'I can't explain my anger and sadness': Father of girl, 9, who died when school was hit by tornado describes his horror at finding the building reduced to rubble



Janae Hornsby, 9, 'always had a smile on her face'



Entire neighborhoods flattened in Moore, Oklahoma after 190mph winds pulverized a 30-square-mile stretch



Officials initially said there were as many as 91 people dead - with 51 confirmed - but on Tuesday morning they corrected this to say there were 24 confirmed dead; some people had been counted twice amid the chaos

Seven children died at Plaza Towers Elementary School



Hundreds of homes wiped out and more than 50,000 people left without power



The devastating tornado was larger than 1999 storm in the area that left 36 people dead






The father of a nine-year-old girl who perished when Plaza Elementary School suffered a direct hit from Monday's tornado has described his horror at arriving at her school to find nothing but a pile of rubble.

Joshua Hornsby was driving to pick up his daughter Janae when the massive storm hit the city of Moore, Oklahoma but he became stuck in traffic and was unable to reach her in time.

'When I got to the school it was complete gone,' he told ABC. 'It was just rubble. There's no way to explain the anger or sadness I had at that time.'

Janae was one of seven children who died of asphyxiation at the school after the tornado flattened the building. Her grandfather said authorities told the family at around 9 a.m. on Tuesday that the little girl's body was at the medical examiner's office.

Her father remembered her as a fun spirited child 'who always had a smile on her face' and shared photographs of her grinning angelically.



She perished alongside six other children, including eight-year-old Kyle Davis. Other families have released photographs of more children who are missing, including Sydney Angle.



The names of the victims began to emerge as hope of finding anyone alive began to wane. Nearly 24 hours after the two mile-wide tornado ravaged Moore, officials started to search flattened homes and piles of rubble with cadaver dogs. No survivors were found on Tuesday.

The storm, which barreled through the Oklahoma City suburb for 17 miles on Monday, injured 237 people and killed at least 24, including nine children and four people in Oklahoma City. The weather service confirmed on Tuesday that the powerful storm was an EF5 - the maximum on the scale.



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Horror: Teachers carry children away from Briarwood Elementary school after a tornado destroyed the school in south Oklahoma City. The desperate search continued overnight for two dozen children feared dead after yesterday's monstrous tornado, which already took the lives of seven of their classmates





People look through the wreckage of their neighborhood after the tornado devastated the Oklahoma City suburb of Moore on Monday

After the monster tornado struck, around 80 National Guard members were deployed and first responders with dogs were drafted in to help search the debris at Plaza Towers elementary, hoping for a miracle . As many as 50,000 people are without power in the area, officials added.

Crews used jackhammers and sledgehammers to tear away concrete, and chunks were being thrown to the side as the workers dug.



National Guard choppers were being used across Moore overnight to detect body heat of survivors trapped under collapsed buildings and other rubble so they could direct rescuers.

Devastating aerial images taken immediately after the tornado show Plaza Towers - as well as hundreds of homes and businesses - completely leveled with cars thrown into the school grounds by the powerful storm.



Frightened third graders were being pulled from the wreckage alive on Monday afternoon as rescue workers passed the children down a human chain before taking them to a triage center set up in the school's parking lot.

Traumatic: A man sits down in shock in front of Plaza Towers Elementary school as seven children are found dead in a pool of water Worst in memory: This detailed map of downtown Moore, Oklahoma, locates the path of Monday's devastating tornado and compares it to the path of the 1999 tornado, which had the most powerful winds ever recorded

This aerial photo shows the remains of homes hit by a massive tornado in Moore, Oklahoma, on Monday

Relief: Cindy Wilson texts to friends after her home was destroyed in the afternoon tornado. Cindy and her husband, Staff Sgt. B. Wilson, took cover in their home's bathtub when the tornado hit Efforts: Rescue workers help free one of 15 people trapped in a medical building at the Moore hospital complex This aerial photo shows the remains of houses in Moore after the tornado, which flattened entire neighborhoods, setting buildings on fire and landing a direct blow on an elementary school

Rescue workers help free one of the 15 people that were trapped at a medical building at the Moore hospital complex

Lost: People look for belongings after the tornado struck - President Barack Obama has declared a major disaster in Oklahoma

Injured: A nurse helps an older man that suffered a head injury, left, while another man is taken away from the IMAX theater that was used as a triage area

Staff said there had been at least 75 people in the school of around 500 students when the tornado hit. T he 4th, 5th, and 6th grade students were taken from the school to a church before the twister barreled through.

Students who were inside the building described clinging to the walls of the hallway where many of them huddled during the storm as the twister battered the school. Others cowered in closets or bathrooms to protect themselves. Rhonda Crosswhite, who shielded students with her body in bathroom stalls at the school, said that one terrified child had cried: 'I love you, I love you, please don't die with me' as the ferocious winds brought the building down on top of them. On Tuesday, she was reunited with fourth-grader Damien Kline, whom she had held in a tight hug. He told the Today show: 'We were in class... we went in the bathroom,. Then we heard the tornado, it sounded like a train coming by. 'A teacher took cover of us, Miss Crosswhite. She was covering me and my friend Zachary... Then she went over to my friend Antonio and covered him. So she saved our lives.'

Rescue workers help free one of the 15 people that were trapped at a medical building at the Moore hospital complex after a tornado tore through the area Saved: A woman is pulled from debris on Monday after the tornado barreled through Through the night: A handout picture provided by the Oklahoma National Guard shows rescue personnel working to find survivors beneath rubble At the ready: Red Cross Oklahoma shared this picture of the influx of volunteers who arrived at centers following the storm One sixth grade boy named Brady told ABC affiliate KOCO-TV in Oklahoma City that he and other students took cover in the boys' bathroom. 'Cinderblocks and everything collapsed on them but they were underneath so that kind of saved them a little bit, but I mean they were trapped in there,' he said. One woman, Jessica Flood, reported on Twitter that her sister-in-law's nephew, a boy named Kyle, was among the missing children at Plaza Towers. When the boy's mother went to the school to see if her son had been found, she suffered a heart attack, Ms Flood said. Governor Fallin told Oklahomans to 'stay away and let the search and rescue teams and families get in there,' referring to the pulverized school. Many land lines to stricken areas were down and cellphone traffic was congested. Poor cell phone reception was making it difficult for frantic families to connect with each other but a website Safeandwell.com has been set up to assist people who fear for their loved ones. A reporter said they asked a paramedic about the injured at Plaza Towers, and the medic 'just shook his head'. Briarwood Elementary was also entirely flattened after staff sent an email to parents at 2.45pm to say that the school was on lockdown and they would be holding the children at the campus until the storm had passed. At 5pm local time, authorities said all the children were accounted for. Injured: A tornado victim is loaded in an ambulance in south Oklahoma City after the storm with 200mph winds hit on Monday afternoon Nothing left: Gene Tripp sits in his rocking chair where his home once stood after being destroyed by a tornado Taking it in: A boy sits on the trunk of a car outside a house which has been wrecked in the storm Past: In May 1999 , the town of Moore was hit by a severe tornado which had the highest winds ever recorded on Earth Last one standing: Dana Ulepich searches inside a room left standing at the back of her house which was destroyed Kay James holds her cat as she sits in her driveway after her home was destroyed by the tornado that hit the area on Monday Workers continued to dig through the rubble of Plaza Towers Elementary School on Monday afternoon Horror: Local residents look through the debris that remains where homes once stood Moore police dig through the rubble of the Plaza Towers Elementary School following a tornado in Moore A meteorologist for KFOR branded the aftermath 'the worst tornado damage in the history of the world'.

Rep. Mark McBride told CNN that the devastation was the worst he had ever seen. 'Moore hospital it just looks like someone bombed it,' he said. 'If you didn't have a storm shelter you didn't make it through. There were no closets that you could hide in because there were no closets.'

As news of the devastating tornado spread the Queen today said she was 'deeply saddened' by the loss of life and devastation caused by the tornado in Oklahoma and sent her 'deepest sympathies' to all those whose lives have been affected. Pope Francis tweeted his sympathies: 'I am close to the families of all who died in the Oklahoma tornado, especially those who lost young children. Join me in praying for them.' A Facebook page has been set up asking people to post any pictures or documents they have found after the tornado in the hope of reuniting them with their owners. One woman who lives more than 100 miles away in Tulsa found a picture of a woman in her flower bed.

Decimated: A truck lays damaged in a field near the Moore Medical Center, background, after a tornado moves through Moore A damaged police car in the midst of debris from the violent storm that lasted 45 minutes Force: The upturned cars show the full force of the storm which ripped through the suburbs

Chaos: Dozen of cars piled up on top of each other in the parking lot of Moore Hospital



Site: A map shows where the worst tornado damage was sustained in Moore, Oklahoma on Monday. The red triangles show the areas hit Paths: This map shows the paths of tornadoes over the years in the Moore, Oklahoma area, with red showing the May 3rd, 1999 tornado path; blue the May 8th, 2003 tornado path and green the May 20th, 2013 tornado path You can see how a portion of the 2013 storm (green) overlaps the 1999 storm (red), which was an F5 tornado that did around 1.1 billion dollars in damage. 36 people died in that storm and 8,000 homes were badly damaged or destroyed. A Moore resident took a picture of the monstrous twister as it barreled towards the heavily-populated Oklahoma City suburb A monstrous tornado roared through the Oklahoma City suburbs, flattening entire neighborhoods with winds up to 200 mph, setting buildings on fire and landing a direct blow on an elementary school Destroyed: As dawn breaks on Tuesday, storm clouds roll in over a destroyed neighborhood the day after a tornado hit in Moore, Oklahoma, Desolate: The area looks completely wiped out without any signs of life, hours after the massive storm hit

THE SCIENCE BEHIND THE STORM: HOW DID IT HAPPEN? The severe thunderstorms that produce tornadoes form where cold dry air meets warm moist tropical air.

The wind coming into the storm starts to swirl and forms a funnel. The air in the funnel spins faster and faster and creates a very low pressure area which sucks more air - and objects on the ground into it.

Most tornadoes spin cyclonically (counter-clockwise) in the Northern hemisphere.

The twisters are most common in a section of the U.S. called Tornado Alley, with most forming in the months of April and May.

The vortex of winds varies in size and shape, and can be hundreds of meters wide.

There are, on average, 1,300 tornadoes each year in the United States, which have caused an average of 65 deaths annually in recent years.

Conditions on the ground do not generally affect the power of a tornado, including terrain and structures like buildings.

Moore, Oklahoma is within the boundaries of Tornado Alley, which includes northern Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska and South Dakota.

The city was the site of another devastating tornado that tore through the town in 1999.

Speaking outside Norman Regional Hospital Ninia Lay, 48, said she huddled in a closet through two storm alerts and the tornado hit on the third.

'I was hiding in the closet and I heard something like a train coming,' she said under skies still flashing with lightning. The house was flattened and Lay was buried in the rubble for two hours until her husband Kevin, 50, and rescuers dug her out.

'I thank God for my cell phone, I called me husband for help.'

Her daughter Catherine, seven, a first-grader at Plaza Towers Elementary School, took shelter with classmates and teachers in a bathroom when the tornado hit and destroyed the school. She escaped with scrapes and cuts. At Southmoore High School, about 15 students were in a field house when the tornado hit. Coaches sent them to a locker room and made them put on football helmets, the Oklahoman newspaper said. It said the students survived.

Oklahoma City Police Capt. Dexter Nelson warned that downed power lines and open gas lines posed a risk in the aftermath of the system. A KFOR reporter says that doctors told her of looting at the hospital damaged by the tornado. In video of the storm, the dark funnel cloud could be seen marching slowly across the green landscape. As it churned through the community, the twister scattered shards of wood, pieces of insulation, awnings, shingles and glass all over the streets. Volunteers and first responders raced to search the debris for survivors. Chris Calvert saw the menacing tornado from about a mile away. 'I was close enough to hear it,' he said. 'It was just a low roar, and you could see the debris, like pieces of shingles and insulation and stuff like that, rotating around it.' Even though his subdivision is a mile from the tornado's path, it was still covered with debris. He found a picture of a small girl on Santa Claus' lap in his yard. 'The whole city looks like a debris field,' Glenn Lewis, the mayor of Moore, told NBC.

'It looks like we have lost our hospital. I drove by there a while ago and it's pretty much destroyed,' Lewis said.



Rescuers recover a horse from the remains of a day care center and destroyed barns

Workers look for victims under debris from a tornado that passed across south Oklahoma City

Glenn Rusk hugs his neighbor Sherie Loman outside her home north of Briarwood Elementary School after a tornado moved through the area

A destroyed house remains after a huge tornado struck Moore, Oklahoma, near Oklahoma City

Aftermath: Fires have also broken out at buildings after the monster storm thanks to exposed power lines, CNN reported

KILLER STORMS: THE DEADLIEST TORNADOES IN U.S. HISTORY 695 deaths. March 18, 1925, in Missouri, Illinois and Indiana.

The tri-state tornado remains the deadliest in U.S. history.

It crossed from southeastern Missouri, through southern Illinois and then into southwestern Indiana. The tornado carried sheets of iron as far as 50miles away and obliterated entire towns and injured more than 2,000 people.

216 deaths. April 5, 1936, in Tupelo, Mississippi

203 deaths. April 6, 1936, in Gainesville, Georgia

The tornado outbreak over two days caused millions of dollars’ worth of damage across the region. The Tupelo tornado destroyed more than 200 homes, sweeping many into Gum Pond along with the residents. It killed whole families, including one of 13. The following day the Gainesville tornado - a double tornado event - emerged. It destroyed the Cooper Pants Factory, killing 70 workers - the highest tornado death toll from a single building in U.S. history.

181 deaths. April 9, 1947, in Woodward, Oklahoma

The Woodward tornado is the most deadly to ever strike the state of Oklahoma. It was almost two miles wide and traveled for 100 miles at speeds of up to 50 miles per hour.

More than 100 blocks in Woodward were levelled and over 1,000 homes and businesses destroyed.

158 deaths. May 22, 2011, in Joplin, Missouri

The one-mile wide tornado was the third to strike the town of Joplin since 1971. More than 1,000 people were injured and almost $3billion worth of damage was caused. Local media reported that more than half of the 158 who died were killed inside their homes.

143 deaths. April 24, 1908, in Amite, Louisiana, and Purvis, Mississippi

Most of the people killed were in rural areas.

Many historians believe the death toll was higher than official records state as many the deaths of many African-American may not have been properly recorded. Both the Amite and Purvis tornadoes were rated as F4 - the second strongest possible - and injured hundreds of people.

116 deaths. June 8, 1953, in Flint, Michigan

It is the deadliest tornado to strike Michigan and injured more than 800 people. The Flint tornado, which traveled at speeds of 35mph, is rated as a F5 on the Fujita scale - the strongest possible. Of the 116 people killed, all but three died on a four-mile stretch of Coldwater Road.

114 deaths. May 11, 1953 in Waco, Texas

The Waco tornado killed 22 people as it destroyed the packed Dennis Building and a 12 died in cars crushed in the street.

Almost 200 businesses and factories were destroyed, causing $41.2million worth of damage. The deadly tornado spurred the development of a nationwide severe weather warnings system.

114 deaths. May 18, 1902 in Goliad, Texas

The tornado leveled churches, as well as more than 200 homes and businesses. Of those killed, 50 people died as they sought shelter in a black Methodist church in Goliad.

103 deaths. March 23, 1913, in Omaha, Nebraska

The tornado struck on Easter Sunday at about 6pm, with little or no warning. It was so strong that steel train cars were later found pierced by pieces of debris from destroyed houses.



Tiffany Thronesberry said she got an alarming call from her mother, Barbara Jarrell, after the tornado.

'I got a phone call from her screaming, "Help! Help! I can't breathe. My house is on top of me!"' Thronesberry said.

Thronesberry hurried to her mother's house, where first responders had already pulled her out. Her mother was hospitalized for treatment for cuts and bruises.

Barbara Garcia, a survivor of the massive tornado, found her dog buried alive under the rubble during her interview with CBS News.

A man with a megaphone stood near a Catholic church Monday evening and called out the names of surviving children. Parents waited nearby, hoping to hear their sons' and daughters' names.

Don Denton hadn't heard from his two sons since the tornado hit the town, but the man who has endured six back surgeries and walks with a severe limp said he walked about two miles as he searched for them.

As reports of the storm came in, Denton's 16-year-old texted him, telling him to call.

'I was trying to call him, and I couldn't get through,' Denton said.

Eventually, Denton said, his sons spotted him in the crowd. They were fine, but upset to hear that their grandparents' home was destroyed.

'There are so many homes in the air right now,' storm chase Spencer Basoco told CNN of Moore. 'It's destroying everything. There's so much debris.'

Jamie Shelton, the public information officer for Moore, had pleaded with residents to seek shelter before the storm dissipated. 'It's happening as we speak,' he said. 'People need to take this seriously... Take precaution, be aware. If you're outside the area, please pray for us.'



CBS has pulled tonight's season finale of 'Mike & Molly,' which included a storyline that involved a tornado.



It comes as yet more heartbreak for residents of Oklahoma, after a series of deadly tornadoes barreled through Kansas and Oklahoma this weekend , leaving a violent trail of destruction through the Midwest and South , killing two elderly men, injuring 39 people and flattening hundreds of homes.

Several terrifying twisters were spotted on Saturday evening near Rozel, a sparsely populated area in central Kansas. They were also reported to the south in parts of Oklahoma and Iowa.

A National Weather Service advisory warned: 'You could be killed if not underground or in a tornado shelter.'

'Complete destruction of neighborhoods, businesses and vehicles will occur. Flying debris will be deadly to people and animals.'

At least four separate tornadoes touched down in central Oklahoma on Sunday afternoon, including one near the town of Shawnee, 35 miles southeast of Oklahoma City, that laid waste to much of a trailer park.

Two men, 79-year-old Glen Irish and 76-year-old Billy Hutchinson, were found dead after the tornado wrought its devastation on Shawnee, Oklahoma.

Irish's body was found out in the open after the storm passed through, while Hutchinson was taken to Norman Regional Hospital, but later pronounced dead, according to the medical examiner.



'You can see where there's absolutely nothing, then there are places where you have mobile home frames on top of each other, debris piled up,' Pottawatomie County Sheriff Mike Booth said after surviving damage in the Steelman Estates Mobile Home Park.

'It looks like there's been heavy equipment in there on a demolition tour. It's pretty bad. It's pretty much wiped out,' he said.

Across the state, 21 people were injured, not including those who suffered bumps and bruises and chose not to visit a hospital, said Keli Cain, a spokeswoman for the Oklahoma Department of Emergency Management.

'I knew it was coming,' said Randy Grau, who huddled with his wife and two young sons in their Edmond home's safe room when the tornado hit.

Twisted metal lies in the road as people take pictures of damage after a huge tornado struck on Monday

A woman is comforted after a tornado that destroyed buildings and overturned cars struck Moore

A woman walks through debris after a huge tornado struck Moore, Oklahoma, near Oklahoma City, May 20, 2013

A sign for a local restaurant lies on the ground after a huge tornado struck Moore, Oklahoma, near Oklahoma City

An American flag sits among devastation after the massive twister barreled through Moore, Oklahoma

Debris hangs from a tree over a destroyed home as Abby Madi and Peterson Zatterlee comforts Zaterlee's dog Rippy after escaping the brunt of the storm

