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At least 6 tornado touchdowns confirmed in northern Illinois

CHICAGO (AP) - At least six tornadoes touched down in northern Illinois Wednesday night as powerful storms swept across the upper Midwest, damaging rural communities and forcing thousands of soccer fans to seek shelter during the Copa America semifinal in Chicago.

The National Weather Service said an EF-2 tornado with estimated top wind speeds of 115-125 mph cut a path more than 11 miles long and about four football fields wide through the city of Pontiac, injuring four people Wednesday night. Survey crews also identified three EF-1 tornadoes, with maximum winds up to 110 mph, that struck Cissna Park, Ottawa and West Brooklyn. No injuries resulted from those storms.

Survey crews were investigating damage along three separate supercell paths, the weather service said.

"We are fortunate things are not worse and are thankful there were no fatalities," Illinois Gov. Bruce Rauner said in a Thursday morning statement.

The storm system produced dime-sized hail in some areas, and its high winds snapped trees, blew roofs off buildings and downed power lines. The weather service reported winds from 80 mph to 100 mph in some parts of northern Indiana.

The northwestern Indiana town of Brookston, among those buffeted by the high winds, declared a state of emergency Thursday after the entire town lost power. WLFI-TV reported two state highways in the town were blocked by storm debris, and authorities were warning people to avoid the area.

"The wind was so ferocious you couldn't have stood out in it at all," Brookston resident Steve Hall told WLFI. "This tulip (poplar) tree behind me was a healthy young tree and (the wind) just twisted it and laid it over like a pretzel."

A 100 mph wind gust was recorded in the nearby town of Battle Ground, the weather service said.

Nearly 50 families sought refuge at an emergency shelter established at a Brookston church, Red Cross volunteers said.

Firefighters responded to reports of people trapped in a house in Seneca, Illinois, after a tornado moved through the village about 70 miles southwest of Chicago Wednesday night. No injuries were reported.

Jeff Maierhofer of Seneca said he huddled in a basement with his wife, two children and seven neighbors when the storm arrived. He said his farm was badly hit.

"Nobody's hurt. Everybody's fine. All the neighbors are fine. Everybody checked in with everybody. But there's a lot of damage," Maierhofer told WLS-TV.

In nearby Serena, Nate Hermann said he drove his pickup truck around 10 square miles and found farmland "wiped out everywhere."

"Lines are down, trees are down, corn is flat everywhere," he told the Chicago Tribune.

A strong band of thunderstorms forced a two-hour delay in Chile's 2-0 victory over Colombia in the Copa America semifinal at Soldier Field, the home of the Chicago Bears football team. Fans sheltered beneath the stands until the danger passed.

Fans also were told to take shelter at Target Field, home of the Minnesota Twins, before their game against the Philadelphia Phillies resumed after a 70-minute delay.

Heavy rain of 1.24 inches fell Wednesday evening at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport, forcing delays of up to 90 minutes and 325 cancellations. Airlines at Midway International Airport cancelled about 70 flights, and there were 60-minute delays. Normal operations resumed Thursday morning at both airports.

In northern and central Indiana, nearly 30,000 homes and businesses were without power early Thursday morning. By noon, the number was down to about 17,000.

A car's windshield is pierced by a board Thursday, June 23, 2016, in Pontiac, Ill., after it was damaged Wednesday night by a tornado. The tornado that cut a more than 11-mile path through the Pontiac area was rated an EF-2 with estimated top wind speeds of 115 to 125 mph. (AP Photo/Teresa Crawford) The Associated Press
Debris is scattered around a Shell Travel Mart, Thursday, June 23, 2016, in Pontiac, Ill., after it was damaged Wednesday night by a tornado. The tornado that cut a more than 11-mile path through the Pontiac area was rated an EF-2 with estimated top wind speeds of 115 to 125 mph. (AP Photo/Teresa Crawford) The Associated Press
Fans sit in a heavy rain during a Copa America Centenario semifinal soccer match between Chile and Colombia at Soldier Field in Chicago, Wednesday, June 22, 2016. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast) The Associated Press
Fans seek refuge out of a heavy rain during a Copa America Centenario semifinal soccer match between Chile and Colombia at Soldier Field in Chicago, Wednesday, June 22, 2016. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh) The Associated Press
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