The Mercury News

At least 22 people still missing after tornadoes kill dozens

- By Jacey Fortin

Rescue teams, police and volunteers continued to search for at least 22 missing people in Tennessee on Wednesday, a day after a series of tornadoes tore across the state, killing two dozen people.

In Putnam County, east of Nashville, the death toll was 18, Randy Porter, the county’s mayor, said at a news conference Wednesday morning. The dead included 13 adults and five children under the age of 13, and officials had identified all of the victims except one, the mayor said.

He added that 22 people were missing, down from more than 80 who were unaccounte­d for Tuesday night. Rescue workers had fielded calls late into the night as people reported that their friends and relatives were safe, he said, but officials were struggling to find those who were still missing.

“We’re hoping that most of those are people that are safe and just haven’t let us know that they are,” Porter said.

“The area is still very devastated,” he said, adding that as many as 100 houses and structures were destroyed and that hundreds more were damaged.

Sheriff Eddie Farris of Putnam County said that police were continuing to go door to door in search of survivors and victims.

Officials at the Tennessee Emergency Management Agency said the statewide death toll decreased by one on Tuesday night after one person was determined to have died of a medical issue unrelated to the storms.

The deadly storms and tornadoes cut a destructiv­e path across central Tennessee Tuesday morning, shortly after midnight.

There were devastatin­g losses in several communitie­s in Putnam County, including Double Springs, Baxter and Echo Valley. In some neighborho­ods, residents searched for houses along streets they could no longer recognize. Huge trees and live power lines were strewn across roads.

Buildings were also destroyed in the Nashville area, including in North Nashville, East Nashville and Germantown. Two people died in East Nashville after being struck by debris. Other fatalities were reported in Wilson and Benton counties.

 ?? MARK HUMPHREY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A man looks for items he can salvage from his store Tuesday near Cookeville, Tenn. Tornadoes ripped across Tennessee early Tuesday, killing two dozen people.
MARK HUMPHREY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A man looks for items he can salvage from his store Tuesday near Cookeville, Tenn. Tornadoes ripped across Tennessee early Tuesday, killing two dozen people.

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