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Irma, now a Category 3 hurricane, barrels toward Naples

Editor's note: This is a developing story that is being constantly updated as the storm progresses. Also, follow our live updates here or watch unlimited CNN.
Hurricane Irma bludgeoned Florida on Sunday, snapping trees like matchsticks and turning Miami streets into rivers.
And there's plenty more damage to come.
    Palm trees lie strewn across a road Sunday in Miami Beach, Florida.
    Naples and Marco Island will endure some of the strongest winds in the next few hours, the National Hurricane Center said.
    Irma, now a Category 3 hurricane, is bringing 120 mph winds as it hugs the southwest Florida coast.
    Even more dangerous than the powerful winds could be the storm surges that threaten to swallow Florida's coastal cities.
    "The threat of catastrophic storm surge flooding is highest along the southwest coast of Florida, where 10 to 15 feet of inundation above ground level is expected," the hurricane center said. "This is a life-threatening situation."
    Still, not everyone heeded orders to evacuate coastal Florida.
    Wayne Ploghoft is hunkered down on the third floor of a building on Marco Island -- where catastrophic storm surges are imminent.
    Ploghoft said he wasn't able to evacuate because his flight plans didn't work out. Now Ploghoft and three others are holed up with stockpiles of water, canned food and battery power.
    "We're all going to be OK," Ploghoft said.
    Gov. Rick Scott said Irma's wrath is unprecedented.
    "We have never had anything like this before," he told CNN Sunday.
    Waves crash over a seawall as Irma slams Miami.
    In Florida and southern Georgia, more than 8 million people face hurricane-force winds topping 74 mph, said Ryan Maue of WeatherBell Analytics.
    And almost the entire state of Florida is under a hurricane warning, affecting at least 36 million people.

    Miami succumbs to Irma's wrath

    Gusts topping 90 mph whipped Miami on Sunday, knocking out power to more than 750,000 customers in the Miami-Dade area.
    Flying objects such as coconuts turned into dangerous projectiles. And at least one construction crane snapped, swinging vigorously over downtown Miami.
    Matthew Spuler captured video of waves crashing over a seawall toward his downtown high-rise building.
    "There is no seawall whatsoever," Spuler said. "It's amazing. It's under water."

    The latest developments:

    -- Miami-Dade County announced a curfew between 7 p.m. Sunday and 7 a.m. Monday.
    -- Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal has expanded a state of emergency to include all 159 Georgia counties, Deal's office said. The decision was made in advance of heavy rains, strong winds and potential flooding from Hurricane Irma. The state government will be closed Monday and Tuesday except for essential personnel.
    -- The forecast track for Irma has shifted 15 miles east, the National Hurricane Center said. But it's still not clear exactly when or where on the Florida mainland Irma will make landfall -- meaning half the hurricane's eye is over land.
    "With the eye tracking this close to land, everyone needs to be prepared for the worst possible conditions," CNN meteorologist Brandon Miller said.
    -- More than 1.69 million electric customers across 31 counties are without power, Florida Power and Light said Sunday morning.
    -- Miami-Dade officers can no longer respond to calls for service, the Miami-Dade Police Department tweeted Sunday. Police are urging residents to stay indoors and not venture outside.
    -- A 6 p.m. curfew has been put in place for Tampa. Manatee County officials announced a curfew from 3 p.m. ET Sunday until 3 p.m. ET Monday.
    -- A storm surge warning wraps around the state, from Brevard County to Tampa Bay.
    -- At least 24 deaths have been blamed on Irma in the Caribbean islands, where it hit before barreling toward Florida.

    'You can't survive these storm surges'

    The governor warned some storm surges could be deadly.

    CNN Reporter: It's like power-washing my face 01:28
    "You can't survive these storm surges," he said.
    Those who did not evacuate ahead of the storm are in danger, Federal Emergency Management Agency Administrator Brock Long said Saturday.
    "You're on your own until we can actually get in there and it's safe," he told CNN.
    But Key West business owner Jason Jonas said he stayed behind because he's in a home that is "built like a bunker."
    "It's pretty much the only reason I considered staying here because I knew that I had a pretty good chance of making it through this thing," he said.
    "We're 30 plus feet above sea level and in a place that's built to withstand 225 mph winds -- I mean that's a better chance than being exposed out on the highway in traffic trying to make it to Georgia."
    Mass evacuations jammed highways heading north and created a severe gas shortage in some parts the state.
    Irma hit Cuba's Ciego de Avila province late Friday as a Category 5 hurricane before it weakened and headed to the US.
    This is the the first year on record that the continental US has had two Category 4 hurricane landfalls in the same year.
    Last month, Hurricane Harvey devastated much of coastal Texas and killed more than 70 people.

    Other cities will get pummeled

    Several Florida cities are in or near the forecast path of the storm's eye.
    The storm will be devastating for central Florida, Tampa, Fort Myers and Key West, CNN meteorologist Chad Myers said.
    In Fort Myers, where storm surge warnings are in effect, Evanson Ngai stayed up all night, tracking the hurricane.
    "I've tried to get some sleep but I can't. Just the nervousness, trying to keep an eye on it to see if its track will change," he said.

    Other states may be affected

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