. good morning, it is 11:00 a.m. r pacific, i mt(çóñit( josé diaz-. shell shocked residents are picking up the tornados torer weekend killing 26 people.fá we re live ina;buz decimated to% of rolling fork, mississippi, as people searchjf for loved ñrone. we re just learning another witness isxd expected today. an on a tentative deal between the u.s. and mexico oni] efforts to crack down on the flow fentanyl and guns across the southern border.çóçó çó and we begin this very busy hour withe1 destruction and hour withe1 destruction and devastation in the american south. right now first responders are frantically searching for survivors after a deadly string of tornados killedt( 26 people over the weekend, leveling entire homesfá and businesses. it marks the xddeadliest storm mississippi has seen ine1t( ove years.xd the twisters packingxd winds as high as 155 miles per hour, and now recovery|■ efforts could become even more complicated with more severe weath
over rolling fork right now, and you can see some of the damage. the damage may remindñi you of when we were in kentucky more than a year agoi] for thatfá devastating tornado that rippedh apart that community asfá well. here 85% of this town is gone according to the mayor.ñi a very tight-knit community, you heardfá that there in some of those interviews. that last woman we intervieoe#ì% ms. miles, her husbandq is actually the police chief. the 911 calls have been coming through to his cell phone5a■xd give you another idea of h /ñfá small this town is, the mayor also happens to be the funeral director. so peo ■ here know everyone who passed away. ujrj injured. in some cases they re lookingw3% for their homes, jose. we met a man yesterday, he sq looking for his home. and i said what is that feeling like?t(é@■ he said listen, my neighbor just i don t care if i never find my home. to can. it gives you a sense of what the people are going through heuñr % ut devastation.