closed in Oklahoma and Arkansas due to flooding and hundreds of flights were canceled at Chicago’s internatio­nal airports.

Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson declared a state of emergency to assist crews working to restore power around the state.

Two first responders were killed and another was critically injured in Lubbock, Texas, Saturday morning after they were hit by a vehicle while working the scene of a traffic accident in icy conditions, officials said.

Police Officer Nicholas Reyna, 27, who had been with the department for one year, died at the scene. Firefighte­r Lt. David Hill, 39, was taken to a local hospital where he later died. Firefighte­r Matthew Dawson, 30, was hospitaliz­ed in critical condition.

Lubbock Police Chief Floyd Mitchell called it an “extremely tragic day” for the city.

The Iowa State Patrol said roads were caked with ice early Saturday when a semitraile­r on Interstate 80 overturned, killing a passenger in the truck east of Iowa City.

In Alabama, three people were confirmed killed near Carrollton in Pickens County, the National Weather Service in Birmingham tweeted. The Alabama Emergency Management Agency said the deaths were caused by an “embedded tornado within a long line of intense thundersto­rms.”

The National Weather Service in Shreveport, Louisiana, said a tornado with winds of around 135 mph had touched down in Bossier Parish.

 ?? Bossier Parish Sheriff ’s Office ?? Damage from Friday night’s severe weather, including an elderly couple’s home, is seen in Bossier Parish, La., on Saturday. The Bossier Parish Sheriff ’s Office said the couple’s bodies were found Saturday near their demolished trailer by firefighte­rs.
Bossier Parish Sheriff ’s Office Damage from Friday night’s severe weather, including an elderly couple’s home, is seen in Bossier Parish, La., on Saturday. The Bossier Parish Sheriff ’s Office said the couple’s bodies were found Saturday near their demolished trailer by firefighte­rs.

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