US officials revised the toll of the powerful blast that destroyed a fertilizer factory to at least 12 killed and 60 missing.
US officials revised the toll of the powerful blast that destroyed a fertilizer factory to at least 12 killed and 60 missing.
Some 200 other people were injured in Wednesday's blast in this small town of 2,800 people located 129 kilometers south of Dallas, Texas Department of Public Safety spokesman Jason Reyes told a news conference.
Investigators are treating the blast site as a crime scene, although authorities say the blast was likely caused by a fire at the West Fertilizer Company.
Fifty nearby homes were destroyed, while teams have searched 150 homes and have another 25 to go.
"We are still in a search and rescue mode," Reyes said, after giving the death toll.
Until now, officials had refused to release a firm toll, saying only that it was between five and 15.
Speaking at the same press conference, Senator John Cornyn said that 60 people were still unaccounted for in the "terrible tragedy."
Texas Governor Rick Perry however later said that that figure was expected to drop as residents rushed to hospitals or staying with friends and relatives are accounted for.
The blast came with the entire country already on edge after the attacks on the Boston Marathon that left three dead and more than 170 wounded on Monday.
OBAMA: TEXAS BLAST VICTIMS NOT FORGOTTEN
In Washington, President Barack Obama told the Texas blast victims that they were not forgotten, despite the national focus on Boston.
"We've also seen a tight-knit community in Texas devastated by a terrible explosion," Obama said in a televised statement after the second suspect in the marathon bombings was captured in a suburb of Boston.
"I want them to know that they are not forgotten. Our thoughts, our prayers are with the people of West, Texas, where so many good people lost their lives, some lost their homes, many are injured, many still missing."
Obama signed an emergency declaration for Texas late Friday allowing federal funds to help in the rebuilding effort.