Heavy rains batter 11 states in south and midwest, 20 killed
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Another round of torrential rain and flash flooding came Saturday for parts of the South and Midwest already heavily waterlogged by days of severe storms that also spawned deadly tornadoes.
From The Associated Press
Flooding worsened across the U.S. South and Midwest, threatening communities already waterlogged and badly damaged by days of heavy rain and storms that killed at least 23 people.
From Seattle Times
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At least eight people were reported dead, including one child, after storms slammed into multiple states over the weekend.
At least 16 people are believed to have died after tornadoes, heavy rain and flash flooding battered parts of the South and Midwest in the United States. Among them was a 9-year-old boy, who was swept away while walking to a school bus stop in Kentucky on April 4.
1don MSN
In Louisville, Kentucky, river levels rose 5 feet in just 24 hours. In Owensboro, Kentucky, a levee broke, sending water into fields. Meanwhile, in Dawson Springs, Kentucky, rising waters reached a substation, causing authorities to cut power.
1d
Irish Star on MSNFlorida tornado fears as severe weather belt including heavy rain set to slam into stateResidents across Florida are bracing themselves after the horror weather that deveastated states across the Midwest and South over the past week
The storm inundating a large stretch of the South and Midwest has wreaked havoc since Wednesday. But heavy rain and flooding are likely to ease considerably by Monday.
Intense thunderstorms are expected to unleash rounds of heavy rain that could bring dangerous flooding to tens of millions of people in the central and eastern US this week.
Severe weather and flood risks return to Middle Tennessee Saturday after storms left five dead statewide earlier this week.
Heavy rains, damaging winds and dangerous floods have ravaged the South and the Midwest for days, killing at least 23 people.
Days of unrelenting heavy rain and storms that killed at least 18 people worsened flooding as some rivers rose to near-record levels and inundated towns across an already saturated U.S. South and
Much of Middle Tennessee experienced rain, wind, hail and seemingly constant tornado and flash flood warnings as training storms slashed through the area