Tropical Storm Debby drenched Florida on Monday, killing at least four people and threatening south-eastern US states with heavy rainfall and catastrophic flooding.
A 13-year-old boy died when a tree was blown onto a mobile home in Levy County, the sheriff’s office said, after Debby made landfall on Florida’s Gulf Coast early Monday as a category one hurricane.
Authorities said a truck driver was killed after his 18-wheeler plunged into a canal in Hillsborough County, while a 38-year-old woman and 12-year-old boy died in a car crash in Dixie County.
The storm moved into Georgia overnight on Monday and is expected to go offshore before approaching the South Carolina coast on Thursday, according to the National Hurricane Centre (NHC).
“This is a level four out of four risk for excessive rainfall,” Michael Brennan, director of the NHC, told reporters.
“This is going to result in a prolonged extreme rainfall event with potential for catastrophic flooding across coastal portions of Georgia, South Carolina, even extending up into North Carolina,” he added.