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He's good 'cause he just went out to the holler.ĬZAR: For the next nine hours, Officer Clark and Turner monitor radio chatter and drive endlessly. Somebody called in - said they hadn't been able to talk to him or anything.ĬAMPBELL: 'Cause we have no electric, no internet, no nothing.ĬLARK: I know, but some - one of his family members, I guess, had called.ĬAMPBELL: Yeah. But his neighbor, Stella Campbell, gives Officer Clark some good news. At the next stop, the missing man we're looking for isn't home. The next address on the list is on the other side of the county, which means crossing a rugged mountain, jostling through potholes and avoiding several mudslides and debris. The team goes door to door.ĬZAR: They find a woman living in one home who says she's safe and wants to stay. At their first stop, an hour away, they find loose dogs and wandering livestock.ĬZAR: There are four mobile homes along a winding gravel drive.
Turner is at the wheel, as Clark navigates the winding backroads and hills of central Appalachia. The crew's truck is loaded with food and water. They're looking for people who are listed as missing and taking supplies to those who want to stay in their homes. Fish and Wildlife officers Kyle Clark and Dakota Turner are going into areas that had been unreachable until the floodwaters receded. That way, you can stay on task.ĬZAR: Cell service is spotty at best in this rural and mountainous part of Kentucky. And if you need additional stuff, let me know. Captain Greg Watts with Kentucky Fish and Wildlife gives each group its mission. Each morning, plans for the day are coordinated. KARYN CZAR, BYLINE: These men and women have been working nonstop since Thursday. UNIDENTIFIED PERSON #1: 10-38 (inaudible). Karyn Czar of member station WUKY spent the day yesterday with a search team and brings us this report. More than three dozen people have died in the flash flooding that hit parts of eastern Kentucky.