Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Miami Herald
Miami Herald
National
Tess Riski

Hurricane Ian death toll passes 35 in Florida. Damage is ‘worst thing I’ve seen,’ county official says

MIAMI — Florida officials reported more than 35 fatalities appear to be linked to Hurricane Ian, including the deaths of two elderly people who were disconnected from oxygen machines due to power outages.

Lee County Sheriff Carmine Marceno on Friday afternoon announced 16 storm-related deaths, and five deaths that are not storm-related. That’s the first preliminary fatality count out of the region that Gov. Ron DeSantis described as “ground zero” and “where the storm packed its biggest punch” during a Friday afternoon press conference in Fort Myers.

The official death toll continued to rise. At a morning press conference, Kevin Guthrie, Florida’s emergency management director, said there was one confirmed death in Polk County, eight unconfirmed deaths in Collier County and 12 unconfirmed deaths in Charlotte County.

The local medical examiner determines if a death is storm-related or not, Guthrie said, which is why several counties have reported some deaths as “unconfirmed” for the time being.

The Sarasota County Sheriff’s Office also provided more details about the two deaths it reported Thursday, saying they were a 94-year-old man who lived near the Palmer Ranch area and an 80-year-old woman who lived near north Sarasota.

Both individuals relied on oxygen machines that were disabled following power outages, according to the sheriff’s office.

“This is a significant and catastrophic storm,” Sarasota County Sheriff Kurt Hoffman said in a Friday video. “I’ve lived in this community for over four decades and I have never seen a storm of this strength that has done this much damage.”

DEATHS BY COUNTY

Sarasota County: 2

Lee County: 16 storm-related, 5 non-storm

Polk County: 1 (confirmed)

Charlotte County: 12 (unconfirmed)

Collier County: 8 (unconfirmed)

Emergency responders were “still processing through” the initial search phase Friday morning in Lee County, Guthrie said. He described a grim situation at a home in an undisclosed location in Lee County with apparent drowning victims.

“We do not know exactly how many were in the house,” he said. “Let me paint the picture for you. The water was up over the rooftop but we had a Coast Guard rescue swimmer swim down into it and he could identify what appeared to be human remains.”

Guthrie noted that there are “a couple of other situations” in the area with similar circumstances.

Much of the county remains without power or water, and it saw 10-foot-high storm surges when the hurricane made landfall, according to Lee County Sheriff Carmine Marceno.

“It’s definitely the worst thing I’ve seen in my life, and I’m a lifelong Floridian,” Lee County Commissioner Brian Hamman told the Miami Herald on Friday. “We don’t even have water getting to the hospitals.”

____

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.