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Violent storms, including tornadoes, strike across the Midwest and South

Beginning on Wednesday, a large stretch of the central U.S. from Texas to the Great Lakes is at risk of severe weather, including possible tornadoes and flash flooding.
National Weather Service Storm Prediction Center
Beginning on Wednesday, a large stretch of the central U.S. from Texas to the Great Lakes is at risk of severe weather, including possible tornadoes and flash flooding.

Updated April 03, 2025 at 01:53 AM ET

Millions of people across a large swath of the United States from the South to parts of the upper Midwest are facing heavy rain, high winds, hail, flooding and other dangerous weather as a major storm system swept across the region early Thursday.

Tornadoes were reported in Arkansas and Oklahoma late Wednesday night and by Thursday morning were reported in Indiana and Kentucky.

One person was killed Wednesday evening in southeast Missouri after severe storms moved through that region, local television station KFVS reported, citing the Missouri State Highway Patrol.

By early Thursday morning, power was knocked out to more than 250,000 customers in Arkansas, Mississippi, Missouri, Illinois, Kentucky, Tennessee, Michigan and Ohio, according to PowerOutage.us, which tracks outages nationwide.

Earlier Wednesday, the National Weather Service warned that the "multi-day catastrophic and potentially historic" event will produce a "barrage of life-threatening" conditions, including powerful tornadoes and widespread flash flooding.

An NWS map showed Memphis and Little Rock at high and moderate risk for severe weather, respectively, while other cities including St. Louis, Cincinnati and Louisville are also expected to see inclement conditions.

Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear declared a state of emergency ahead of the storm on Wednesday, saying his state was facing "some of the most serious weather threats I've seen."

The mayor of Little Rock, Ark., announced via social media that the city had canceled the weekly test of its emergency warning sirens, telling residents that any sirens they heard on Wednesday would actually indicate an imminent tornado.

The NWS said areas most at risk for tornadoes included northeastern Arkansas, western Tennessee, western Kentucky, southern Illinois and southeastern Missouri. Some tornadoes may even reach the level of an EF3, which is characterized by estimated wind gusts between 136-165 miles per hour.

Outside of that high-risk region, other parts of those states as well as portions of Indiana, Ohio, Mississippi and Texas could see less severe tornadoes, wind gusts and hail.

NWS forecasters also said intense thunderstorms will hit large stretches of the Great Lakes region, Appalachia and Texas.

Some places within that region could see historic rainfall totals as high as 15 inches through the weekend. The storm front will stall out over the area on Thursday, potentially dropping six inches of rain over a two-day period.

Repeated bouts of rainfall could saturate the soil and worsen flooding, forecasters said. "This isn't routine," the NWS Memphis office warned of the expected flooding. "This is a rare, high-impact, and potentially devastating event."

People in the storm's path could experience "long duration and severe disruptions to daily life" as a result of the expected rainfall and flooding, the NWS added.

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