Suspected tornado in Mississippi from Barry's wet remnants

This Sunday, July 14, 2019, image made from a cellphone video provided by the Mississippi Governor's Office shows the flooded welcome sign at the entrance to Eagle Lake community near Vicksburg, Miss. In a Monday, July 15, posting of the short video on Twitter, Gov. Phil Bryant made reference that "the South Delta has become an ocean," with the additional rainfall from Tropical Depression Barry, while calling on the federal government to build pumps to drain water from the confluence of the Yazoo and Mississippi Rivers. (Bobby Morgan/Office of Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant via AP)
This Sunday, July 14, 2019, image made from a cellphone video provided by the Mississippi Governor's Office shows the flooded welcome sign at the entrance to Eagle Lake community near Vicksburg, Miss. In a Monday, July 15, posting of the short video on Twitter, Gov. Phil Bryant made reference that "the South Delta has become an ocean," with the additional rainfall from Tropical Depression Barry, while calling on the federal government to build pumps to drain water from the confluence of the Yazoo and Mississippi Rivers. (Bobby Morgan/Office of Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant via AP)

MEMPHIS, Tenn. — A suspected tornado struck a rural area of north Mississippi on Tuesday, damaging homes and knocking down trees and power lines as the wet remnants of Hurricane Barry rumbled through several states, officials said.

A storm that may have included a tornado passed through Victoria, Mississippi, about 45 miles southeast of Memphis, Tennessee, National Weather Service forecaster Andrew Chiuppi said.

About a dozen homes were damaged by either straight-line winds or a tornado, Marshall County Emergency Management Director Hugh Hollowell said. A few people were checked out for very minor injuries, he said.

Crews were trying Tuesday afternoon to reach areas that were blocked off by large, fallen trees and downed, active power lines, Hollowell said.

Weather service experts were going to survey the area to confirm whether a tornado touched down.

Marshall County resident Jennifer Foy told WREG-TV that windows were blown out of her home.

"All we heard was a loud boom," Foy said. "I guess it was a transformer blowing, and the wind just started moving things across the porch, and it started moving my grill across the porch, so I grabbed the kids and threw them into the bathtub."

Storms caused by what was left of Barry have soaked parts of Mississippi, Tennessee and Arkansas, causing flash flooding in rural areas and prompting the shutdown of a stretch of interstate that links Little Rock and Dallas because of water on the road.

Barry spared New Orleans and Baton Rouge from catastrophic flooding but still drenched other parts of Louisiana with torrential rains. Cities as far as Memphis reported heavy rain from Barry: More than 5 inches of rain have fallen since Friday, Chiuppi said.

In Arkadelphia, about 60 miles southwest of Little Rock, heavy rains inundated an animal shelter, and the shelter says one puppy died.

By 2 p.m. Arkansas Department of Transportation officials said lanes in both directions of Interstate 30, which had been closed due to flooding, were reopened. One small section heading eastbound remained closed while crews addressed slope erosion.

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