Minnesota tornadoes kill 3, injure dozens

Minnesota tornadoes on Thursday were responsible for at least 3 deaths and dozens of injuries.

A large funnel cloud touches down west of Albert Lea, Minn., early evening Thursday, June 16, 2010. The tornado was traveling northeast. Several tornadoes were reported in southern Minnesota and northern Iowa Thursday evening, some causing major damage.

AP

June 18, 2010

When the storm came through, Jay Hotakainen huddled in the basement of his northwest Minnesota home with his 12-year-old son and 6-year-old daughter. The walls shook and everything in the house rattled.

"They say it sounds like a freight train. It does," Hotakainen said.

At least three people were killed and dozens injured as a series of tornadoes tore through Minnesota on Thursday, flattening homes, toppling power lines and leaving a big chunk of Hotakainen's hometown of Wadena treeless.

In nearby Almora, a northwest Minnesota town of about 20 people, an elderly woman was killed when a twister wiped out her home, said Otter Tail County Emergency spokesman David Hauser. Brittney Schulke of Almora told The Daily Journal that her grandmother, Margie Schulke, was killed and that her grandfather, Norman Schulke, suffered two broken shoulders.

Debris including shingles and pieces of buildings littered the town. Several large trees were uprooted.

Farther north, in Mentor, a man was killed when a tornado destroyed a Cenex gas station, the Polk County sheriff's office said. Three other people were hurt.

A series of tornadoes hit 40 to 60 rural properties in southern Minnesota's Freeborn County, killing one person at a farm west of Albert Lea, the county's Emergency Management Director Mark Roche said.

Back in Wadena, Scott Kern was at the Walmart store when the storm came through there. He returned to his mobile home to find it demolished and his all-terrain vehicle up in a tree. His dog, Buttercup, was missing.

"Thanks to the man upstairs I wasn't there," he said, fighting back tears. "This is a real tear-jerker for everybody."

Wadena Mayor Wayne Wolden said sirens gave plenty of warning in his town of about 4,300, where the National Weather Service said a tornado struck around 5 p.m. Wolden said many people were there for an all-school reunion. Both Wadena and Almora are about 70 miles southeast of Fargo, N.D.

Twenty people were treated for injuries at the Wadena hospital, mostly for bumps and bruises, nursing supervisor Kathy Kleen said.

Crews worked overnight to control dozens of gas leaks. Wadena's community pool was destroyed, the high school "extremely busted up" and the community center beyond repair, Wolden said.

His wife, Lori Wolden, said houses were "half-gone" and "there's no trees" in the southwest part of the town, which was barricaded after the storm.

Patty Jones was evacuated from her apartment because of a gas leak and walked around Wadena before taking shelter at the local armory.

"It's terrible. It's whacked out. Nothing's left in one part of town," Jones said.

In Almora, Mabel Wangerin said she heard her bedroom windows rattle as the storm came through, then watched her quilt fly off the bed and out the window.

"I was over by the window and prayed and prayed," Wangerin said.

The National Weather Service said twisters also were spotted in central and southern Minnesota.

In Freeborn County, about two dozen Minnesota National Guard members secured damaged properties, while farmers chased down about 1,000 roaming hogs that got loose in the storm, Roche said.

So many power lines were down that the Minnesota Department of Transportation said it had closed a section of Highway 251 through Freeborn County until at least midmorning Friday.

Gov. Tim Pawlenty and the state's emergency management director, Kris Eide, planned to visit the Wadena and Albert Lea areas Friday to meet with local officials and survey the damage.

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