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Like A ‘Freight Train’: Tornadoes Leave Nearly Two Dozen Dead In Alabama

SCOTT FILLMER /via REUTERS

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Michael Bastasch DCNF Managing Editor
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  • Two powerful tornadoes touched down in Alabama on Sunday, killing at least 23 people.
  • The tornadoes destroyed homes, knocked down power lines, felled trees and littered roads with debris.
  • “Please be careful and safe,” President Donald Trump implored Alabama residents.

At least 23 people were killed after two powerful tornadoes ripped through communities in southeast Alabama Sunday afternoon, and officials said the death toll could rise as search efforts resume.

“I cannot recall, at least in the last 50 years, and longer than that, a situation where we have had this type, this loss of life that we experienced today,” Lee County Sheriff Jay Jones told CBS News Sunday night.

“We do have some children, unfortunately,” Jones said, also saying the “massive damage” included felled trees, damaged buildings, power outages, lost lives and debris strewn across the county.

“The contents of one residence we know for a fact were located over 1,000 yards away,” Jones said.

Lee County officials said the worst damage was near the town of Beauregard, which is about 60 miles east of Montgomery. Smith Station, another small county town, saw about 20 homes destroyed. The tornadoes were part of a larger storm system that moved through southern U.S. states.

One Beauregard resident described the tornado as a “freight train” that left debris everywhere. Residents and news outlets were quickly on the scene to share pictures and videos of the widespread devastation.

Rescue crews resumed working through rubble and wreckage Monday morning after bad weather delayed search efforts the previous night. The Sunday afternoon tornado through Lee County left a half-mile wide swath of devastation.

The National Weather Service estimated the tornado’s strength was at least EF-3, meaning wind-speeds were in excess of 136 miles per hour. That’s enough to easily tear away some buildings from their foundations.

“It’s bad,” Lee County resident Ryan Posey told The Associated Press. “We knew it was bad, we lost power, we were getting a lot of phone calls because of the area.”

Once they were able, Posey said he and his neighbor loaded chainsaws and other equipment into a truck and headed over to the impacted area to help people. Posey is one of many volunteer rescue workers helping authorities.

President Donald Trump implored Alabamians to stay safe, and warned that more severe weather could be on the way. (RELATED: Ocasio-Cortez Invited To Debate Climate Catastrophe Skeptics. They Even Saved Her A Seat)

“To the great people of Alabama and surrounding areas: Please be careful and safe,” Trump tweeted Sunday night. “Tornadoes and storms were truly violent and more could be coming. To the families and friends of the victims, and to the injured, God bless you all!”

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