Death toll rises to 12 following tornadoes and flash floods in Oklahoma

Storms heading towards US east coast, where hail and high winds are main threat

A stuffed frog sits on a tree stump outside a home damaged by tornadoes that ripped through the area in El Reno, Oklahoma. Photograph: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
A stuffed frog sits on a tree stump outside a home damaged by tornadoes that ripped through the area in El Reno, Oklahoma. Photograph: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

A violent weather system that claimed 12 lives in Oklahoma and Arkansas amid tornadoes and flash floods gave way to clearing skies as the storms trekked towards the US east coast yesterday.

A tornado killed nine people as it charged down Interstate 40 in Oklahoma City’s western suburbs on Friday night, twisting billboards and scattering cars and tractor-trailers along a roadway clogged with rush-hour motorists leaving work or fleeing the storm’s path. Flash floods in Arkansas killed three early on Friday, including a sheriff attempting a water rescue.

“The last two nights, I’ve been having hell,” said Roy Stoddard, a truck driver from Depew, Oklahoma, who was delayed by rising floodwaters at Little Rock, Arkansas, on Thursday. Then on Friday evening, he had to take shelter in a shop’s walk-in fridge during Friday evening’s rush-hour in Oklahoma City as the tornado approached.


Damage
Damage from Friday night's severe weather was concentrated a few miles north of Moore, the Oklahoma City suburb pounded by an EF5 tornado on May 20th that killed 24 people. The system then approached the densely populated northeast.

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The Storm Prediction Centre in Norman, Oklahoma, predicted a slight chance of severe weather in the northeast yesterday, mainly from the Washington DC area to northern Maine. Hail and high winds were the chief threat, though a tornado could not be ruled out, forecasters said.

Friday night’s storm formed out on the prairie west of Oklahoma City, giving residents plenty of advance notice. When told to seek shelter, many ventured out and snarled traffic across the metro area.

“It was chaos. People were going southbound in the northbound lanes. Everybody was running for their lives,” said Terri Black (51), a teacher’s assistant in Moore.

After seeing last month’s tornado turn homes into piles of splintered rubble, Ms Black said she decided to try to outrun the tornado when she learned her southwest Oklahoma City home was in harm’s way.

She quickly regretted it. When she realised she was a sitting duck in bumper-to-bumper traffic, Ms Black turned around and found herself directly in the path of the most violent part of the storm. “My car was actually lifted off the road and then set back down,” she said.

“The trees were leaning literally to the ground. The rain was coming down horizontally in front of my car.”


Fleeing residents
Oklahoma highway patrol trooper Betsy Randolph said roadways quickly became congested with the convergence of rush-hour traffic and fleeing residents.

“They had no place to go, and that’s always a bad thing. They were essentially targets just waiting for a tornado to touch down,” Ms Randolph said. “I’m not sure why people do that sort of stuff, but it is very dangerous.”

Friday night’s victims included a mother and a baby sucked out of their car as the EF3 hit near El Reno. A four-year-old boy died after being swept into Oklahoma river on the south side of Oklahoma City, said Oklahoma City police Lieut Jay Barnett. The boy and other family members had sought shelter in a drainage ditch.

More than 100 people were injured by swirling debris, most with puncture wounds and lacerations, authorities said.