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Death toll rises to 90 in Surfside condo collapse

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The death toll in the condo collapse in Surfside, Florida, rose to 90 on Sunday, officials said in a news conference.
Seventy-one of the victims have been identified and their next of kin have been notified, Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said. There are now 217 people accounted for and 31 others “potentially unaccounted for,” she said. Recovering the victims has been much swifter after the search operation shifted its focus from rescue to recovery. Levine Cava said teams are making “incredible progress,” and as of Sunday morning, more than 14 million pounds of concrete and debris have been removed from the site. Ten additional victims, all of whom were recovered between July 6 and 9, were identified by Miami-Dade officials in a statement Sunday. They were identified as Maria Gabriela Camou,64; Julio Cesar Velasquez,66; Lorenzo De Oliveira Leone,5; Alfredo Leone,48; Maria Torre,76; Richard Augustine,77; Luis Sadovnic,28; Edgar Gonzalez,42; Alexia Maria Pettengill Lopez Moreira,9; and Anna Sophia Pettengill Lopez Moreira,6. The recovery effort is still delicate work, Surfside Mayor Charles Burkett said, telling reporters that search and recovery workers have “even found unbroken wine bottles in the rubble and recovered them.” Miami-Dade Fire Chief Alan Cominsky echoed that statement. The process of removing debris is faster for the section of the building that remained standing after the collapse and was brought down in a controlled demolition last week amid concerns it posed a threat to search and rescue teams. “On the rubble pile where we’re still in our search and recovery, it’s still a methodical process,” Cominsky said. “The crews there, they’re monitoring, they’re hand digging… As we’re delayering, it’s a slow process.” Other personal belongings, like rings, continue to be recovered as well, Burkett said. Those items are being “returned to the site storage area, categorized, photographed and saved for the families.

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