Howard County Executive Allan Kittleman told The Associated Press by phone that the body of a man had been recovered, along with a woman's body that was recovered yesterday. Both were found in the Patapsco River. Everyone else had been accounted for, he said.
The town, about 14 miles west of Baltimore, received 6.5 inches of rain, according to the National Weather Service, and most of it fell Saturday evening between 7 pm and 9 pm (local time).
One of the victims was a pedestrian who was swept away by floodwaters, and the other was carried downstream after abandoning a stranded vehicle along with another person, who survived, police chief Gary Gardner told reporters at a news conference.
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"It looks like the set of a disaster movie," said Kittleman, a Republican. "Cars everywhere, cars on top of cars, parts of the road are gone, many parts of the sidewalk are gone, storefronts are completely gone."
Governor Larry Hogan toured the damaged area yesterday along with Kittleman and Republican Elijah Cummings, D-Md., who has an office in the town. Hogan declared a state of emergency, which will allow greater aid coordination and assistance.
Johnny Breidenbach, the owner and chef of Johnny's Bistro on Main, said he closed his restaurant around 7:30 Saturday night, before the worst of the flooding, and he hadn't been able to get back there to assess the damage.