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At least 14 confirmed dead as the scope of Ian's devastation comes into focus

Most of the deaths have been in Charlotte County, an area near the stretch of Florida's southwest coast where Ian made landfall Wednesday afternoon.
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At least 14 people have died after Hurricane Ian tore across Florida with such ferocity that President Joe Biden said it could be the deadliest in the state's history.

Speaking after a briefing with Federal Emergency Management Agency officials Thursday morning, Biden said that while the death toll remained unclear, early reports suggest the loss of life could be “substantial.” 

“I spoke with the commissioners, and they are worried,” he said.

As of Thursday evening, 12 people had been confirmed dead in the storm, with seven of them in Charlotte County, an area near the stretch of the southwest coast where Ian made landfall Wednesday afternoon.

By Friday, that number had climbed to 14 confirmed dead.

The latest on Hurricane Ian

  • At least 14 people have died in three Florida counties — Charlotte, Sarasota and Volusia.
  • More than 2.3 million customers were without power in Florida by Thursday afternoon, according to PowerOutage.us.
  • After weakening to a tropical storm, Ian again strengthened to a hurricane and was moving toward the Carolinas and Georgia.
  • By 11 p.m. Thursday, the storm was around 185 miles south of Charleston and moving northeast at 10 mph.
  • A hurricane warning was in effect for the South Carolina coast and a sliver of North Carolina.

Charlotte County Commissioner Christopher Constance told MSNBC that a county administrator said there were six fatalities. He later confirmed a seventh death.

Two people died in Sarasota County, a sheriff’s spokesperson there said, and one person drowned in Volusia County while trying to drain his pool, local law enforcement officials said.

Two more people died on Sanibel Island, where the Category 4 storm wrecked a causeway linking it with Florida's mainland, the city manager said Thursday.

Additional details about the victims were not immediately available.

One of the most powerful storms to ever hit the United States, Ian left roughly 2.3 million customers without power as of Thursday afternoon. Several hospitals had no water, and thousands of residents were trapped in their homes.

Fort Myers Mayor Kevin Anderson told NBC's "TODAY" show that Ian was one of the most ferocious storms he had witnessed in decades, gutting him emotionally.

"Watching the water from my condo in the heart of downtown, watching that water rise and just flood out all the stores on the first floor, it was heartbreaking," he said.

Photos and videos on social media showed the scenes of devastation: Orlando inundated by floodwaters, boats wrecked in Fort Myers, trees snapped like toothpicks in Punta Gorda. Part of the Sanibel Causeway was destroyed, blocking vehicles from crossing the bridge.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said the storm would rank as "one of the top five hurricanes to ever hit the Florida peninsula.” Biden declared a major disaster, freeing up federal aid to assist with local and state recovery efforts.

Ian heads north

Ian was downgraded to a tropical storm Thursday morning before strengthening again to a hurricane and "taking aim at the Carolinas and Georgia with life-threatening flooding, storm surge and strong winds," the National Hurricane Center said.

Ian was moving northeast at 10 mph with maximum sustained winds of 85 mph and higher gusts as it headed for South Carolina, where it was forecast to hit Friday, it said late Thursday night.

The state's entire coastline was under a hurricane warning, the hurricane center said.

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Ian made landfall near Cayo Costa, Florida, around 3 p.m. Wednesday as a powerful Category 4 hurricane with 150 mph winds, forecasters said.

Image: Hurricane Ian Slams Into West Coast Of Florida
Boats are pushed up on a causeway after Hurricane Ian passed through the area Thursday in Fort Myers, Fla.Joe Raedle / Getty Images

On Wednesday night, Lee County Manager Roger Desjarlais said the damage was extensive in the county, which includes Cayo Costa, Fort Myers and Cape Coral. Two people were killed there, officials said.

Rescue crews were forced to wait for conditions to improve before going to the aid of people stranded by high waters.

In Lee County, there were also reports of vehicles "floating out into the ocean," but Sheriff Carmine Marceno said officials were not able to investigate or respond to calls of people trapped until winds dropped below 45 mph.

“Those that are in need: We want to get to you, and we will get to you as soon as possible," he said in a video address shortly before 8 p.m.

At least nine hospitals in Lee County had no water after the storm made landfall on Florida’s southwest coast, FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell said Thursday.

'We are trapped'

Terry Mazany hunkered down on the 22nd floor of a Fort Myers high-rise with his wife and his 91-year-old mother as the water rose and winds whipped the building.

“We are trapped. There is eight feet of water around us,” Mazany, who moved to Florida from California a year ago, told MSNBC. He noted that the elevators were also shut down.

"It started relatively manageable, but the last 12 hours we have dealt with that freight train of 100-plus mile an hour winds shaking the building, swaying," he said.

Central and northeast Florida were expected to see 20 inches of rain, and life-threatening storm surge remained a risk for parts of Florida’s western and eastern coasts Thursday, the hurricane center said.

Florida’s Atlantic coast from northeast of Orlando into Georgia could see storm surge of 6 feet, it said.

Radar indicated that 4 to 5 inches of rain per hour was falling in the hurricane’s heavier bands Wednesday, said Jamie Rhome, the acting director of the hurricane center.

“Those are incredibly heavy rainfall rates,” Rhome said Wednesday night on MSNBC. The storm’s slow speed was prolonging the damaging wind but also increasing the potential for flooding, he said.

Experts have not directly linked the storm's strength to climate change, but its rainfall projections fit within a broader trend of storms becoming rainier as the climate warms, allowing the atmosphere to hold more moisture.

As the storm turns north and heads for the Carolinas, the governors of Georgia, South Carolina and North Carolina have declared states of emergency ahead of the storm’s arrival.