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3 killed by suspected tornado, lightning as storms hit South | TribLIVE.com
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3 killed by suspected tornado, lightning as storms hit South

Associated Press
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The Clarion-Ledger
Family portraits still hang on the wall of Brian and Penny Temples’ house Monday in Baxterville, Miss., despite the severe damage caused to their home when a tornado struck the area on Sunday.
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The Clarion-Ledger
The Baxterville, Miss. of home Brian and Penny Templesis seen Monday, April 20, 2020 after it was heavily damaged after being struck by a tornado on Sunday evening. Severe storms are raking parts of the Deep South, a week after Easter storms pounded the Deep South, killing dozens.
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The Tuscaloosa News
Firefighters work to control a three- alarm fire in the attic space in Moody Music Hall on the campus of the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa, Ala., in the wing housing the rehearsal hall for the Million Dollar Band, Sunday, April 19, 2020. (Gary Cosby Jr./The Tuscaloosa News via AP)
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The Clarion-Ledger
Penny Temples sits in the yard of the heavily damaged home she shares with her husband Brian in Baxterville, Miss., Monday, April 20, 2020. The Temples’ house was struck by a tornado passing through Lamar County on Sunday evening.
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The Tuscaloosa News
Firefighters work to control a three- alarm fire in the attic space in Moody Music Hall on the campus of the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa, Ala., in the wing housing the rehearsal hall for the Million Dollar Band, Sunday, April 19, 2020.
2571396_web1_2571396-bb26bbdfb59141de950a9e4e2de0d8cd
The Clarion-Ledger
Pastor Zach Smith stands in front of his church, Hurricane Creek Baptist Church, in Sandy Hook, Miss. on Monday morning, April 20, 2020. The church sustained major damage on Sunday when a tornado struck Marion county.
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The Clarion-Ledger
Penny Temples is comforted by her sister, Sherry Broom, outside Temples’ tornado damaged home in Baxterville, Miss. Monday, April 20, 2020.

HEADLAND, Ala. — Suspected tornadoes killed at least two people as severe weather blasted the Deep South and a house fire believed to have been caused by lightning claimed a third person, officials said Monday.

Jerry Oliver Williams, 61, of Henry County died when the storm struck a rural area about 11:30 p.m. Sunday, Coroner Derek Wright said.

The area was under a tornado warning when winds flipped the home Williams shared with his wife and child, Wright said.

“He was in a mobile home, and the mobile home was destroyed by a tornado. He was in the wreckage of the mobile home. His wife and child were with him, and they were OK,” said Wright.

A suspected twister also resulted in one death in Marion County, Miss., said Coroner Jessie Graham. Jerry Johnson, 70, died when his home took a “direct hit” from the storm in the Sandy Hook community, Graham said.

The National Weather Service said it had received reports of large hail and broken power poles in the area, and emergency management officials said 20 homes were damaged.

In south Georgia, the Wilcox County Sheriff’s Office said lightning struck a rural home during a storm early Monday, causing a fire that killed one person. News outlets identified the victim as an elderly woman and reported that state fire investigators would determine a cause.

The deaths came as firefighters worked through storms to contain a blaze at the main music building at the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa. Authorities haven’t determined the cause of the fire, but it happened while strong storms with lightning were in the area.

Firefighters saved most of the instruments and uniforms belonging to Alabama’s “Million Dollar Band,” Mayor Walt Maddox said in a tweet.

Rainfall totals in excess of 2 inches were widespread, and isolated spots in central Alabama received more than 8 inches of rain in a day, the weather service said.

More than 35,000 homes and businesses in Alabama and Mississippi were still without power around noontime Monday.

The Storm Prediction Center received more than 250 reports of possible tornadoes, high winds, hail and storm damage from east Texas to central Florida on Sunday and Monday. Teams from the National Weather Service will assess tracks to determine where tornadoes struck.

The storms hit a week after a two-day outbreak of more than 100 tornadoes that began Easter Sunday killed at least 36 people across the region.

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Categories: News | U.S./World
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