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Virginia residents inspect twister damage

Buildings wrecked, cars flipped; three tornadoes hurt more than 200

IMAGE: DAMAGED HOMES
Steve Helber / AP
Monday's tornadoes destroyed many homes in Suffolk, Va., but appear to have taken no lives.
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Image: Chris Donahue
  Va. tornado aftermath
Residents survey the damage after at least three tornadoes blew through the area, destroying homes and flipping cars.

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updated 12:42 p.m. ET April 29, 2008

SUFFOLK, Va. - Weary residents and business owners, some awakening in emergency shelters, braced themselves to see what was left of their homes and livelihoods Tuesday after three tornadoes smashed houses, piled cars on each other and injured more than 200 people.

One twister in this city outside Norfolk cut a zigzagging path 25 miles long through residential areas, obliterating some homes in sprays of splintered lumber while leaving others just a few feet away untouched.

Search teams with dogs found no sign of deaths or any additional injured victims, Suffolk City Fire Chief Mark Outlaw said.

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“The only thing I can say is we were watched over and blessed,” Outlaw said.

Most home and business owners were blocked from damaged areas until officials could assess the damage. It wasn’t clear when they could return.

Brenda Williams, 43, returned Tuesday to the shopping center where she was buried beneath a collapsed ceiling in a manicure shop during the storm. She was pulled to safety by a stranger, she said.

“I’m not lucky, I’m blessed,” said Williams, who had a 2-inch gash stitched above her left eyebrow and stitches on her right forearm. “I’m fine. I’m here. I’m in the land of the living.”

She retrieved possessions from her car, which was flipped on its roof and destroyed in the parking lot.

Several roads were closed Tuesday morning, and traffic was backed up leading into downtown Suffolk, a city of approximately 80,000 outside Norfolk.

Only 6 in critical condition
Of the 200 injured, only six were listed in critical condition and six were listed as serious.

Officials listed 125 Suffolk homes and 15 buildings as uninhabitable.

Video
  Survivor: 'Scary, really scary'
April 29: MSNBC's Contessa Brewer and Jeff Ranieri report on reaction from residents returning to their homes after Monday's devastating tornadoes in Virginia.

MSNBC

Gov. Timothy Kaine declared a state of emergency, which frees up resources for those areas hit hardest. Kaine planned to visit some of the most damaged areas on Tuesday.

“It’s kind of amazing there were not more significant injuries,” Kaine said in an interview with WTOP Radio in Washington. He said he would ask President Bush for a disaster declaration.

Jennifer Haines and her two young girls hid in a cubbyhole in her house in Suffolk as the tornado hit about three blocks away.

“It sounded like someone shuffling a giant deck of cards or a herd of wild animals coming through. You could feel the house shaking and hear the wind coming in through the cracks in the windows,” Haines said.

“It was so scary I felt like I was having a heart attack.”

Keith Godwin and his wife and two kids took shelter in their bathroom after he looked out a window and saw one of the funnel clouds.

The Godwins’ home is fine except for some debris, as are the rest of those on their side of the street. But houses across the street were badly damaged, including two completely wiped off their foundations and one that was tossed on top of another home.

“All that’s left is a concrete slab,” Godwin said.


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