Paulo Falcao de Olivera was driving on State Route 530 north of Seattle to pick up his children two days ago when he watched as a huge landslide buried the road right in front of him.
âI just saw the darkness coming across the road,â he said in an interview on video uploaded by a former television journalist, Mark Horner. âEverything was gone in three seconds.â
As my colleague Kirk Johnson reports from Arlington in Washington State, emergency officials said on Monday that they had collected 108 names of people who were unaccounted for and who may have been in the area at the time of the landslide, which left at least eight dead.
The Washington State Patrol released aerial video of the area where a landslide buried homes and a stretch of state highway in mud and debris.
At a news conference on Monday, Travis Hots, a fire chief from Snohomish County, said that emergency crews were still treating the scene as a rescue operation. But he warned there was little hope that crews would find survivors.
âThe situation is very grim,â Chief Hots said. âWeâre still holding out hope that weâre going to be able to find people that may still be alive. But keep in mind we havenât found anybody alive on this pile since Saturday in the initial stages of our operation.â
Among those missing was Summer Raffo, 36, a farrier who was on her way to an appointment at a barn when the landslide hit. The Seattle Times reported that her family members, including brothers, nephews and a sister, rushed to the scene and spent five hours looking for her before emergency crews forced them to turn away.
âYou canât imagine the devastation until you see it yourself,â Ms. Raffoâs brother, Dayn Brunner, 42, told The Seattle Times. âThere were bodies everywhere, cars cut in half.â
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