Searchers look for flood victims in polygamous Utah town

Floods
Community members look along a stream after a flash flood Tuesday, Sept. 15, 2015, in Colorado City, Ariz. The floods came after heavy rains fell in the canyons just north of the sister towns of Hildale, Utah, and Colorado City, Arizona, sending waves of water barreling through the streets. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
Rick Bowmer | AP

Rescuers trudged through muddy streambeds Tuesday in a small polygamous town on the Utah-Arizona border, searching for people who were missing after a flash flood killed at least 12 people. The same flood claimed at least three lives in nearby Zion National Park.

Only one person was still missing Tuesday afternoon in Hildale, Utah, out of 16 people— three women and 13 children—who were in two vehicles that got smashed Monday by a wall of water and carried several hundred yards downstream. Authorities had not identified the dead. Three people survived, all of them children, in the secluded community that is the home base of Warren Jeffs' polygamous sect.

At Zion National Park, about 20 miles to the north, three bodies were found Tuesday, a day after four men and three women set out to rappel down a narrow slot canyon. They left before park officials closed the canyons that evening because of flood warnings, park spokeswoman Holly Baker said.

The group hailed from California and Nevada and were all in their 40s and 50s, Baker said. She had no details on their identities.

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The group was in Keyhole Canyon, which narrows to just 6 feet across in places. Baker said the canyon received more than a half-inch of rain in a single hour.

Rescuers were waiting for water levels to drop before entering the canyon to search for the missing.

The National Weather Service issued flash flood warnings through 7:45 p.m. for Zion National Park and through 7:15 p.m. for Hildale, as the saturated areas could be hit again with light to moderate rainfall.

In Hildale, the streets were caked in red mud, and earth movers cleared the roads and piled up mounds of dirt. As a helicopter buzzed overhead, crowds of boys in jeans and girls and women in deep-colored prairie dresses watched the rescue effort.

Residents called it the worst flood in memory for the sister towns of Hildale, Utah, and Colorado City, Arizona, which are 315 miles south of Salt Lake City at the foot of picturesque red rock cliffs. It was in this area at Maxwell Canyon where heavy rains sent water down Short Creek and barreling through the towns.

The torrent was so fast, "it was taking concrete pillars and just throwing them down, just moving them like plastic," said Lorin Holm, who called the storm the heaviest in the 58 years he's lived in the community.

The women and children were in an SUV and a van on a gravel road north of the towns. They were returning from a park when they stopped at a flooded crossing and got out to watch the raging waters, Hildale Mayor Philip Barlow said.

What they did not know was that a flash flood was brewing in the canyon above, he said. It came rushing down and engulfed their vehicles.

"We're greatly humbled by this, but we realize that this is an act of God, and this is something we can't control," said Barlow, a Jeffs follower. "We have to take what we receive and do the best we can."

About three hours earlier, the National Weather Service had issued a flood warning for the area, saying: "Move to higher ground now. Act quickly to protect your life." It's unknown if the victims were aware of the warning.

The raging torrents are not uncommon in an area prone to flash floods, but the volume and pace of Monday's rain was a "100-year event," said Brian McInerney, hydrologist with the National Weather Service in Salt Lake City.

The height of the storm lasted about 30 minutes, pouring rain into a desert-like landscape with little vegetation and many steep slopes.

Monday's weather event was like a bucket of water being poured onto a rock—it slid right off and began running downstream, picking up sediment to create the forceful, muddy "chocolate mess" that rushed through the city, McInerney said. Another half-inch of rain came within the hour.

"It just hit the wrong place at the wrong time," he said.

Officials say the bodies of two people were recovered in Arizona, one about 5 miles downstream.

Lt. Gov. Spencer Cox, who was sent to the town, called it one of the worst-weather related tragedies in state history and said the Utah National Guard will send troops.

Chris and Lydia Wyler of Hildale said heavy rainfall usually draws spectators who love to splash in it and watch as it surges through creeks.

"People go out on the streets and kids will start playing," Chris Wyler said. "But this storm that hit yesterday, it was just so severe and so sudden."

Wyler's SUV was hemmed in by the floodwaters. She filmed women in braids and long skirts being pulled from a car in the path of a torrent of water.

"It looks like a tsunami went through," said Ross Chatwin, who lives in Colorado City. He and about 500 people joined in the search Monday night.

Wilford "Woody" Williams says the fierce downpour turned the streets in town into rivers. He joined the search effort overnight, holding a flashlight and watching for anything that looked like human remains as crews carefully skimmed off layers of debris. They spotted a nightgown and what appeared to be the fabric lining from the roofs of one of the vans, but no remains.

The search effort temporarily eased the tension between Jeffs followers and others who no longer belong to the sect but still live there. That split between loyalists who still believe Jeffs is a victim of religious persecution and defectors who are embracing government efforts to pull the town into modern society has sharpened in the four years since Jeffs was sentenced to life in prison for sexually assaulting underage girls he considered brides.

"We were all coming together for a common cause, without any bad feelings," he said.