The Columbus Dispatch

Tenn. flooding’s death toll revised to 18

- Travis Loller and Jonathan Mattise

WAVERLY, Tenn. – Authoritie­s revised the confirmed death toll from flooding in rural Tennessee over the weekend to 18 people from as high as 22, saying the miscount was an honest mistake.

Waverly police Chief Grant Gillespie said some people who were in the emergency room and died of natural causes were mistakenly added to the count. Gillespie said John and Jane Doe victims twice were not crossed off the list once they were identified.

Gillespie said authoritie­s had detectives follow up on each case and confirm the numbers, which now line up with the state tally.

“Just an honest mistake, and I hope everybody understand­s that,” Gillespie said. “It’s still a tremendous loss of life. I hope that number doesn’t grow.”

Three people are still on the list of those missing who witnesses said they saw in the water, he said.

Meanwhile, the state received approval from President Joe Biden for a major disaster declaratio­n, which frees up federal aid to help with recovery efforts in Humphreys County, the White House said in a statement Tuesday.

After touring the area on Sunday, Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee called it a “devastatin­g picture of loss and heartache.”

The flooding took out roads, cellphone towers and telephone lines, leaving people uncertain about whether family and friends survived the unpreceden­ted deluge, with rainfall that more than tripled forecasts and shattered the state’s one-day record.

It also left large swaths of the community suddenly displaced.

Gofundme pages sought help for funeral expenses for the dead, including 7-month-old twins swept from their father’s arms.

Matthew Rigney and Danielle Hall described to WTVF-TV how the water began to rage through their apartment where they sheltered with their four children.

“I had the twins in my arms, I had (19-month-old) Brayla on my hip and I had (5-year-old) Maleah wrapped around my neck,” Rigney told the news station, his voice trembling behind tears. “The water, when it hit us it just pulled us under, all of us and we were trapped underneath a bed.”

A neighbor helped Rigney and the two children up to the roof. Hall was ultimately rescued from a tree by boat.

 ?? JOHN AMIS/AP ?? Ernest Hollis looks for items at his granddaugh­ter’s house that was devastated by floodwater­s on Monday in Waverly, Tenn. Heavy rains caused flooding in Middle Tennessee days ago and have resulted in multiple deaths.
JOHN AMIS/AP Ernest Hollis looks for items at his granddaugh­ter’s house that was devastated by floodwater­s on Monday in Waverly, Tenn. Heavy rains caused flooding in Middle Tennessee days ago and have resulted in multiple deaths.

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