- 8 people killed after dozens of tornadoes flattened large parts of the Midwest
- 3 died in Massac County, 2 in Washington County, 1 in city of Washington, Tazewell County and 2 in Michigan
- Winds of 166 to 200mph reported in Washington County, The National Weather Service confirmed
- Unusual late season storms moved east at about 60mph over five hours on Sunday
- Dozens treated for injuries in Peoria as rescuers scrambled to uncover survivors in at least 70 leveled homes
- A Chicago Bears and Baltimore Ravens game delayed for two hours as storms approached Chicago's Soldier Field
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Eight people have been killed and 
scores of homes destroyed after at least 60 tornadoes and intense 
thunderstorms swept across the American Midwest yesterday. 
States
 of emergency have been issued for seven Illinois counties in the wake 
of a series of powerful tornadoes that blew flipped over cars and 
uprooted trees. 
Dozens
 of people were injured in the unusually powerful, late-season 
tornadoes. Three people were killed in Massac County, two in Washington 
County and one person died in the city of Washington, Tazewell County. 
On Monday, officials confirmed two people also died in Michigan.
There are fears that some residents are still trapped inside their collapsed homes. 
The
 National Weather Service confirmed preliminary EF-4 tornado damage in 
Washington County in southern Illinois, with winds of 166 to 200 miles 
per hour.
 
Deadly: Eight people were killed and dozens of 
homes devastated when up to 80 tornadoes struck Illinois and the 
surrounding states 
 
Disaster: Jeremy Janssen of Mackinaw Fire Department walks through debris in Washington after the tornado struck 
 
Aftermath: Trees were uprooted and cars flung in the air in the tornado winds that reached speeds of up to 200mph
 
Wreckage: Many homeowners have lost everything as their houses were flattened by the string of tornadoes 
 
Praying for mercy: A resident of Washington, 
Illinois, one of the hardest hit communities in Sunday's storms, surveys
 the damage to her home and neighbors
 
Dark calm: Heavy damage to the roof of the HP 
building from a tornado is seen in the eerie after storm moonlight on 
Hoffer Street in Kokomo, Indiana
 
Frantic: Residents search through a neighborhood
 in Washington after a tornado and strong thunderstorms swept through 
part of the town destroying several homes
 
In shock: A boy takes a break from helping comb 
the rubble of Curt Zehr's home in Washington. Zehr's wife and adult son 
took shelter in their basement as their farm house was destroyed
 
Unthinkable: A man stands near a pickup that belonged to farmer Curt Zehr after a tornado blew through Zehr's farm on Sunday
 
'The tornado happened in my backyard, and 
you can hear people screaming': Anthony Khoury captured the twister on 
camera in Washington
 
The storm is moving east and forecasters say could still cause damage in New York 
The storms moved dangerously fast, tracking east at 60 miles per hour, with most damage caused within just five hours. 
In two communities, including the 
Illinois town of Washington, population 15,000, one of the estimated 60 
twisters smashed through and destroyed at least 70 homes.
Dozens
of injured residents were rushed to nearby Peoria, Illinois, for 
medical treatment as rescuers continued to scour leveled neighborhoods 
in search of survivors trapped beneath debris.
'It was complete destruction,' Anthony Khoury, who lives in Washington, told CNN. 'There are people in the streets crying.'
Khoury said that all he could do was pray as he watched a tornado touch down and heard toward his home.
'The tornado happened in my backyard, and you can hear people screaming,' he told CNN. 'We were freaking out.'
Khoury and his home managed to survive the storm.
Three people were killed in Massac County, two in Washington County and one in city of Washington, Tazewell County.
The Washington County coroner announced that an 80-year-old man and his
78-year-old sister died when a tornado hit their home in New Minden, 
Illinois.
New Minden and Washington, which 
were both severely damaged by the tornadoes, are separated by nearly 200
miles and the distance attests to the fury and speed with which this 
cluster of storms struck.
 
Gone: A homeowner moves debris next to a set of stairs that once lead to the second floor of his home in Washington
 
Terrified: Residents embrace after they 
discovered their home was destroyed when a tornado and thunderstorms 
tore through a portion of Washington, Illinois
 
Surveying the damage: A news cameraman shoots 
video of the rubble of an auto parts store destroyed by a tornado in 
Washington, Illinois
 
Confusion: Friends and neighbors comb the rubble
 of Curt Zehr's home just outside Washington, Ill. His family took 
refuge in the basement and all were saved
 
Not just homes: A Tippecanoe County, Indian,a 
middle school lay in ruins after one of the 60 tornadoes blew through 
the area near Lafayette just before 3pm Sunday
DEVASTATION ACROSS THE MIDWEST: ILLINOIS TO INDIANA AND BEYOND
ILLINOIS
 
 
 
Shell-shocked: Pat Whitaker, 82, sits under a 
blanket in her nightgown outside what was once her home waiting for help
 to come in Gifford, Illinois, a town of fewer than 1000 people about 90
 miles from Washington, Illinois
Intense thunderstorms and tornadoes ripped off roofs and sent trees toppling in several communities across the state. 
At
 least six people were killed, including, an elderly man and his sister 
who died when a tornado struck their farmhouse in rural New Minden in 
southern Illinois, officials said.
One
 is the worst-hit areas was the western Illinois town of Washington, 
where the storm flattened houses and sent cars flying through the air.
As
 high winds slammed into the Chicago area, officials at Soldier Field 
evacuated the stands and order the Bears and Ravens off the field. Fans 
were allowed back to their seats shortly after 2 p.m., and the game 
resumed after about a two-hour delay.
INDIANA 
Severe thunderstorms packing tornadoes
and heavy winds rolled across Indiana Sunday afternoon and evening, 
injuring several people and causing widespread damage.
Gov.
Mike Pence said 12 counties reported either tornadoes or storm damage 
after the initial line of storms had traveled midway across Indiana.
Kokomo
police asked residents to stay home and off the streets after city 
officials declared a state of emergency in the wake of severe storms. 
The city police department posted photos on its Twitter account showing 
buildings with roofs torn off and a destroyed bank branch.
OHIO
Heavy winds from storms 
rolling through Ohio caused damage to buildings and have left thousands 
without power. More than 38,000 customers are without power across 
northwest Ohio due to the storm.
 
Widespread: A car sits halfway in a basement at a
 leveled home near Home Avenue and Hoffer Street in Kokomo, Indiana. In 
the string of 60 storms, devastation hailed down in towns across 
hundreds, perhaps thousands of miles in the Midwest
WISCONSINStrong winds 
knocked out power to thousands in the Milwaukee area, damaged buildings 
and downed trees in Dodge County and sent Sunday churchgoers scrambling 
into church basements for safety. In the town of Hustisford, cattle 
sheds, garages and storage sheds were damaged, said Dodge County 
Emergency Management Director Joseph Meagher said. No injuries were 
immediately reported, he said.
MICHIGAN
High winds and rain slammed into the western part of the state. There are no immediate reports of injuries, but utilities reported tens of thousands of power outages. Churches in western Michigan canceled evening worship services.
High winds and rain slammed into the western part of the state. There are no immediate reports of injuries, but utilities reported tens of thousands of power outages. Churches in western Michigan canceled evening worship services.
KENTUCKY
Tornadoes were spotted in at least eight Kentucky counties and at least one home had its roof blown off, a spokesman for the Kentucky Emergency Management said. Buddy Rogers said it was unclear how many of those tornadoes actually touched down. He said a home in Rochester in Butler County had its roof blown off and there were reports of damages to homes and other structures in the various counties, but no reports of injuries.
Tornadoes were spotted in at least eight Kentucky counties and at least one home had its roof blown off, a spokesman for the Kentucky Emergency Management said. Buddy Rogers said it was unclear how many of those tornadoes actually touched down. He said a home in Rochester in Butler County had its roof blown off and there were reports of damages to homes and other structures in the various counties, but no reports of injuries.
MISSOURI
Severe storms slammed the eastern part of Missouri, leaving tens of thousands without power and destroying a mobile home. The National Weather Service said the storm tore shingles off of roofs and uprooted trees across parts of St. Louis and St. Louis County. Ameren Missouri reported more than 37,000 outages Sunday afternoon, mostly in the St. Louis area.
Severe storms slammed the eastern part of Missouri, leaving tens of thousands without power and destroying a mobile home. The National Weather Service said the storm tore shingles off of roofs and uprooted trees across parts of St. Louis and St. Louis County. Ameren Missouri reported more than 37,000 outages Sunday afternoon, mostly in the St. Louis area.
Residents walk the 
debris-strewn streets, likely with no clue where to begin to put the 
pieces of their shattered lives back together.
But Washington wasn't the only affected town in the now shell-shocked Midwest.
Tony Laubach watched another tornado touch down in Lebanon, Indiana--a town nearly 200 miles to the east of Washington.
'These storms having been moving so fast today, it's been hard to keep up,' said Laubach, who is a storm chaser.
Around
50 tornadoes were reported up until 4pm today as part of a severe, 
unpredictable and unusually late in the season storm system. The number 
grew to 60 within two hours but some say the figure was closer to 80. 
At one point the city of Chicago was 
threatened, leading to the temporary suspension of a Bears-Ravens 
football game. Spectators were evacuated from the stadium seats to 
shelters under the concourse. 
 
Pulled from the wreckage: Rescuers pull an injured resident from a demolished house
 
Devastation: Richard Miller salvages items from his brothers home, after the tornado ripped through the Washington neighborhood 
 
Field of damage: Entire neighborhoods in Washington have been destroyed and acres of land are strewn with debris
 
Dangerous: A picture on Instagram shows a tornado charging through Washington, Illinois, yesterday 
 
Salvage: Residents survey the damage caused the deadly tornadoes and storms in Washington 
'Attention:
Please clear the stadium seating area and relocate to the nearest 
covered concourse. Please remain calm and leave the seating area in an 
orderly fashion,' a message on one of Soldier Field's jumbotrons read. The game resumed after a two-hour delay. 
The
tornado warning for Cook County, Illinois has been dropped but now 
Indiana and Kentucky are on high alert. In Illinois flights are still 
grounded at Chicago's O'Hare and Midway Airports and approximately 
83,000 are without power in the area.  
The community of Washington in 
central Illinois appeared particularly hard-hit, with one resident 
saying his neighborhood was wiped out in a matter of seconds.
Michael
Perdun said: 'I stepped outside and I heard it coming. My daughter was 
already in the basement, so I ran downstairs and grabbed her, crouched 
in the laundry room and all of a sudden I could see daylight up the 
stairway and my house was gone.
 'The whole neighborhood's gone, (and) the wall of my fireplace is all that is left of my house.'
Illinois
State Police Trooper Dustin Pierce said the tornado cut a path from one
end of town to the other, knocking down power lines, rupturing gas 
lines and ripping off roofs. 
 
Together: A couple walks along a devastated 
street in the Devonshire subdivision of Washington where trees have been
 stripped bare
 
Devastation: Billy Vestal and his 3-year-old 
daughter Lillian evacuate an area near their home in East Peoria, 
Illinois after a tornado touched down there Sunday afternoon
 
 
Rare:  The home-destroying twister was the product of some unusually late and 
powerful November storms
 
Taking it in: Firefighters stand in the middle 
of Devonshire street on the north side of Washington, Illinois - with a 
mostly blue-sky above
 
Squashed: A mattress is wrapped around a tree on
 Devonshire Street in Washington, Illinois on Sunday following the 
storm. Destroyed cars and homes made into matchsticks littered the town 
southwest of Chicago
 
Shattered: The intense toll on homes and other 
property continued to be assessed by the dumbstruck residents of 
Washington, Illinois
 
Shadow of the storm: Dozens of tornadoes and strong winds left behind a path of destruction yesterday 
 
Picking up the pieces: John Ramsey helps recover items from a family friend's destroyed home in Pekin, Illinois
 
Rescue: Aimee Royer holds a Toto-look-alike dog 
she rescued from the debris after a tornado touched down in her 
subdivision in Washington, Illinois 
 
Evacuate: Fans are asked to leave the stadium during the Bears-Ravens game in Chicago which was 'temporarily suspended'
 
Game over: Baltimore Ravens players walk off 
Soldier Field in Chicago after their game against the Bears was 
temporarily suspended following tornado warnings
'I went over there immediately after the tornado, walking through the neighborhoods, and I couldn't even tell what street I was on,' Washington Alderman Tyler Gee told WLS-TV.
'Just completely flattened - some of the neighborhoods here in town, hundreds of homes.'
In addition, WLS-TV reported that a local grocery store kept customers and workers safe from harm in a freezer during the worst of the storm, a Washington alderman told Chicago's WBBM Radio that there were 'quite a few people hurt' but didn't offer details. The damage, he said, was extensive.
After the twister, Alderman Gee went door-to-door, yelling in windows, trying to see if anyone needed help and at one house he heard banging on a wall.
'I had to climb in through the window. The front door was blocked shut. I climbed in and there was debris up against the bathroom door that she was in...I had to get the debris out to open the door,' he told WBBM.
But Gee soon found himself in the path of the storm. He quickly moved locations, which ended up being a 'very, very good decision'.
 
Uprooted: The winds were so strong in Pekin, Illinois today that this tree completely detached from its strong roots 
'It went right through where I was sitting in my pickup truck. It was unbelievable.
'All I can ask for is a bunch of prayers from everybody...we're going to need them,' Alderman Gee said.
Washington residents Curt Zehr said the tornado turned his farmhouse into a mass of rubble scattered over hundreds of yards. 
His truck was sent flying and landed on an uprooted tree. 
'They
heard the siren... and saw (the tornado) right there and got into the 
basement,' he said of his wife and adult son who were home at the time. 
Then,
seconds later, when they looked out from their hiding place the house 
was gone and 'the sun was out and right on top of them.'
There have also been reports of looting in Washington, state troopers said. 
 
Torn up: Chuck Phillips looks out at the damage inflicted by a tornado on his Pekin, Illinois neighborhood
 
Ripped out of the walls: Pink insulation litters a yard in Pekin showing just how extensive the damage was 
At 
OSF Saint Francis Medical Center in Peoria, spokeswoman Amy Paul said 37
 patients had been treated, eight with injuries ranging from broken 
bones to head injuries. 
Another
 hospital, Methodist Medical Center in Peoria, treated more than a 
dozen, but officials there said none of them were seriously injured. 
Anthony Khoury captured the storm 
ripping through his neighborhood in Washington. The 21-year-old was with
his family when he thought he heard a helicopter over the house. 
The noise turned out to be the massive tornado, which caused everyone inside the panic.
 
Touchdown: Around 50 tornadoes touched down in the region today before 4pm, represented by the purple icons in the map above
'The tornado happened in my backyard and you can hear people screaming,' he told CNN. 'We were freaking out.' 
The
'man of faith' started praying, and his Our Fathers and Hail Marys are 
clearly audible in his video of the terrifying moment. 
After
the tornado passed, his family went outside to discover that their home
had been completely spared in the tornado's wrath - but some neighbors 
were not so lucky. 
'It
was complete destruction. There are people in the streets crying,' he 
said. 'We're so blessed that our  street was untouched. You drive out of
my street and all this destruction is there. A mile away it is all 
destroyed.'
Patti
Thompson of the Illinois Department of Emergency Management said it was
difficult to get information from the scene in the aftermath of yesterday's storms. 
The tornado emerged out of a large 
weather system bringing thunderstorms to parts of Indiana, Ohio, 
Michigan and Kentucky, the weather service said.
As the storm system moved east, the National Weather Service issued tornado warnings for several counties in Indiana. 
A
 tornado was confirmed near Covington, Indiana at around 2:30pm. The 
tornado was moving at 75mph and the storm was producing pea-sized hail. 
Tornado damage was also reported in northern Vermillion County, Indiana, near Interstate 74 and State Route 63. 
Officials at Soldier Field evacuated the stands and ordered the Bears and Baltimore Ravens off the field. 
Fans were allowed back to their seats shortly after 2pm, and the game resumed after about a two-hour delay. 
Earlier,
the Office of Emergency Management and Communications had issued a 
warning to fans, urging them 'to take extra precautions and... 
appropriate measures to ensure their personal safety.'
 
Twister: Neighbors in Pekin, Illinois - just 
south of Peoria - survey the damage to their street shortly after a 
tornado touched down in the area
 
Ripped from the ground: An overturned tree threatens the roofs of two houses in Pekin, Illinois
 
Ominous: The sky is still darkened by the storm system which whipped up a tornado near Pekin, Illinois
 
Moving east: The above maps shows the storm 
system moving through Illinois which produced the tornado near Peoria 
around noon today
Meteorologists are not clear how many tornadoes struck yesterday. There were about 80 twister reports, but Bill Bunting of the National Weather Service's Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Okla., said the actual number will likely be in the 30 to 40 range.
He said that's because the same tornado often gets reported multiple times.
People were warned yesterday to prepare early as the storms moved too fast for people to wait to seek safety.
'This is a very dangerous situation,' said Russell Schneider, director of the Storm Prediction Center. Some 53million people in 10 states were 'at significant risk for thunderstorms and tornadoes,' he said.
 
Split: Firefighters in Webster Groves, Missouri 
climb over a tree that fell on a house. The residents were at home the 
time the tree crashed but were not injured
 
Tornado watch: Severe thunderstorms are expected
 today in the yellow region highlighted in yellow. The thunderstorms 
will be so severe that they could lead to tornadoes around Indiana and 
Illinois
 
Gone: Neighbors step out to assess the damage on their street in Washington, Illinois
 
Wiped out: Cars are all that remain in this Washington, Illinois neighborhood after the tornado 
 
The aftermath: Homes were torn apart after a tornado passed through Washington, Illinois - just a few hours southwest of Chicago 
The White House issued a statement saying President Barack Obama had been briefed about the damage and was in touch with federal, state and local officials.
The White House issued a statement saying President Barack Obama had been briefed about the damage and was in touch with federal, state and local officials.
Such severe weather this late in the season also carries the risk of surprise.
'People
 can fall into complacency because they don't see severe weather and 
tornadoes, but we do stress that they should keep a vigilant eye on the 
weather and have a means to hear a tornado warning because things can 
change very quickly,' said Matt Friedlein, a weather service 
meteorologist. 
The
 storm also slammed through parts of Wisconsin, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio 
and Kentucky as it made its way east into the mid-Atlantic states on 
Sunday night. Tornadoes, large hail and damaging winds tore through 
several communities, leaving thousands without power as emergency crews 
tried to clear roads. 
 
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