Albany, Ga., was hit by an apparent tornado Sunday. Large trees and power lines are down in the area. (AJC photo by Joshua Sharpe)
icon to expand image

By Joshua Sharpe,  jsharpe@ajc.com

Four people in Dougherty County were killed by a suspected tornado that struck a mobile home park east Albany Sunday afternoon.

Albany police public information officer Phyllis Banks said late Sunday that the county coroner had confirmed four deaths. Authorities were still sifting through the debris at a massive trailer park in east Albany that was devastated by the storm.

Dougherty County Commission Chairman Chris Cohilas said Sunday evening that his county was still trying to recover from the last round of storms a few weeks ago. Now the need is worse.

The fatalities in Albany raised the death toll across South Georgia to 16, after vicious storms ripped through the region on Sunday.

Cohilas, the Dougherty commission chairman, earlier posted a video to his Facebook page that showed extraordinary devastation along Holly Drive.

"It looks like a nuclear bomb went off," he remarks at one point.

Later, Cohilas posted another Facebook video saying that the Paradise Village Mobile Home Park off Holly Drive was "demolished."

"The demolition and the damage are unspeakable," Cohilas said. "I've never seen anything like it. . . . Please, please, tell everyone, share it on Facebook, do not go to Paradise Village trailer park to go sightseeing. It's not something you should go to sight-see."

He said Dougherty County school buses were ferrying people away from the destruction zone and to local shelters.

The Herald's website quoted a local state legislator as saying that a mobile home park in east Albany looked like a "war zone."

"The old Paradise Village Mobile Home Park has been destroyed," the Herald quoted state Rep. Darrel Ealum as saying. "We've just had phenomenal damage."

» 16 deaths reported in south Georgia from Sunday storms

About the Author

Keep Reading

A Korean Air plane takes off from Incheon International Airport in South Korea on Wednesday, Sept. 10, 2025. The plane is chartered to bring back Korean workers detained in an immigration raid in Georgia. (Yonhap via AP)

Credit: AP

Featured

In this file photo from October 2024, Atlanta Braves outfielder Jorge Soler and teammates react after losing to the San Diego Padres 5-4 in San Diego. The Braves and Soler, who now plays for the Los Angeles Angels, face a lawsuit by a fan injured at a 2021 World Series game at Truist Park in Atlanta. (Jason Getz/AJC)

Credit: Jason.Getz@ajc.com