A powerful tornado tore through southern Indiana and parts of Kentucky early on Sunday, killing at least 23 people and injuring more than 200, many caught sleeping when the twister hit, officials said.
At least five people were confirmed dead in
Three area hospitals reported treating more than 220 people. At St. Mary's
Officials said the death toll would likely climb as rescue workers picked through rubble in house-to-house searches and scoured farm lands. About 130 Indiana National Guard troops were called in to assist in recovery efforts and to help provide security and clean up debris.
At least two people were found dead in a soybean field in
The Eastbrooke mobile home park in
In one trailer home, rescue workers found a young mother alive, but her husband and daughter dead and her two-year-old missing, said Eric Williams, chief deputy of the sheriff's department in
Search teams at the trailer park were cheered briefly when they happened across a young child alive in a ditch tightly entangled in shards of metal and other debris, Williams said. The child was flown to a nearby hospital but neither the child's identity nor condition were immediately known.
An apartment complex in nearby Warrick County was also hit hard, with the top floors ripped off, said Vanderburgh County Sheriff's office spokesman Lt. John Strange.
Such severe tornadoes are rare in the U.S. Midwest in November, according to the
Through September, killer tornadoes were reported in
On average, tornadoes kill about 70 people annually in the
PHOTO CAPTION
Chris Smith looks through the remains of a family friend's home after a tornado destroyed it in the Willow Brooke subdivision in