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Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Woman becomes North Carolina's 24th storm fatality Published - Apr 20 2011 09:52AM EST

Published - Apr 20 2011 09:52AM EST
Martin Evans, second from left, shows the damage the tornado did to his home in northeast Raleigh, N.C. on Tuesday, April 19, 2011.  Cleanup was on...
Martin Evans, second from left, shows the damage the tornado did to his home in northeast Raleigh, N.C. on Tuesday, April 19, 2011. Cleanup was on going as the whole neighborhood was littered and homes damaged with trees felled from Saturday's tornado. From remote rural communities to the state's second-largest city, thousands of residents hit by the most active tornado outbreak recorded in North Carolina's history were clearing away rubble and debris, repairing power lines and facing a recovery that will cost tens of millions of dollars. Gov. Beverly Perdue on Tuesday requested a federal disaster declaration for 18 counties, which would open up federal aid. (AP Photo/The News & Observer, Chris Seward) MANDATORY CREDIT
RALEIGH, N.C. — Officials say a woman who lived with two other tornado victims in a group home in eastern North Carolina has died after being injured in the weekend storm.
Bertie County manager Zee Lamb said Wednesday that 50-year-old Mary Williams had been hospitalized in critical condition since the storm Saturday.
Williams' death brings to 12 the number of people who died in Bertie County, accounting for half the state's death toll of 24.
Bertie was one of 18 counties declared a major disaster area Tuesday by President Barack Obama. State officials estimate that more than 800 homes were either damaged or destroyed.
The National Weather Service has identified 25 tornadoes that touched down across North Carolina on Saturday. The Colerain community where Williams died is about 108 miles east of Raleigh.

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