Ahad, 2 Jun 2013

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Storm chasers, TV personalities among Oklahoma fatalities - CNN

Posted: 02 Jun 2013 07:44 AM PDT

TWISTEX team member Carl Young was killed along with Tim and Paul Samaras while chasing a tornado.
TWISTEX team member Carl Young was killed along with Tim and Paul Samaras while chasing a tornado.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Tim and Paul Samaras and Carl Young were killed chasing a tornado on Friday night
  • They were known to viewers of a former Discovery Channel show "Storm Chasers"
  • Samaras "was one of the safest people to go out there," a veteran storm chaser says

(CNN) -- Three storm chasers were among the nine people killed in powerful storms that struck Oklahoma on Friday night, relatives told CNN on Sunday.

Tim Samaras, 55, his son Paul Samaras, 24, and Carl Young, 45, died while chasing a tornado in El Reno, relatives said.

"Thank you to everyone for the condolences. It truly is sad that we lost my great brother Tim and his great son, Paul," Jim Samaras wrote in a statement posted on his brother's Facebook page.

"Our hearts also go out to the Carl Young family as well as they are feeling the same feelings we are today. They all unfortunately passed away but doing what they loved," he wrote.

Discovery Channel storm chaser Tim Samaras.
Discovery Channel storm chaser Tim Samaras.
Paul Samaras.
Paul Samaras.

Tim Samaras founded TWISTEX, the Tactical Weather Instrumented Sampling in Tornadoes Experiment, to help learn more about tornadoes and increase lead time for warnings, according to the official website.

Two children were also among the dead from Friday night's storms. Scores of people were injured.

Tim and Paul Samaras and Carl Young were known to viewers of the former Discovery Channel show "Storm Chasers."

"We are deeply saddened by the loss of Carl Young, Tim Samaras and his son. Our thoughts and prayers go out to their families," the network said in a statement.

Doug Kiesling, a videographer who chases storms and calls himself "The Weather Paparazzi," said the three men were more than storm chasers. "They're researchers," he said.

"Tim wasn't one of the guys that would go up close, he would go into the paths, drop probes, and then get out of the way."

"This thing is really shaking up everyone in the chasing community," he added. "We knew this day would happen someday, but nobody would imagine that it would happen to Tim. Tim was one of the safest people to go out there. ... He's had close calls but he's always had an escape route."

Photos from a professional storm chaser

Tornadoes rip through heartland again: How to help

CNN's Josh Levs contributed to this report.

Powerhouse fire grows overnight; at least 5 structures destroyed - Los Angeles Times

Posted: 02 Jun 2013 07:46 AM PDT

The Powerhouse fire destroyed at least five structures during a wind-fueled assault on Lake Hughes and Lake Elizabeth on Saturday and has burned nearly 20,000 acres. The 4-day-old fire in the Palmdale area grew rapidly in size overnight amid the hot, dry conditions.

As of Saturday afternoon, only 3,600 acres had burned.

Authorities were still trying to determine how many structures were lost when the fire bore down on the lake communities. Hundreds of residents remain evacuated, and nearly 1,000 fire personnel remain on the fire lines.

PHOTOS: Powerhouse fire

Firefighters on Saturday night rescued people from homes and had some close calls. At one point, a fire station was surrounded by flames.

Water-dropping helicopters were used to make night drops, helping beat back the flames from the communities.

Lake Hughes resident Patty Robitaille, 61, sat in her car Saturday night and watched the Powerhouse fire burning at the top of a nearby hill.

Inside the vehicle, her pit bull, Roxie, slept amid the belongings Robitaille was able to grab before she was forced to evacuate.

"I grabbed pictures and documents," Robitaille said.   

The Caltrans employee said she had pulled over at the intersection of Johnson and Elizabeth Lake roads to wait for her boyfriend and son, who stayed behind to water down their house.

Robitaille said her home on Muir Drive and Lake Hughes Road was among the first in the direct path of the fire.

MAP: Critical areas

She said the fire had burned on the ridge of the mountain at 6:15 p.m. Within an hour, the flames had reached the back of her home.  

"It kept  going and going," Robitaille said. "Driving away, you could see the town burning up," she added. "I don't think there's going to be much left."

She said she noticed flames near Hughes-Elizabeth Lakes Union Elementary  School, the Lancaster Fire Station and the post office. The buildings sit along the north side of Lake Elizabeth Road.

"It was horrible," Robitaille said. "Everything happened fast."

Across the intersection, in a small empty lot, Elizabeth Lake resident Sara Ford, 43, waited in her SUV for her husband and two sons. They too had stayed behind to protect their home, she said.

Ford said her home is in the Club Ranch area, which sits on the western part of the Elizabeth Lake Golf Course.

"We have had fires out here before, but this is the closest that it's ever been in my 18 years of living here," Ford said.

At 11:35 p.m. the fire had burned slightly down the side of the hill.  The air got smokier and the orange glow in the sky turned brighter as the flames grew.  Ash fell everywhere. 

A squad of Los Angeles County Sheriff's deputies made their way down on Elizabeth Lake Road and into Alderwood Road, where dozens of homes sat on the east side of the golf course.

Not far, Stephanie Purdy, 43, and her boyfriend JJ Azan, 43, watched the fire. They listened to a scanner through a phone app. At one point, a propane tank exploded in the distance. 

"It's devastating for Lake Hughes," Purdy said.

ALSO:

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Powerhouse fire grows overnight; at least 5 structures destroyed

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