Two killed and several injured as tornado rips through southern Illinois
A tornado struck southern Illinois on Sunday evening, killing two residents and injuring at least five others. The fatalities occurred in Mount Vernon, where 62-year-old Sarita Kimble and 83-year-old Delores Shelton died inside separate structures destroyed by the storm.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedA tornado struck southern Illinois on Sunday evening, killing two residents and injuring at least five others. The fatalities occurred in Mount Vernon, where 62-year-old Sarita Kimble and 83-year-old Delores Shelton died inside separate structures destroyed by the storm. The tornado, which touched down around 5 p.m., also leveled at least three mobile homes, though the injured individuals did not sustain life-threatening injuries. This event follows a fatality in Kansas on Saturday due to a similar storm. Illinois has experienced a significant number of tornado reports this year, with experts noting that climate change may be contributing to concentrated, volatile tornado outbreaks.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extracted1,031 tornadoes had been reported nationwide in 2026, with 40 of them highly destructive EF2 severity or greater.
Illinois had already seen 164 tornado reports in 2026 up to last Thursday, more than any other year since records began.
The fatalities occurred in Mount Vernon, with victims identified as Sarita Kimble, 62, and Delores Shelton, 83.
Two older residents were killed and at least five other people were injured in a tornado that ripped through a rural county in southern Illinois on Sunday evening.
Potent tornadoes are increasingly striking in concentrated, volatile outbreaks amid the climate crisis, which is primarily driven by carbon emissions from the burning of fossil fuels.