Homes were destroyed and damaged in Indiana and state police were assisting in search and rescue efforts in the city of Winchester, as a band of storms moved across the Midwest on Thursday, officials said.
An Indiana State Police official said at a late night news conference that earlier reports of three deaths were incorrect and state police were not aware of any deaths — but he said there was a “terrible, terrible event” in Winchester and many significant injuries.
Randolph County emergency officials warned that a confirmed tornado was on the ground near Winchester at 7:56 p.m. and moving towards the city of around 4,800 near the Ohio border.
The National Weather Service said that there is damage in Winchester, most likely from a tornado, but that a tornado had not been confirmed. Survey teams often confirm tornadoes later after they visit scenes of damage.
Up to half the buildings in Selma, a community of around 750 people west of Winchester, may have been damaged, emergency management officials said.
“The sky was completely black,” Lisa Gulley, who lives in Selma, told NBC affiliate WTHR of Indianapolis. She was filming the weather.
“I saw the clouds were kind of spinning and I saw it form, basically over my neighbor’s house, just two doors down — and then it just dropped,” Gulley said. “We barely had time to get in the house.”
Gulley told WTHR that as soon as they got in the hallway of their home, one of their fence panels went flying through a sliding glass door.
“The whole door just exploded,” she said. “It took all the shingles off the back of my house.”
The Emergency Management Agency in Delaware County, where Selma is, said despite the damage it was relieved to report only one minor injury as of late Thursday.
The storms occurred on a day when tornado watches stretched across a band of the U.S., from northeast Texas, through parts of Arkansas and Indiana, and into Ohio. More than 13 million people were under tornado watches Thursday…
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