Article Image and Credit(s): Homes damaged by a tornado are seen on Friday in Little Rock, Ark. Tornados damaged hundreds of homes and buildings Friday afternoon across a large part of Central Arkansas. Benjamin Krain/Getty Images
In Arkansas, multiple tornadoes tore through the state, along with severe thunderstorms and golf ball-size hail. Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders declared a state of emergency and activated 100 members of the state’s National Guard in response to the deadly weather.
At least four people died and dozens more were injured in the city of Wynne in east Arkansas, Cross County Coroner Eli Long told KAIT-TV.
In Little Rock, at least one person was killed and two dozen were hospitalized, local officials said. Homes, apartment complexes and storefronts were severely damaged, according to the Little Rock Police Department.
“As dawn breaks we start the long process of recovery and rebuilding,” the city’s mayor, Frank Scott Jr., wrote on Twitter Saturday morning.
About 260 people were at the venue to attend a heavy metal concert and calls about a collapse began to come in at 7:48 p.m. local time, Belvidere Fire Chief Shawn Schadle told the Associated Press.
“Our worst fears became a reality earlier when we learned that members of our community have lost their lives,” Sullivan County Sheriff Jason Bobbitt said on Saturday morning.
One elderly woman was killed in Madison County in northern Alabama after a tornado struck her home, County Coroner Dr. Tyler Berryhill told NPR.
In Covington, Tenn., the local police department said the city was “impassable” in the wake of a tornado. Homes were battered, power lines were downed and search and rescue teams were deployed, according to police.
More than 350,000 customers in Indiana, Illinois, Arkansas, Tennessee, Kentucky, Ohio, Michigan, Minnesota and Wisconsin were without power as of Saturday morning, according to Poweroutage.us, which tracks outages.