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Tornadoes Kill 7 in Missouri as Severe Weather Rolls Through Central U.S.

May 17, 2025
in News
Tornado in St. Louis Kills 5 as Severe Weather Rolls Through Central U.S.
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At least seven people were killed, five of them in St. Louis, after tornadoes struck Missouri on Friday and left a trail of uprooted trees, downed power lines and collapsed buildings, the authorities said.

The tornadoes were part of widespread severe weather across several states moving through the Midwest and Mid-Atlantic, unleashing large hail, damaging winds and tornadoes, including some strong ones.

“Our city is grieving tonight. The loss of life and the destruction is truly, truly horrendous,” Cara Spencer, the mayor of St. Louis, said in a Friday night news conference where she announced that the death toll had risen to five. “Tonight, we are focused on life, saving lives and keeping people safe.”

A tornado killed two people in Scott County, in southeastern Missouri, the county sheriff’s office said in a statement.

The storm in St. Louis initially hit around 3 p.m. local time and damaged an area of about 20 square blocks, said Dennis Jenkerson, the city’s fire commissioner.

The city has urged residents to stay off the roads and away from damaged areas while emergency crews sweep through neighborhoods responding to distress calls and looking for people trapped in their homes. On Friday evening, officials announced a curfew in parts of the city until 6 a.m.

“This is going to be a very exhausting and extensive search pattern,” Commissioner Jenkerson said.

The tornado had also affected cellphone towers, the city authorities said Friday night, and service was being gradually restored in the area damaged by the tornado.

The Barnes-Jewish Hospital, Missouri’s largest hospital, received about 20 to 30 injured patients. A number were in critical condition, but most were expected to be discharged on Friday, a spokeswoman said. The St. Louis Children’s Hospital received 15 patients with storm-related injuries, all but two of whom were expected to be released on Friday.

The National Weather Service in St. Louis said it confirmed a tornado on its radar on Friday afternoon.

Large portions of the Midwest and the Mid-Atlantic were at significant risk of severe weather on Friday, as a multiday storm system moved slowly east. A bull’s-eye centered over parts of Missouri, Illinois, Indiana and Kentucky was at risk for some of the most severe weather.

Here are the key things to know:

  • Images on social media showed numerous trees down in St. Louis. The tornado also damaged buildings in St. Louis, as seen in images and videos shared online. Ripped brick facades, mangled chairs and a badly damaged building with water spraying out of it were among the scenes in the city.

  • More than 725,000 customers from Missouri to Maryland were without power, according to poweroutage.us.

  • Weather Service forecasters issued a rare dust storm warning for portions of northwest Indiana and north-central Illinois.

Indiana, Kentucky and Missouri were expected to see major storms.

The risk on Friday generally stretched from eastern Texas into the Mid-Atlantic and the Northeast. But the area of highest concerns were in Bloomington, Ind.; Evansville, Ind.; Louisville, Ky.; and St. Louis.

Those areas were at particular risk of supercells, highly organized, longer-lasting storms that produce stronger winds and larger hail than typical thunderstorms.

The National Weather Service office in St. Louis warned of hail of nearly three inches in diameter and damaging winds. Large hail was reported in Van Buren, Mo., about 150 miles south of St. Louis.

The Weather Service issued tornado warnings on Friday night for several counties in Kentucky.

“Parts of Kentucky particularly and southern Ohio will have the potential for multiple rounds of thunderstorms and each producing heavy rain,” said Richard Bann, a meteorologist with the Weather Prediction Center.

On Friday, a curtain of dust pushed into Chicago at about 6:30 p.m., and visibility dropped to a quarter-mile at Chicago Midway International Airport and near zero on highways.

Weather Service forecasters in Chicago issued a dust storm warning for portions of northwest Indiana and north-central Illinois, including the Kankakee River Valley.

This is only the third time the office has ever issued a dust storm warning.

“This is not common at all,” said Zachary Wack, a meteorologist with the Weather Service in Chicago.

Mr. Wack said webcams along sections of Interstates 55 and 57 showed zero visibility. The dust storm was kicked up by powerful winds generated by thunderstorms that raced across central Illinois.

The threat of thunderstorms comes to the Midwest in a week of unseasonably warm weather.

The heat was expected to continue on Friday, with many locations across the region forecast to record afternoon highs in the 80s and 90s. Lower temperatures are predicted to arrive this weekend as cooler, drier air sweeps in from the northwest.

The Northeast also saw severe weather.

On Friday afternoon, thunderstorms moved through southern New Jersey, northern Delaware, northern Maryland and southeastern Pennsylvania.

The area was under a severe thunderstorm watch, with the storms capable of delivering hail as big as limes and winds up to 70 miles per hour.

Flash-flood warnings were issued across several areas, including Philadelphia and Trenton, N.J., and a few tornado warnings were in effect in southern New Jersey.

Aimee Ortiz, Simon J. Levien and Qasim Nauman contributed reporting.

Amy Graff is a Times reporter covering weather, wildfires and earthquakes.

The post Tornadoes Kill 7 in Missouri as Severe Weather Rolls Through Central U.S. appeared first on New York Times.

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