Storms rake Southeast, leave at least two people dead
The Associated Press
ADAIRSVILLE, Ga. (AP) -- A massive storm system raking the Southeast hammered a Georgia town on Wednesday, overturning cars on an interstate and killing at least one person there, authorities said.
Bartow County Fire Chief Craig Millsap said the body was found in the storm
damage but did not have further details on how the person died. The same system also was blamed for
a death in Tennessee. Most dangerous were powerful wind gusts that in several places were powerful
enough to overturn tractor-trailers.
There were reports
that people were trapped in homes and businesses, and television footage showed large sections of a
sprawling manufacturing plant had been destroyed.
Footage
also showed a funnel cloud roaring through the downtown area of Adairsville, about 60 miles
northwest of Atlanta, flipping cars and demolishing a home. Interstate 75 was closed in both
directions after the storm flipped cars onto their roofs and tossed them onto the grassy
shoulder.
At least two tornadoes were confirmed and
several more suspected, and conditions remained ripe for more. Since Tuesday, the system had
caused damage across a swath from Missouri to Georgia.
In
recent days, people in the South and Midwest had enjoyed unseasonably balmy temperatures in the 60s
and 70s. A system pulling warm weather from the Gulf of Mexico was colliding with a cold front
moving in from the west, creating volatility.
Police said
high winds toppled a tree onto a shed in Nashville, Tenn., where a man had taken shelter, killing
him.
Across the region, downed power lines, trees and tree
limbs were making it difficult to reach people who needed help.
One person was reported injured by lightning in Arkansas during the storm's
eastward trek. Two people suffered minor injuries when a mobile home was blown off its foundation
in Kentucky.
In Tennessee, officials confirmed that a
tornado with peak wind speeds of 115 mph touched down in Mount Juliet. No serious injuries were
reported there, though the path of damage was about 150 yards wide, including homes, a warehouse
and an automotive business.
At a shopping center in Mount
Juliet, large sheets of metal littered the parking lot, light poles were knocked down and bits of
fiberglass insulation were stuck in the trees.
One wall of
a Dollar General convenience store collapsed, and the roof was torn off. Mark Fulks Jr. runs Mark's
Automotive with his father in a building attached to the Dollar General. The garage door was blown
off his shop and sitting on one of the cars inside, and Fulks said several of the cars they were
working on had their windshields blown out.
A nearby
office building and a distribution center for The Tennessean newspaper also had severe damage. Rick
Martin, who bags the newspapers and helps his wife deliver them, was shocked when he saw what was
left of the distribution center.
The metal frame of the
building still stood, but its cinderblock walls had crumbled, and papers and plastic bags littered
the trees.
"We feel real lucky," he said on Wednesday
morning as looked at the damage. "I would have hated to be in here when this
happened."
The nation has had its longest break between
tornado fatalities since detailed tornado records began being kept in 1950, according to the Storm
Prediction Center and National Climatic Data Center. The last one was June 24, when a person was
killed in a home in Highlands County, Fla. That was 220 days ago as of Tuesday.
The last day with multiple fatalities was June 4, when three people were
killed in a mobile home in Scott County, Mo.
___
Associated Press Writer Kristin
M. Hall contributed to this report from Mount Juliet, Tenn.
Copyright 2013 The Associated
Press.




