Two women in the Inland Empire are killed and another injured in lightning-related incidents. Lightning also ignites more than a dozen brush fires.

Thunder rumbled through the Southland and freak storms pelted the region with hail, lightning and unseasonal rain, killing two women in the Inland Empire, bedeviling aviation and touching off more than a dozen brush fires on the parched mountain slopes ringing Los Angeles County.

Both fatalities occurred in San Bernardino County, the first when lightning snapped off a tree limb that crashed onto a vehicle traveling through a residential neighborhood near Big Bear Lake, crushing the woman driver to death about 11 a.m. Two hours later, a 35-year-old woman was killed by lightning that struck near a tree in the frontyard of her Fontana home.

Neither victim was immediately identified.

In Cabazon, a woman shopping at the outlet mall just off Interstate 10 suffered moderate injuries from a near-miss lightning strike as she walked across the parking lot just after noon, said Riverside County Fire Department spokeswoman Jody Hagemann. The woman was taken by ambulance to a nearby hospital.

A Southwest Airlines plane bound for Burbank was struck by lightning more than half an hour into its flight, forcing the pilot to return to Oakland with the 53 passengers on board. There were no injuries or damage to the aircraft, and travelers were put on later flights. The plane returned to service after a safety inspection.

Lightning was blamed for more than a dozen brush fires in the Cleveland, Angeles and San Bernardino national forests. In the largest, called the McKinley fire, 150 acres burned before firefighters could extinguish it, said U.S. Forest Service spokeswoman Norma Bailey.

The electrical storms that swept the Inland Empire also were suspected as the cause of a small blaze above the San Dimas Canyon Golf Course in eastern Los Angeles County.

Temperatures were about 10 degrees below normal in the area, with downtown Los Angeles registering 67 degrees at 2 p.m. Rain is so rare at this time of year that records were broken in Palmdale, Sandberg and Camarillo, where there had been zero precipitation on any June 3 in the years that the National Weather Service has been keeping records, the Oxnard office reported.

Small hailstones drummed at least four beachfront communities in San Diego County, as well as the inland city of Murrieta, another oddity in late spring, according to the weather service.

Thunderstorms and light rain are forecast to continue through Friday or Saturday as a low-pressure system slowly makes its way inland from the coast, the weather service said.