Tornadoes Devastate Oklahoma, Killing 4 and Injuring Dozens

Michael Clements
By Michael Clements
April 28, 2024US News
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Tornadoes Devastate Oklahoma, Killing 4 and Injuring Dozens
A partially torn off roof on a damaged home in Omaha, Neb., on April 27, 2024. (Chris Machian/Omaha World-Herald via AP)

SULPHUR, Okla.—At least four deaths and dozens of injuries are attributed to a storm system that ripped through 12 counties late on Saturday, April 27, including an estimated Category F4 tornado that ripped through Sulphur, Oklahoma, killing one woman and injuring others.

Gov. Kevin Stitt, Oklahoma House Speaker Charles McCall, and State Senate Majority Floor Leader Greg McCortney toured the devastated downtown area on Sunday afternoon. Mr. Stitt called it “the worst damage I’ve seen in six years.”

Annie Mack-Vest, Oklahoma Department of Emergency Management, said state resources have been mobilized since the system that produced the tornados had been predicted on April 26. During a press conference Sunday afternoon, Ms. Mack-Vest said Mr. Stitt had declared a state of emergency and taken other steps to ensure assistance would be available for everyone impacted by the storm.

The governor pointed out that the legislature was still in session and could authorize appropriations for assistance as needed. Mr. McCall and Mr. McCortney agreed.

As of 3 p.m. Sunday, the Oklahoma Department of Emergency Management’s website reported four confirmed fatalities: two in Holdenville, one in Marietta, and one in Sulphur.

The website stated that 100 injuries had been reported. Ms. Mack-Vest told media gathered in Sulphur that she had no reports of anyone missing, but stressed that crews were still searching the wreckage.

According to witnesses, the Sulphur tornado ground a path north through the heart of downtown, flattening businesses and homes, uprooting trees in the Chickasaw National Recreation Area, and flipping cars and trucks at around 10:30 p.m. Mr. Stitt said that may have reduced the number of casualties since many of the now-destroyed businesses were closed.

NTD Photo
Pizzaria owner Cesar Trinidad inspects his damaged truck outside his restaurant in Sulphur, Okla., on April 28, 2024. (Michael Clements/The Epoch Times)

Unfortunately, up to 30 patrons were reportedly gathered in Raina’s Sports Lounge when the storm flattened it, Mr. Stitt told reporters. One woman was killed, and several were taken to hospitals. Ms. Mack-Vest confirmed there were injuries but said she had no details on their severity.

Mr. Stitt said he was told the scope of the damage indicated the storm could have been as strong as an F4, though that has not been determined officially. He said the fact that most of the downtown businesses were closed for the night probably saved lives. Mr. McCortney agreed.

“We are probably blessed that it wasn’t any worse than what it was,” Mr. McCortney said.

About two blocks to the east of Raina’s, the historic Artesian hotel escaped serious damage. The brick building towers over a destroyed downtown. A few blocks from the hotel, and minutes before the storm, Cesar Trinidad was closing his business, Delizi Pizza, for the day.

Mr. Trinidad said his cook was starting his pickup truck to drive home when the tornado sirens began to sound. They knew the severe weather was possible but thought the worst of it would pass south of town.

As his cook ran back into the building, Mr. Trinidad turned to run into the kitchen. Less than two minutes after hearing the sirens, Mr. Trinidad said the front windows of his restaurant were blown in by the wind, showering him and his cook with shards of glass, chairs, and tables. He said the wind blew him into the soda fountain at the back of the restaurant.

Mr. Trinidad’s employee received cuts and bruises to his back and legs. Though sore and shaken, Mr. Trinidad said he escaped serious injury. On Sunday afternoon he surveyed his ravaged store and vehicles.

“I don’t know what we will do,” he said.

A block south of Mr. Trinidad’s establishment was the Sulphur Coin Laundry, which had been running for 25 years. It’s now a just concrete slab with damaged washing machines and an uncertain future. Les Kirby owns the business, and, like his neighbor at the pizza parlor, he isn’t sure what he will do.

He said he would like to rebuild and continue, but looking at the devastation around him on Sunday, he said he isn’t sure how long Sulphur’s downtown will take to heal. In addition to the laundromat, Mr. Kirby owns rental properties in town, and many of those have also been damaged.

“It could take years to build this all back,” he said.

From The Epoch Times

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