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Killer storm pummels Texas as forecasters predict worsening weather

A dangerous storm system sweeping through the middle of America has claimed at least four lives
Severe weather hits the Midwest 01:33

FORT WORTH, Texas -- At least three people have died in fast-moving floodwaters in Texas as freezing rain and flooding pummeled the state and other parts of the central U.S. on Friday, with forecasters warning that the chilling weather would worsen over the holiday weekend.

Forecasters issued flash-flood watches and warnings from northern Texas up to St. Louis, with up to 4 inches of rain reported in some places as the storm system makes a slow trek to the northeast. Freezing rain and strong winds also caused at least two fatal traffic accidents in western Kansas on Thursday.

"There's a pretty substantial shield of rain extending from parts of Texas across a lot of Oklahoma and into the mid-Mississippi Valley," said John Hart, a meteorologist with the Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Oklahoma.

In North Texas, where more than 4 inches of rain fell overnight in the Dallas-Fort Worth area - pushing the annual rainfall total into the record books - three people died after being washed away in the deep, rapid floodwaters. At least one other person is missing.

Firefighters in Garland, Texas, found a 29-year-old man dead inside a submerged Hyundai Elantra, fire department spokesman Merrill Balanciere said. The man's name hasn't been released.

Crews found the body of 33-year-old Sandra Jones just after 8 a.m. downstream from her vehicle just west of Fort Worth. Jones' car was washed off the road in waters flowing 10 to 12 feet above the banks of Rock Creek, Johnson County Sheriff's Office spokesman Tim Jones said.

Johnson County sheriff's deputies responded to a high-water rescue early Friday after three people were swept into the water overnight. Two people were rescued, but the third person's body was recovered Friday morning near Mansfield, about 18 miles southeast of Fort Worth, sheriff's spokesman Tim Jones said. No other details have been released.

Firefighters in Fort Worth are waiting for the water to recede before deploying a dive team to continue searching for another woman whose car was swept away in a flood, according to spokesman Kyle Falkner.

Early Friday morning, a Fort Worth area's sheriff's deputy was attempting to rescue a driver that was stuck in rushing water near Rendon-Crowley road and he almost drowned, CBS Dallas reports.

The driver was swept away in the rushing water, and is still missing at this time and the Fort Worth Fire Department says the search for her is on hold until later this morning due to dangerous flooding.

A total 55.23 inches of rain has been recorded at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport this year, topping the annual rainfall record of 53.54 inches set in 1991. National Weather Service forecaster Matt Stalley says rain is forecast in the area through Sunday.

The state transportation department discouraged travel in the Texas Panhandle after the storm front left dozens of major roads, bridges and overpasses covered in ice and snow. Winds whipping around snow also kept visibility low in some places.

Elsewhere, an ice storm warning was in effect for western Oklahoma until noon Saturday, while a winter weather advisory and a flash flood watch were issued for parts of central Oklahoma. The National Weather Service warned of freezing rain and sleet in northern and western Oklahoma Friday, with up to a half inch of ice possible in some areas.

The weather service also issued flood warnings throughout Arkansas, saying much of central and western Arkansas could see 5 to 7 inches of rain through Sunday, while the Ouachita Mountain region could get more than 8 inches.

The Kansas Highway Patrol attributed two traffic fatalities on Thursday to icy roads in western Kansas.

The weather service issued a winter storm warning for sections of central and southern Kansas through early Saturday and said up to a quarter inch of sleet and ice could hit the state by Friday night.

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