Deaths reported after multiple tornadoes touch down in Oklahoma

(FOX NEWS) At least two people were killed after multiple tornadoes touched down Monday across Oklahoma.

The emergency director in Garvin County, Oklahoma, Bud Ramming, said a man believed to be in his late 70s was found dead in Wynnewood, located south of Oklahoma City.

The twister prompted forecasters to issue a "tornado emergency" for communities east of Wynnewood, noting the storm could be particularly violent.

Another death was reported in Johnston County, Fox 25 reported.

The Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Oklahoma, had warned that a "substantial tornado risk" could develop in portions of the Southern Plains and Ozarks late Monday.

A series of violent thunderstorms dropped tornadoes near Oklahoma City and in the rolling hills south of the capital.

"You are in a life-threatening situation," forecasters declared when they declared a tornado emergency for Roff, population 725, and Hickory, population 71. "Flying debris will be deadly to those caught without shelter."

Television images showed at least three homes destroyed, multiple overturned vehicles and trees torn limb to limb. A roof lay near a hay barn after the first tornado reports from near Wynnewood along Interstate 35.

The Oklahoma Highway Patrol closed five miles of the main roadway between Oklahoma City and Dallas as the storm approached. It opened about 15 minutes later.

Meteorologists said twisters with wind speeds above 111 mph were possible from eastern Oklahoma to central Arkansas. Hail 2 inches or more in diameter is possible from eastern Texas to southeastern Kansas.

About 41 million people from Houston to Sioux City, Iowa, are at risk for some type of stormy weather.

While the threat was less farther north, forecasters issued a tornado warning for a storm near Lincoln, Nebraska.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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