AccuWeather's Tony Laubach reported live from Mississippi on April 3 as severe storms roared across the Midwest and South for a second day in a row.
Days of relentless rain and severe storms in the Mississippi and Ohio River Valleys may have many wondering whether the weather has gone topsy-turvy or if it is a sign of something else.
Parts of Mississippi will likely see severe weather and tornadoes on Wednesday with more widespread severe storms expected this week.
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WJTV on MSNSevere weather in Mississippi injures six, causes damageSix people were injured when severe storms moved through Mississippi April 2-3, 2025. According to the Mississippi Emergency Management Agency (MEMA), one injury was reported in Marshall County, two in Tate County and three in Tippah County.
A four-day, once-in-a-generation weather event is pounding the middle of the U.S. with destructive tornadoes and life-threatening flooding.
Yet again, another round of severe weather is set to threaten the central U.S. with damaging winds, large hail and tornadoes starting late Tuesday and continuing through Thursday.
Several tornadoes are believed to have touched down in the Mid-South Wednesday night into early Thursday morning.
Tornadoes were reported from Arkansas to Illinois on Wednesday and early Thursday, according to the National Weather Service Storm Prediction Center. Across multiple states, the devastation was immense. The storms and tornadoes flattened homes, tore off roofs, collapsed a warehouse, decimated a church and overturned trailers.
The city announced in a press release that early warning sirens did not function due to "possible weather-related interference."
A deadly severe weather system continues to charge east Thursday and is expected to tear across more than a dozen states, from parts of Texas to the densely populated mid-Atlantic and Northeast,