More bodies found in Florida condo tower collapse, first funeral held
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[July 07, 2021]
By Francisco Alvarado
SURFSIDE, Fla. (Reuters) -Search and rescue
teams pulled the remains of eight more victims from the ruins of a
Florida condominium tower on Tuesday, able to penetrate deeper into the
site after demolition of a fragile section that had remained standing.
With a confirmed death toll now of 36, 109 people who may have been
inside Champlain Towers South when it fell on June 24 are still
considered missing. That number could change as police detectives work
to confirm the names.
"I ask all of you around the world who continue to follow this story,
please keep these victims in your hearts and prayers," Miami-Dade Mayor
Daniella Levine Cava told a news conference.
Levine Cava announced the updated death toll hours after several hundred
mourners gathered in a Miami Beach church at the first funeral for
victims of the collapse.
Marcus Guara, 52, his wife Ana Guara, 42, and their daughters, Lucia,
10, and Emma, 4, were remembered as a tight-knit family who loved taking
walks on the beach and spending time together.
"Who would have thought a few weeks ago that our community had so many
ties to one little building in one small corner of Florida called
Surfside," Marcus Guara's cousin Peter Milián said in a eulogy for the
family.
TROPICAL STORM ELSA APPROACHES
The search for more victims carried on even as Elsa, which strengthened
into a Category 1 hurricane, was on track to make landfall on Florida's
northern Gulf Coast on Wednesday morning.
Forecasters say Surfside will likely be spared the worst of the storm,
but its approach prompted local officials demolish a still-standing
section of the 12-story tower on Sunday night over worries that high
winds could knock it down.
Lightning brought by Elsa forced search and rescue teams to halt their
operation for a time on Tuesday. Officials said their task could be
interrupted again before the storm passes.
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Search crews at the Champlain Towers South collapse site in Surfside
have recovered a total of eight victims Tuesday.
Though local officials say they have not given up
hope of finding survivors, no one has been discovered alive in the
rubble since the first few hours after Champlain Towers South
collapsed.
Miami-Dade County Fire Chief Alan Cominsky said rescuers have not
found any "livable spaces" where survivors could have been spared.
More than 124 tons, or 5 million pounds, of debris has been removed
from the site, with identifiable pieces sent to a police warehouse
for use in upcoming investigations, including a grand jury probe.
Investigators have not determined what caused the tower to fall.
Attention has been focused on a 2018 engineering report that warned
of structural deficiencies.
The disaster has prompted officials across South Florida to study
residential buildings for signs of poor construction or structural
weaknesses.
Residents of a North Miami Beach condominium, Crestview Towers, were
told to leave immediately last week after engineers found serious
concrete and electrical problems. They have not been allowed to
return as city officials try to determine if the building can be
shored up to make it safe.
(Reporting by Franciso Alvarado; Additional reporting by Barbara
Goldberg in Maplewood, New Jersey, Nathan Layne in Wilton,
Connecticut, and Dan Whitcomb in Los Angeles;Writing by Dan
WhitcombEditing by Cynthia Osterman, Bill Berkrot and Leslie Adler)
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