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Tornado Fury: 8 Dead as Storms Ravage 12 States
8 Mar
Summary
- At least eight people died across 12 states due to severe tornadoes.
- Over 100,000 residents are without power following the destructive storms.
- Millions remain at risk as a cold front threatens further severe weather.

Destructive tornadoes and severe winds have ravaged 12 states, resulting in eight fatalities and leaving more than 100,000 residents without power. As of March 8, 2026, approximately 100 million Americans across the central and western United States faced continued tornado risk following a night of intense twisters.
Michigan and Oklahoma experienced the most severe impacts, with tornadoes causing widespread destruction beginning on Thursday. In Oklahoma, Governor Kevin Stitt declared a state of emergency for eight counties due to the storms, which tragically claimed the lives of a mother and her 13-year-old daughter, Jodie and Lexi Owens, in Major County. Michigan also reported at least four deaths, including three in Branch County from a powerful tornado.
Residents in cities like Pittsburgh, Indianapolis, Dallas, Atlanta, and New Orleans were alerted to potential further risks. A threatening cold front moving across the Eastern United States heightened concerns for more twisters, brutal winds, and hail. Rain, thunderstorms, and flash flooding were also anticipated in Texas, the Great Lakes, and the Mississippi Valley, with Ohio and Michigan facing additional tornado activity.
This severe weather event marks the first tornado-related fatalities since June 2025. Unseasonably warm temperatures, 20 to 30 degrees above seasonal norms, collided with cooler Canadian air, creating explosive atmospheric conditions conducive to such violent storms. Millions in Texas and New England were braced for continued severe weather through March 8 and 9.




