At least three people are dead and officials fear that number will increase after rain battered the eastern part of Kentucky, flooded streets and left people stranded on roofs and hanging from trees, authorities said Thursday.
Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear said "a number of people" are unaccounted for and he expects "double-digit deaths" after the region received an estimated eight to 12 inches of rain overnight.
“We are currently experiencing one of the worst, most devastating flooding events in Kentucky’s history,” he said, adding the state is not in the clear.
Another two to three inches could fall Thursday night and over the weekend, with most of the rain coming overnight, according to the governor.
Four million remain under flood alerts across Kentucky, southern Ohio, West Virginia and southwestern Virginia.
“We’re going to need people to take some steps to keep them safe,” Beshear said at an afternoon news conference. “Otherwise, the total that we expect could grow. This isn’t just a disaster. It is an ongoing natural disaster. We’re in the midst of it.”


Earlier in the day, the governor said the state expects "massive property damage" that will take "not months, but likely years for many families to rebuild and recover from." A total of 25,111 people are currently without power statewide, he added.
Beshear has activated the Kentucky National Guard and signed a state of emergency, which will "unlock the resources needed and also tell the people of eastern Kentucky that we are going to be there for them," he said.
The sheriff in Perry County, where two of the three deaths occurred, described the flooding as something "unlike (anything) I’ve ever seen."
Flood emergency issued in parts of Kentucky after torrential rainfall
July 28, 202201:28Authorities have not released the names of the victims, but said one was 81 years old. The other fatality occurred in Knott County.
"We’ve had reports coming in all night of people that we’ve just not been able to get to," Perry County Sheriff Joe Engle told NBC News. "So hoping that the water will recede and come down from to be able to get them, but I’m not sure how many people are still trapped."
Perry County emergency management director Jerry Stacy told The Associated Press that “we’re just in the rescue mode right now.”
“Extreme flash flooding and mudslides are just everywhere,” he said by phone Thursday morning as he struggled to reach his office in Hazard.



U.S. Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., tweeted about the floods, urging anyone in need of assistance to contact his office.
"Praying for all those affected," he wrote.
