mysteriew
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LAKE CHARLES, La. (CNN) -- As Category-3 Hurricane Rita battered the Louisiana coast early Saturday, reports of damage were almost immediate in Lake Charles, La., a city of about 72,000 people about 50 miles northeast of the Sabine Pass, on the border of Texas and Louisiana, where the storm made landfall.
"What we're experiencing now is what people were afraid of," said CNN's Jason Carroll in a Lake Charles hospital, describing the conditions as "very intense. The debris flying in every direction, we've seen transformers blow, we've seen trees toppling over."
"The weather is deteriorating quickly," said Sgt. Joey Fontenot of the sheriff's office in Calcasieu Parish, which includes Lake Charles. "We've got a lot of damage. We're unable to get out of our building."
http://www.cnn.com/2005/US/09/24/news.update.sat/
"What we're experiencing now is what people were afraid of," said CNN's Jason Carroll in a Lake Charles hospital, describing the conditions as "very intense. The debris flying in every direction, we've seen transformers blow, we've seen trees toppling over."
"The weather is deteriorating quickly," said Sgt. Joey Fontenot of the sheriff's office in Calcasieu Parish, which includes Lake Charles. "We've got a lot of damage. We're unable to get out of our building."
http://www.cnn.com/2005/US/09/24/news.update.sat/