"It was very sad, very tragic. ... I couldn't even imagine," he said.
In Kinston, more than an hour's drive inland from the coast, Lenoir County spokesman Bryan Hanks said a man was electrocuted as he attempted to connect extension cords outside in the rain. The body of the 78-year-old man was discovered by family members Friday morning. Gov. Roy Cooper's office said he died while plugging in a generator. Hanks said a fourth person died while checking on his hunting dogs, and authorities believe he was blown over by the wind.
Emergency officials warned residents that the peril had probably not passed, as the storm continued to dump torrential rain.
In Wilmington, the storm tore down numerous trees when its center tore through the area Friday morning. Later in the day, trees could be seen on top of roofs, driveways and parked cars.
In the neighborhood where the mother and child died, resident Frank Hendrickson pointed to a tree that fell next door to him but spared a neighbor's house. He said it was a testament to the close calls around the city. He said he had trimmed his own trees before the storm.
While he didn't know the family at the center of the tragedy, it was devastating for him to see bereaved relatives coming to the house after they heard what happened.
"Seeing them get out of the car and seeing their emotions was heartbreaking," he said. "A little infant dying in the middle of the night while they were sleeping. ... It doesn't get any worse."
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Associated Press writers Gary D. Robertson in Raleigh and Alan Suderman in Richmond, Virginia, contributed to this report.
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