Tag Archives: Montana

Sources say 10 shot outside The Licking in Miami Gardens; witnesses say rapper French Montana was filming video – WSVN 7News | Miami News, Weather, Sports

MIAMI GARDENS, FLA. (WSVN) – Ten people have been injured in a shooting outside The Licking in Miami Gardens, 7News sources said, and the incident happened while rapper French Montana was shooting a video at the time, according to witnesses.

Miami Gardens Police and Miami-Dade Fire Rescue units have responded to reports of a shooting at the restaurant, located on the 17600 block of Northwest 27th Avenue, just before 8 p.m., Thursday.

7News cameras captured an active scene outside the restaurant just after 10 p.m. The business has been cordoned off by crime scene tape, as ambulances and police vehicles lined busy 27th Avenue.

According to a law enforcement source, there are three different crime scenes, but it’s unknown where the other two are.

As of 10 p.m., Miami Gardens Police have not confirmed the number of victims.

“We’re still working [the scene]. Yeah, there’s multiple shots, there’s multiple cases,” said MGPD detective Diana Gorgue. “We’re still working. We can’t confirm any numbers at this moment, because everything is still fresh, and they’re still investigating.”

Paramedics have airlifted four victims to Ryder Trauma Center.

“We had a total of 10 [victims]. Four brought themselves to the hospital, and we’ve treated six transported,” a first responder said in radio transmissions.

7News cameras captured rescue crews wheeling two of the victims into the hospital on stretchers. Awaiting doctors began treating the victims right away.

Witnesses said Montana had been shooting a music video outside of The Licking.

Cellphone video captured the rapper outside the restaurant wearing a red shirt.

Witness Ced Mogul said he came out to watch Montana shoot the video, and at one point, someone in the crowd watching the production was robbed of his watch, keys and wallet.

“[He asked to] call his mother and see if we can get spare car keys and make sure, you know, he’s OK, and then the gunshots went off,” said Mogul, “at least 13, 14, 15 gunshots. It was very rapid, it sounded like an assault rifle.”

Police have not specified whether someone shot into the crowd or whether there was an exchange of gunfire.

“I took off running, and I was looking back, but I was like, ‘You know what? Let me just duck first, and then people started asking me, you know, ‘Can you help me?’” said Mogul. “When I realized people were asking for help, there was nothing you could do about it when you got shot.”

7News sources said one of the victims is listed in critical condition, but the other patients’ conditions are unknown.

Montana’s status is unknown, but as of late Thursday night, there was no indication that he was among the injured.

No fatalities have been reported.

Police said they believe the shooting was an isolated incident. It’s unclear whether or not they have taken anyone into custody, as they continue to investigate.

Copyright 2022 Sunbeam Television Corp. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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How a vanished Ice Age lake shaped the past and present of Missoula, Montana

Enlarge / Past shorelines left deposits that are still visible on the hills near the Missoula Valley.

Richard Forbes

Had the city of Missoula, Montana, existed thousands of years ago, it would have been under water.

During the last Ice Age, a sheet of ice 20 miles wide got stuck in the Idaho panhandle and blocked the Clark Fork River, creating glacial Lake Missoula. At its highest, the water level reached 4,250 feet above sea level—over 1,000 feet above the present city’s altitude. The ice sheet ultimately gave way to the pressure of the water, and glacial Lake Missoula drained catastrophically.

It’s estimated that the biggest flood discharge reached 386 million cubic feet per second. At that rate, it took the lake only a few days to drain, with its waters eventually reaching the Pacific Ocean.

The scariest thing is not the scale of this event—it’s that floods of this size happened multiple times. Thousands of years after that first flood, scientists finally pieced together whether it was a one-time deal by looking to the dirt for answers.

Signs of the past

In the fall of 1969, Rich Chambers drove southwest of Missoula along I-90 with his undergraduate adviser. They pulled over to the side of the road to look at a wall that ran 80 feet into the air. It was zebra-striped, with layers of dark and light sediments running horizontally up the slope.

Missoula is the second-biggest city in Montana, with a population of about 75,000, and it sits in a mountain valley. The University of Montana is known more for its forestry and law schools and less for the giant boulders sitting around campus or the lines on two mountains—visible from about anywhere on campus—that are remnants of the lake that once drowned the valley.

Chambers devoted his undergraduate and master’s work to glacial Lake Missoula, which formed behind the Cordilleran Ice Sheet between 14,000 and 21,000 years ago. The glacial lake would cover almost 3,000 square miles and hold as much water as Lake Ontario and Lake Erie combined.

Chambers’ adviser was David Alt, a well-renowned historian of glacial Lake Missoula. Something Alt wasn’t as familiar with, though, was the sediments left behind after the flood drained the lake—the sort of sediments that he and Chambers found themselves looking at off I-90.

“These are Lake Missoula sediments,” Alt said to Chambers as they stared at the zebra wall. “And nobody’s looking at them in detail.”

If there was to be anything new uncovered about the lake’s history, it would come from sediments like these. And there was some urgency in uncovering it—in the 1970s, there was a big back-and-forth brewing in the scientific community regarding how many times the lake may have drained and refilled.

Land of many lakes

Chambers started classifying Lake Missoula’s sediments and noticed two scales of zebra striping. On the large scale, he found about 40 alternating light and dark soil sequences up to several meters thick. These cycles, called rhythmites in geology-speak, are deposits where the light layers are made up of fine sand and silt deposited by rivers in the early stages of a lake’s filling, while the dark layers are made up of silt and clay that gather on the bottom of filled lakes.

Chambers then noticed that the dark layers had their own zebra stripes. The stripes-within-stripes at this scale are called varves, and they likely represented annual layers of sediment stacked on top of each other. The varves told geologists about the amount of time it took for the lake to fill. Assuming the varves represented annual stackings, Chambers said it took only an average of about 50 years for the lake to refill. Even though the lake’s depth decreased with each filling, that’s still a wild amount of water. At its peak, it was more than 500 cubic miles of water, about half the quantity held in Lake Michigan.

Zebra stripes in a deposit that once formed on the lake bottom.

Rich Chambers

Bit by bit, Chambers and Alt pieced together a picture of the area’s history. In a paper that Chambers and Alt co-authored, they suggested several decades might have passed between each lake draining and filling; in a different paper, Chambers concluded there was no evidence that the glacial lake had drained completely each time. He later argued that the last several lake drainages were less intense, which kept the floods from washing away deposits like the one seen at the roadcut on I-90.

That piece of land off the highway contains at least 800 years of history—and possibly more. It’s unclear how much sediment may have been removed from the record by subsequent floods. Each draining of glacial Lake Missoula could have taken with it evidence of earlier floods.

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Montana defies order on transgender birth certificates

BILLINGS, Mont. — Just hours after a Montana judge blocked health officials from enforcing a state rule that would prevent transgender people from changing the gender on their birth certificate, the Republican-run state on Thursday said it would defy the order.

District Court Judge Michael Moses chided attorneys for the state during a hearing in Billings for circumventing his April order that temporarily blocked a 2021 Montana law that made it harder to change birth certificates.

Moses said there was no question that state officials violated his earlier order by creating the new rule. Moses said his order reinstates a 2017 Department of Public Health and Human Services rule that allowed people to update the gender on their birth certificate by filing an affidavit with the department.

However, the state said it would disregard the ruling.

“The Department thoroughly evaluated the judge’s vague April 2022 decision and crafted our final rule to be consistent with the decision. It’s unfortunate that the judge’s ruling today does not square with his vague April decision,” said Charlie Brereton, director of the Department of Public Health and Human Services.

Brereton said the agency was keeping the rule it issued last week in place and an agency spokesperson said the department is waiting to see the judge’s written order before considering its next steps.

ACLU attorney Malita Picasso expressed dismay with the agency’s stance and said officials should immediately start processing requests for birth certificate changes.

“It’s shocking that after this morning’s hearing the department would allege there was any lack of clarity in the court’s ruling from the bench,” Picasso said. “It was very clear that Judge Moses expressly required a reversion to the 2017 policy, and anything short of that is a continued flagrant violation of the court’s order.”

Such open defiance of judge’s order is very unusual from a government agency, said Carl Tobias, a former University of Montana Law School professor now at the University of Richmond. When officials disagree with a ruling, the typical response is to appeal to a higher court, he said.

“Appeal is what you contemplate — not that you can nullify a judge’s orders. Otherwise, people just wouldn’t obey the law,” Tobias said. “The system can’t work that way.”’

The move could leave state officials open to contempt of court charges, which in some cases can lead to jail time for offenders, Tobias said. He added that the attorneys representing the state were likely aware of the potential consequences but were “caught in the middle” between a recalcitrant agency and the judge.

The legal dispute comes as conservative lawmakers in numerous states have sought to restrict transgender rights, including with bans on transgender girls competing in girls school sports.

The Montana law said people had to have a “surgical procedure” before they could change the sex listed on their birth certificate, something Moses found to be unconstitutional because it did not specify what type of procedure was required.

Gov. Greg Gianforte’s administration then created a new rule that blocked changes to birth certificates entirely, unless there was a clerical error.

Moses said during Thursday morning’s hearing that his April ruling had been “clear as a bell” and compared the state’s subsequent actions to a person twice convicted of assault who tries to change their name following a third accusation to avoid a harsher punishment.

“Isn’t that exactly what happened here?” Moses asked. “I’m a bit offended the department thinks they can do anything they want.”

One of the plaintiffs in the case, Amelia Marquez, said she was disgusted by the state’s response.

“We have people that think that they’re above the law and don’t have to listen to the judiciary branch of our government,” she said.

After learning the state planned to defy the court order, Shawn Reagor with the Montana Human Rights Network said the organization “will not stand by while the Gianforte administration blatantly disregards rulings from the courts to continue a vindictive attack on the trans community.”

Only Tennessee, Oklahoma and West Virginia have sweeping prohibitions against birth certificate changes similar to what Montana has pursued, advocates for transgender rights say. Bans in Idaho and Ohio were struck down in 2020.

A Republican lawmaker who voted in favor of the 2021 law suggested Moses was biased in favor of the plaintiffs in the case. Moses was appointed to the court by former Gov. Steve Bullock, a Democrat.

“Like clockwork, Judge Moses issued yet another predetermined order in favor of liberal plaintiffs without thoroughly engaging with the legal issues at hand,” Sen. Greg Hertz of Polson said in a statement.

The ACLU of Montana had asked Moses to clarify his order after the state health department enacted its new temporary rule effectively banning birth certificate changes a month after Moses handed down his temporary injunction in the case. That rule was made permanent last week.

The state argued the injunction did not prevent the health department from making rules, but Moses said under case law the injunction reinstated the 2017 rules and any other changes are on hold while the case is decided.

State officials denied that the new rule preventing birth certificate changes was adopted in bad faith. Montana Assistant Solicitor Kathleen Smithgall said the state came up with the new rule to fill a gap in regulations after the 2021 law was blocked.

“Judge Moses mischaracterized the words of his own order, the parties’ motives, and the state of the law,” said Kyler Nerison, a spokesperson for Attorney General Austin Knudsen.

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First Montana monkeypox case confirmed in Flathead County

HELENA – State health officials report the monkeypox virus has arrived in Montana.

The Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services (DPHHS) and Flathead City-County Health Department today confirmed a single presumptive case of monkeypox virus infection in a Flathead County adult.

Initial testing was completed on Friday at the Montana State Public Health Laboratory and confirmatory testing will occur next with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), according to DPHHS.

DPHHS officials state in a news release the department “is working closely with local public health and the patient’s health care provider to identify individuals who may have been in contact with the patient while they were infectious.”

The patient did not require hospitalization and is now isolating at home. To protect patient confidentiality, no further details related to the patient will be disclosed.

As of August 4, 2022, CDC reports 7,102 cases of monkeypox/orthopoxvirus in 48 other U.S. states. In recent months, more than 26,519 cases have been reported in 81 countries where the disease is not typically reported.

Symptoms of monkeypox can include fever, headache, muscle aches and backache, swollen lymph nodes, chills, exhaustion, and a rash that can look like pimples or blisters that appear on the face, inside the mouth, and on other parts of the body.

The illness typically lasts two-to-four weeks and most people get better on their own without treatment. At times, monkeypox can cause scars from the sores, the development of secondary infections, such as pneumonia, or other complications.

The virus does not easily spread between people with casual contact, but transmission can occur through contact with infectious sores and body fluids; contaminated items, such as clothing or bedding; or through respiratory droplets associated with prolonged face-to-face contact.

“Early recognition of the characteristic monkeypox rash by patients and clinicians is necessary to minimize transmission of this virus,” said DPHHS acting State Medical Officer Dr. Maggie Cook-Shimanek. “Anyone with symptoms of monkeypox should isolate from others and immediately consult a healthcare provider.”

Because monkeypox transmission requires close and prolonged contact, close-knit social networks have been particularly impacted.

There is no treatment specifically for monkeypox. But because monkeypox and smallpox viruses are closely related, antiviral drugs (such as tecovirimat) and vaccines developed to protect against smallpox may be used to prevent and treat monkeypox virus infections. The need for treatment will depend on how sick someone gets or whether they are likely to get severely ill.

DPHHS is pre-positioning a supply of tecovirimat in the state for use, if necessary, the news release states. CDC does not recommend widespread vaccination against monkeypox at this time. However, vaccination may be recommended for some people who have been exposed to the monkeypox virus.

According to the CDC, the monkeypox virus is spreading mostly through close, intimate contact with someone who has monkeypox.

Montanans can take steps to prevent getting monkeypox. Anyone with a rash that looks like monkeypox should talk to their healthcare provider, even if they don’t think they had contact with someone who has monkeypox.

A person who is sick with monkeypox should isolate at home. If they have an active rash or other symptoms, they should be in a separate room or area from other family members and pets, when possible.

To learn more about this virus, visit the CDC website at https://www.cdc.gov/poxvirus/monkeypox/. DPHHS has also launched a new monkeypox website at monkeypox (mt.gov).

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Driver Hits Family in Montana and Opens Fire, Killing Father and Toddler

A man struck a family with his vehicle as they were walking beside a roadway near Glacier National Park in Montana on Sunday and then fired at them with a shotgun, killing a man and his 18-month-old daughter, the authorities said.

The gunman also critically injured two other members of the family; one of them fatally wounded him after he attacked her with a knife, the Glacier County Sheriff’s Office said in a statement.

The victims who were fatally shot were identified as David Siau, 39, and his daughter McKenzie, of Syracuse, N.Y. The authorities said Mr. Siau and his family had been visiting the town of East Glacier Park, in Montana’s Rocky Mountains, when the attack occurred.

Two other members of the family, Christy Siau, 40, and Christina Siau, 30, of East Glacier Park, were critically injured in the attack, the authorities said. A GoFundMe page identified Christy Siau as Mr. Siau’s wife and Christina Siau as his sister.

The Glacier County Sheriff’s Office identified the gunman as Derick Amos Madden, 37, of Goldsby, Okla. The sheriff’s office did not give a motive for the attack, but said that Mr. Madden had previously been in a relationship with Christina Siau, and that he had unspecified “mental health issues.”

Just before 9 p.m. local time on Sunday, Mr. Madden “purposely drove his vehicle” into the family and, after crashing it into a tree, got out, armed with a shotgun, and “began shooting at the same victims he had just hit or attempted to hit with his vehicle,” the sheriff’s office said in a statement.

Mr. Madden fatally shot Mr. Siau and then continued shooting at the rest of the family as they were running away, according to the sheriff’s office. He injured Mr. Siau’s wife, Christy Siau, and killed their 18-month-old daughter, McKenzie, who was being held by her mother, the authorities said.

Mr. Madden attacked Christina Siau with a knife, the sheriff’s office said. “During this attack Christina fought for her life and, despite receiving critical injuries,” the authorities added, “fatally wounded Madden,” who died at the scene.

Two other children were present, but were able to run away and were not injured, the sheriff’s office said.

The authorities said the two women and the 18-month-old were taken to a hospital in Browning, Mont., which is about 13 miles northeast of East Glacier Park. The child was pronounced dead at the hospital, and the two women were flown elsewhere to receive more intensive care for “critical injuries,” they said.

The attack was “isolated to this incident,” the sheriff’s office added, “with a clear nexus between the victims and Madden.” The investigation is ongoing, the sheriff’s office said.

On Wednesday night, the Federal Bureau of Investigation released a video statement from John Siau, the father of David and grandfather of McKenzie. He recounted what he said he had told his other children.

“Grieve, be sad, but don’t harbor anger about what has happened,” he said, “because what we have seen is actually the result of somebody who has harbored anger in his own life and allowed it to fester and allowed it to grow and develop into something very terrible and unspeakable.” He went on to quote passages from the Lord’s Prayer and said, “Our goal is to forgive.”

Mr. Madden was formerly a member of the Oklahoma National Guard, but left around 2013 and had no further contact with the organization, said Lt. Col. Geoff Legler, a spokesman for the guard.

Colonel Legler said that Mr. Madden was a chemical operations specialist and had been trained in how to identify dangerous chemicals and render some of them inert. Colonel Legler said he did not know Mr. Madden personally.

Public records indicate that Mr. Madden had lived in Oklahoma for several years.

A friend of Christina Siau, Haley Driver, described her as “calm, cool and collected and such a joy to be around.” Ms. Driver said that Ms. Siau, who is a physician assistant, was planning to move back to upstate New York after almost four years in Montana, having recently accepted a job in Ithaca, N.Y.

“She’s such a tough person,” Ms. Driver said in a Facebook message. “I admire her so much for who she is and the value she brings to our lives.”

The Siau family were active members of the baptist church community in upstate New York.

“We are mourning with the Siau and Brownell Families and will come alongside them during this time of unimaginable grief,” Justin Baratta, who works at the Missio Church in Syracuse, N.Y., said in an email. “It is certainly a broken world.”

Bethany Siau, the sister of David and Christina, set up a GoFundMe page to help with the family’s medical expenses.

“The number of people already reaching out and offering to help is incredible,” she wrote on the fund-raising site. “We appreciate you all.”

Alex Traub contributed reporting.

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2 kids among 6 dead in Montana highway pileup, 8 others hurt

Two children are among the six people who died in a Montana pileup after a Friday evening dust storm caused blackout conditions on Interstate 90, a major route in both Montana and the Western U.S.

Montana Highway Patrol Sgt. Jay Nelson said investigators so far have found no other factors that contributed to the pileup that also sent eight other injured people to hospitals.

“Everything is indicative of an isolated extreme weather event,” Nelson said of the investigation, calling the crash among the worst he’d seen in 24 years with the state. “What could people do? It really was just panic.”

The pileup was just west of Hardin, with additional ambulances called in from Billings to help. The identities of the dead and conditions of the survivors are not yet being released.

The crash was reported around 4:30 p.m., as 21 vehicles, including six commercial semi-trucks, lost control in the dust storm that was fueled by gusts topping 60 mph (97 kph), authorities said.

Nelson said there was zero visibility for a mile-long stretch during a peak summer traffic hour for those commuting home from work or traveling for outdoor recreation.

It took more than six hours to fully reopen the road.

“We had a lot of debris and complete chaos,” Nelson said.

Gov. Greg Gianforte said on Twitter: “I’m deeply saddened by the news of a mass casualty crash near Hardin. Please join me in prayer to lift up the victims and their loved ones. We’re grateful to our first responders for their service.”

Montana Attorney General Austin Knudsen said in a statement that the Montana Highway Patrol, which he oversees, was investigating. “We will release more information as it becomes available and is appropriate out of respect of the lives lost and their loved ones.

A video from The Billings Gazette showed hundreds of tractor-trailers, campers and cars backed up for miles along the two eastbound lanes of the interstate.

Before the pileup, storms popped up in central southern Montana between 1 and 2 p.m. and slowly began moving east, said Nick Vertz, a National Weather Service meteorologist in Billings.

Those storms prompted a severe thunderstorm watch that covered Hardin and other parts of Montana from mid-afternoon until 9 p.m. Friday. Meteorologists forecasted the potential for isolated hail the size of a quarter, scattered gusts up to 75 mph (121 kph) and frequent lightning.

A so-called outflow — or a surge of wind that’s produced by storms — flew about 30 miles (48 kilometers) ahead of the storms, Vertz said.

Winds picked up quickly around the time of the crash, according to readings at nearby Big Horn County Airport. A 40 mph gust (64 kph) was recorded about 15 minutes before the crash was reported and in less than an hour another burst of wind hit 64 (103 kph).

The wind easily picked up dust — a product of recent temperatures into the 90s and triple digits over the last week — and reduced visibility to less than 1/4 mile (0.4 kilometers).

“If they looked up in the sky while they’re in Hardin, they probably didn’t see much of what you’d think of for a thunderstorm cloud, maybe not even much at all,” Vertz said. “It was just a surge of wind that kind of appeared out of nowhere.”



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Montana dust storm kills at least 6 people, causes massive highway pileup on Interstate 90

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At least six people were killed Friday when a dust storm with winds around 60 mph hit a Montana highway, causing a massive pileup of vehicles, according to authorities.

The crash on Interstate 90 outside Hardin, Mont., involved 21 vehicles, including six semi-trucks, Sgt. Jay Nelson, a spokesman for the Montana Highway Patrol, told the Associated Press. Ambulances were dispatched from far away as Billings, Mont., about 50 miles away.

Video posted to social media shows vehicles scattered across the interstate, including 18-wheelers that appeared to have crashed into vehicles or veered into the median.

Authorities think a “quick-arising dust storm” ultimately caused the pileup. “It appears as though there was heavy winds, causing a dust storm with zero visibility,” Nelson said.

A summary of the storm from the National Weather Service showed there were wind gusts up to 64 mph in Hardin around 4 p.m. local time Friday.

The names and ages of the dead had not been released as of early Saturday. Authorities said there also were injuries in the pileup, but exact figures were not given out.

Montana Gov. Greg Gianforte (R) wrote on Twitter that he was “deeply saddened by the news of a mass casualty crash near Hardin.”

“Please join me in prayer to lift up the victims and their loved ones,” he wrote. “We’re grateful to our first responders for their service.”

Montana Attorney General Austin Knudsen (R), who oversees the Montana Highway Patrol, said in a statement on Facebook that the agency and first responders were investigating the incident.

“We will release more information as it becomes available and is appropriate out of respect of the lives lost and their loved ones,” Knudsen said. “My prayers are with everyone affected by the tragic events during the dust storm in Big Horn County today.”

Thunderstorms on Friday afternoon prompted strong-wind warnings in the Billings area, according to the Weather Service. Severe-thunderstorm watches and warnings were issued by the National Weather Service for south central and southeastern Montana on Friday.

The storms produced surging winds known as outflows that were sent toward Hardin. In addition to the wind gusts, meteorologists had forecast potential isolated quarter-size hail and frequent lightning.

“This outflow cannot be seen on radar, so take appropriate actions now to be weather-ready!” the National Weather Service tweeted.

The crashes started around 4:50 p.m. local time Friday, according to an incident map for the Montana Department of Transportation. Traffic was shut down for hours on eastbound I-90, and the westbound side of the interstate was reduced to one lane.

Nick Vertz, a Weather Service meteorologist in Billings, told the AP that winds of that nature could easily pick up dust, quickly making visibility difficult.

“If they looked up in the sky while they’re in Hardin, they probably didn’t see much of what you’d think of for a thunderstorm cloud, maybe not even much at all,” Vertz said. “It was just a surge of wind that kind of appeared out of nowhere.”



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6 people die after storm causes Montana highway pileup

HARDIN, Mont. — Six people have died after a dust storm fueled by wind gusts topping 60 mph caused a pileup Friday evening on Interstate 90 in Montana, authorities said.

Twenty-one vehicles crashed and Montana Highway Patrol Sgt. Jay Nelson said authorities believe the weather was the cause.

“It appears as though there was heavy winds, causing a dust storm with zero visibility,” he said.

While the highway patrol did not have an immediate count of the number of injuries, Nelson said additional ambulances had to be called in from Billings to help.

Gov. Greg Gianforte said on Twitter: “I’m deeply saddened by the news of a mass casualty crash near Hardin. Please join me in prayer to lift up the victims and their loved ones. We’re grateful to our first responders for their service.”

Montana Attorney General Austin Knudsen, who oversees the highway patrol, said in a statement: “The Montana Highway Patrol is on the scene with other first responders and investigating the incident. We will release more information as it becomes available and is appropriate out of respect of the lives lost and their loved ones.

“My prayers are with everyone affected by the tragic events during the dust storm in Big Horn County today,” Knudsen added.

The incident happened 3 miles (5 kilometers) west of Hardin. A video from The Billings Gazette showed hundreds of tractor-trailers, campers and cars backed up for miles along the two eastbound lanes of the interstate.

The dust storm’s roots can be traced back several hours, when storms popped up in central southern Montana between 1 and 2 p.m. and slowly began moving east, according to Nick Vertz, a National Weather Service meteorologist in Billings.

Those storms prompted a severe thunderstorm watch that covered Hardin and other parts of Montana from mid-afternoon until 9 p.m. Friday. Meteorologists forecasted the potential for isolated hail the size of a quarter, scattered wind gusts up to 75 mph (121 kph) and frequent lightning.

A so-called “outflow” — or a surge of wind that’s produced by storms but can travel faster than them — flew east/southeast about 30 miles (48 kilometers) ahead of the storms, Vertz said.

A 40 mph (64 kph) gust of wind was recorded at the nearby Big Horn County Airport at 4:15 p.m. The crash was reported to the highway patrol at 4:28 p.m.

By the airport weather station’s next reading at 4:35 p.m., the gusts had picked up to 62 mph (100 kph). Another reading 20 minutes later recorded a gust of 64 mph (103 kph).

The wind easily picked up dust — a product of recent temperatures into the 90s and triple digits over the last week — and reduced visibility to less than 1/4 mile (0.4 kilometers).

“If they looked up in the sky while they’re in Hardin, they probably didn’t see much of what you’d think of for a thunderstorm cloud, maybe not even much at all,” Vertz said. “It was just a surge of wind that kind of appeared out of nowhere.”

As first responders attempt to clear the wreckage, the meteorologist said they can expect to be safe from additional winds and thunderstorm activity.

“It should be a relatively clear, calm night for them,” he said.

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Massive 21-car pileup in Montana leaves at least 6 dead: ‘Mass casualty crash’

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At least six people are dead in Montana after a wind storm caused 21 vehicles to crash together on the highway Friday evening, authorities said.

The storms’ heavy winds and zero visibility are believed to have contributed to the crash, officials said.

Montana Gov. Greg Gianforte confirmed the “mass casualty crash” on Twitter, where he encouraged his followers to pray for the victims.

First responders work the scene on Interstate 90 after a fatal pileup where at least 20 vehicles crashed near Hardin, Mont., Friday, July 15, 2022. 
(Amy Lynn Nelson/The Billings Gazette via AP)

“I’m deeply saddened by the news of a mass casualty crash near Hardin. Please join me in prayer to lift up the victims and their loved ones. We’re grateful to our first responders for their service,” Gianforte tweeted. 

STATEN ISLAND CRASH LEAVES 3 TEENAGERS DEAD, SIX OTHERS INJURED

It was not immediately clear how many people were injured in the crash.

Montana Highway Patrol Sgt. Jay Nelson said emergency crews responded to the major crash on Interstate 90, which they believed was caused by dust storms and a thunderstorm.

“It appears as though there was heavy winds, causing a dust storm with zero visibility,” Nelson said.

Traffic is backed up on Interstate 90 after a fatal pileup where at least 20 vehicles crashed near Hardin, Mont., Friday, July 15, 2022. 
(Amy Lynn Nelson/The Billings Gazette via AP)

MA POLICE RELEASE NAMES OF TEENS WHO DIED IN CAR CRASH

Nick Vertz, a National Weather Service meteorologist in Billings, said dust storms initially popped up in central southern Montana around 1 to 2 p.m. These dust storms then made way for a severe thunderstorm that remained until 9 p.m. Friday.

The crash happened around 4:30 p.m., likely by an “outflow”  — a gust of wind that can travel faster than the storm that produces it — that flew ahead of the storms, Vertz said.

First responders work the scene on Interstate 90 after a fatal pileup where at least 20 vehicles crashed near Hardin, Mont., Friday, July 15, 2022. 
(Amy Lynn Nelson/The Billings Gazette via AP)

Videos taken at the scene showed the wrecked vehicles caused a miles-long backup.

NEBRASKA CAR CRASH THAT KILLED 2, INJURED 20 LIKELY NOT ‘INTENTIONAL’: POLICE

First responders remained on the scene through the night to clear the wreckage.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Montana Gov. Greg Gianforte vacationed in Italy as Yellowstone crushed by flooding

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Montana Gov. Greg Gianforte (R) was vacationing in Italy when historic flooding overwhelmed his state this week and caused Yellowstone National Park to close, his office confirmed Friday.

Gianforte and his wife, Susan, went on a “long-scheduled personal trip” that was cut short after heavy rains deluged southwestern Montana. The governor’s office had initially declined to disclose his whereabouts or specify when he would return, citing “security concerns,” even as many asked why Gianforte was nowhere to be found during flooding that prompted him to declare a statewide disaster.

“The governor departed early Saturday morning to Italy with his wife for a long-planned personal, private trip,” his office said in a statement Friday after Gianforte had returned. “When severe flooding struck, the governor delegated his authority to respond to the disaster to Lt. Gov. Kristen Juras with whom he worked closely over the last four days to take swift, decisive action.”

The governor’s office added that Gianforte was “grateful to be back in Montana” and that he planned “to survey damage and meet with residents and local officials about recovering and rebuilding.” Gianforte appeared at a briefing in the town of Gardiner on Friday.

As Montana reeled from floods, Gov. Gianforte was nowhere to be found

The governor’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment early Saturday.

Heavy flooding coursed through the region and swept away homes, bridges and roads. Montana National Guard soldiers have been deployed throughout the Yellowstone region, and the Red Cross is operating evacuation centers across the area.

Drone video shows flooding in Paradise Valley on June 13. (Video: Paradise Valley Aerials/Storyful)

The flooding — a mix of torrential rain and snow melt in the southwestern corner of the state — especially affected Yellowstone National Park, from where about 10,000 visitors were evacuated and at least 88 more were airlifted by the Montana National Guard from campsites and surrounding towns. No deaths or serious injuries were reported near the park, a beloved tourist attraction that covers 2.2 million acres.

The unpredictable onset of water caused dramatic river rises that shattered century-old records. The U.S. Geological Survey confirmed this week that the flooding along the Yellowstone River was a 1-in-500-year event. The Yellowstone River at Corwin Springs, Mont., rose six feet between Sunday and Monday to its highest level on record, several feet above the previous high mark noted in 1918.

In maps, photos and videos, see the full force of Yellowstone’s floods

Gianforte declared a statewide disaster on Tuesday in an effort “to help impacted communities get back on their feet as soon as possible.” Then, on Wednesday, some in Montana began to wonder why Juras, the lieutenant governor, had signed the state’s formal request to President Biden for major disaster relief “on behalf of Gov. Greg Gianforte.”

That’s when the governor’s office began receiving repeated questions on Gianforte’s whereabouts. Outlets such as the Montana Free Press ran stories with headlines that read, “Where is Greg Gianforte?” The Montana Democratic Party dinged the Republican for being away on “a mysterious international vacation during an emergency flooding.” When the governor’s office initially said only that Gianforte was out of the country and would be “returning early and as quickly as possible,” critics were not impressed.

“The fact that [the flooding] is so extreme and his office has just been pretty recalcitrant about where he is and what’s going on is not great,” Eric Austin, a public administration professor at Montana State University who teaches a class on government leadership and ethics, told the Free Press.

Gianforte’s absence prompted critics to compare him to Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.), who left the country for Cancún, Mexico, when Texas suffered through the deadly winter freeze of 2021. Unlike Cruz, though, Gianforte left before the emergency began.

Although he was missing from the scene, Gianforte portrayed himself on Twitter as actively responding to the floods. Gianforte announced on Thursday that he had “secured” a major disaster declaration from Biden, which the governor said would supply federal aid to “further help our communities respond to the severe flooding, recover and rebuild.” The news release, however, did not mention his whereabouts or expected return date.

On Friday, Gianforte made his first public appearance since returning from Italy, joining officials including Sen. Steve Daines (R-Mont.) at a spot in Gardiner overlooking the Yellowstone River. The governor acknowledged that cleaning up and rebuilding would take time but said efforts were already underway to repair damaged infrastructure.

“I understand the tragedy that has occurred. It’s wiped out businesses, and with them livelihoods here in the community,” Gianforte said, according to the Bozeman Daily Chronicle. “That’s why [to] get this park entrance open as quickly as possible, it’s so important.”

Yellowstone tweeted on Friday that a limited reopening of the park was “highly possible next week.”

“Yellowstone continues efforts to recover from historic flooding,” the park wrote, posting photos of some of the damage to the south loop of the park.

Gianforte emphasized his commitment to seeing Yellowstone reopen as soon as possible and again showing Americans “all that Montana has to offer.”

“I want you to hear loud and clear,” the governor said, “Montana is open for business.”

Karin Brulliard, N. Kirkpatrick, Jason Samenow, Dylan Moriarty and Laris Karklis contributed to this report.



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