As of December 3, 2013 the most recent tornado was an EF2 tornado near Atlantic Beach, North Carolina on November 26. It did not result in any deaths. Most tornadoes do not. The most recent killer tornado was an EF3 that struck Brookport, Illinois on November 17, killing 3. Two other killer tornadoes ocurred earlier that same day, killing 2 people each.
As of August 22, 2013 the most recent killer tornado was an EF1 in Iowa on June 24. One person was killed.
The Waco, Texas tornado killed 114 people.
27 people were killed.
28 people were killed in the Regina Tornado in 1912.
The Daultapur-Saturia tornado of 1989 killed an estimated 1,300 people.
The Oklahoma City tornado of May 3, 1999 killed 36 people.
If you are referring to the Bridgeport, Connecticut tornado, none were killed by the tornado itself. 3 People were killed in other storm-related events.
The Joplin, Missouri tornado of May 22, 2011 killed 158 people. This ranks it as the 7th deadliest tornado in U.S. history.
158 people were killed by the Joplin tornado. Another tornado on the same day killed 1 person in the Minneapolis area.
The Moore, Oklahoma tornado of May 20, 2013 killed 24 people. A tornado in Shawnee, Oklahoma the day before killed 2 people.
There were no tornado related deaths in Kansas in 2000.
There was no Tri-State tornado in 2014. While there were tornadoes across several states in the most recent outbreak, no single tornado caused damage in more than two states. The infamous Tri-State tornado ocurred in 1925, killing 695 people. In the recent tornado outbreak at the end of April 2014 there were 8 killer tornadoes that killed a total of 34 people in 5 states.