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Joplin, Missouri (AFP) May 27, 2011 The death toll from one of the worst tornadoes ever to hit the United States rose to 132 Friday as crews continued to search the rubble for survivors and victims. Five days after the massive tornado cut a miles-long (kilometers-long) path of destruction through this town of 50,000, officials have managed to pare down the list of the missing to 156 from 232. But for those families who are still waiting for news, the wait has agonizing and many have mounted their own searches. Teenager Will Norton was sucked from his father's Hummer as they drove home from his high school graduation. Dozens of people have been helping his family search the miles-long debris field -- even heading out in a small plane to scan areas farther afield -- but they have had no luck. "I pray the Lord will guide all of us in the right direction of our many searches today for not only my nephew but the many others who are missing their loved ones," his aunt Tracey Presslor posted on a Facebook page set up to organize search efforts that has garnered mass outpourings of support. Friday's steep decline in the number of missing persons came after the Missouri Department of Public Safety published a list of 232 persons unaccounted for, and discovered that 90 people on the list were in fact alive, said spokesman Seth Bundy. Bundy said an additional six persons on the list were determined to have died, two were duplicate names, and an additional 22 missing persons reports were filed, bringing the official number of missing to 156. Officials said many of the missing were likely to be among the dead, but a full accounting is impossible until next of kin are notified. "Are there individuals who are on the missing list and in fact deceased and in the morgue? Yes," said Bundy. "How many, I won't speculate." Bundy said so far 19 among the 132 bodies recovered have been positively identified and their next of kin notified, and that the state was working as fast it could. "We have people working 24 hours around the clock to do the DNA, investigate the missing persons, talk with the families. It's all hands on deck 24/7," he said. Still the process is an agonizingly slow one for families of the victims because they have not been allowed into the Joplin morgue to make identifications. Visual identification "is not 100 percent accurate, and 100 percent accurate is our goal," Andrea Spiller, Missouri's deputy director of public safety, told reporters after releasing the names Thursday. Sharyn Dawson has been searching for her husband's 74-year-old mother, Patricia Dawson, whose apartment building was completely destroyed Sunday. She said she can sympathize with the difficulty officials have had in confirming the identities of the victims, but said it has left her with little choice but to keep looking until there is news. "I don't want to jump on that bandwagon of people who have been screaming and yelling about how this process has worked. They don't understand how the process works. Neither do I," Dawson said. "But I am almost to that place where I really want to know if she's in the morgue so I can quit wondering what happened." The twister, a massive mile-wide funnel cloud, ranks as the single deadliest tornado to hit the United States since modern record keeping began in 1950. It tore apart everything it touched along a path four miles (six kilometers) long. More than 8,000 structures in the midwestern town were damaged or destroyed when the twister packing winds over 200 miles (320 kilometers) an hour came roaring through with just a 24-minute warning. Missouri Governor Jay Nixon has ordered the state's national guard to remove the wasteland of debris left by the tornado, a mission he described as an "enormous task" but crucial for the city's recovery. The city has meanwhile sent a request to the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) for assistance in removing the rubble. US President Barack Obama will participate in a community memorial service on Sunday.
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![]() ![]() State College, Pa. (UPI) May 26, 2011 With nearly 1,200 tornadoes reported so far, the 2011 season is destined for the U.S. tornado record book, meteorologists say. Four have been deadly EF-5 twisters, the highest rated strength for a tornado, resulting in a death toll has surpassed 500, significantly higher than the average annual fatalities of about 60, Accuweather.com reported Thursday. Science does not have the t ... read more |
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