Two Dead From Louisiana Twisters
Mobile Homes Destroyed, Other Homes Damaged, More Than A Dozen Injured
-
Play CBS Video Video Deadly Tornado Hits Louisiana The last thing a recovering southern Louisiana needed was the deadly tornado that touched that down in New Iberia Parish. Kelly Cobiella reports.
-
The home of Darren and Patricia Romero in New Iberia, La., was heavily damaged, Jan. 4, 2007. (AP)
-
Interactive Funnels Of Fury Explore how and where tornadoes are formed and witness their destructive power.
-
News Tools Disaster Links Looking for disaster-related information on the Web? Go to the Disaster Links web page put together by CBS News Producer Dan Dubno.
The twisters, which were reported in eastern Iberia Parish just before 4 p.m., tore off roofs and ripped seven mobile homes from their foundation, Sheriff Sid Hebert said.
"We had five people in one double-wide manufactured home and a mom and daughter perished," Hebert said. "We've had two critical injuries to family members inside that same manufactured house."
The little girl was 6 years old.
At least 15 people were taken to area hospitals, Hebert added.
Three children thought to be missing have been found, accounted for and are fine, reports CBS News correspondent Kelly Cobiella.
The tornado reports came in as a severe band of storms hit the parish, hard and fast.
"In about a 4 to 6 minute of time, we've had what I consider four touchdowns, whether they were tornadoes or microbursts, we're still not sure," Hebert said. "There was substantial damage to homes, manufactured housing, power lines."
"All I seen was the wind, the rain, everything, the wood ... flying all over," resident Connie Leger told CBS affiliate KLFY-TV.
Steven Bruno and his pregnant girlfriend were in their trailer when the tornado lifted the home from it's foundation and flipped it twice.
"We were just lucky to get out, to get out alive," he said.
The storms also flooded roads and Gov. Kathleen Blanco declared a state of emergency in the parishes of Acadia, Allen, Sabine and Vermillion.
In Mississippi, at least nine people were hurt in Kemper County and eight homes damaged when the storm hit there late Thursday and early Friday, according to the Mississippi Emergency Management Agency said. Five more homes and business were damaged in Stone County.
No serious injuries were reported early Friday in Alabama, but several vacant mobile homes parked outside a mobile home plant in Hamilton were damaged and power lines were down, officials said. Another mobile home was destroyed in Cherokee County.
In New Orleans, crews were dispatched to clean drains and prepare for possible flooding ahead of a weather system that could drop several inches of rain on an area that has been drenched in the past two weeks.
A flash flood watch was in effect for portions of southeast Louisiana and southern Mississippi through Friday morning. The National Weather Service forecast 2 to 4 inches of rain, with locally heavy amounts possible, creating potential flooding.
More than 8 inches of rain has fallen in the Deep South in the past seven days, reports CBS News meteorologist George Cullen.
While stormy weather this time of year isn't unusual, this latest system comes after two storms that helped bring December's rainfall total in New Orleans to more than 10 inches, nearly twice the normal average.
One of the storms, just before Christmas, caused widespread flooding in parts of the city and neighboring Jefferson Parish, and raised concerns about how well the area, hit hard by Hurricane Katrina in 2005, would fare in another hurricane.
© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."




