🏠 News From Your Neighborhood
Miami, FL
Charging e-bike suspected in destructive Miami house fire
MIAMI — The smell of blackened, burned rubble still lingers inside the house where an early-morning fire left a family devastated. Outside, debris from the firefight remains scattered around the property.
The fire tore through a duplex near the 1800 block of Northwest 53rd Street Saturday morning around 10:30 a.m., forcing everyone inside to flee.
The blaze is believed to have been caused by an e-bike, though officials say the exact cause is still under investigation.
“With every step,” Josue Paz said as he walked through the damage, he faces heartbreak and devastation.
What was once his family’s living room is now reduced to piles of ash and rubble.
Paz said he was inside the home when an e-bike charging in the house suddenly caught fire.
“Yep, that’s part of the bike. Right there, right there,” he said, pointing to debris.
“I couldn’t really process anything and it just happened,” Paz said.
Paz rushed to get his family out before the flames spread.
“My first thought was getting everybody out of the house. I was trying to call everybody,” he said. “Let’s go, let’s go, let’s get out.”
Fire officials say lithium-ion batteries used in e-bikes and e-scooters have been linked to a growing number of fast-moving fires nationwide. Miami Fire Rescue is still working to determine the exact cause of this fire.
Despite losing everything, Paz said surviving the fire is what matters most.
“I’m glad that I got my neighbors out, I got my family out,” he said.
Six people escaped the fire, along with a dog. They are staying with loved ones as the fire department continues to work to pinpoint how the fire started.
Copyright 2025 by WPLG Local10.com – All rights reserved.
Miami, FL
Palantir moves headquarters to Miami and joins growing tech exodus to Florida
Palantir announced Tuesday it has moved its headquarters from Denver to Miami – joining a slew of tech firms fleeing to South Florida as a growing number of industry leaders deem it the new Silicon Valley.
Tech giants have been increasingly flocking to Florida from business hubs like New York and California in pursuit of lower taxes, warm weather and safer neighborhoods.
“We have moved our headquarters to Miami, Florida,” Palantir wrote in a brief post on X Tuesday morning.
The company did not immediately respond to inquiries about its reason for the move.
Palantir was founded in Palo Alto, Calif., in 2003 and moved to Denver in 2020 as its CEO Alex Karp emerged as a vocal critic of Silicon Valley’s culture.
Former Miami Mayor Francis Suarez, who has long pushed for tech talent to move to Florida, cheered Tuesday’s “watershed moment for Miami.”
“This is the tipping point!” he wrote on X, using numerous exclamation points.
The Post has sought comment from Palantir.
Citadel’s Ken Griffin and real estate magnate Stephen Ross – some of the highest-profile billionaires to move to South Florida during the pandemic – recently launched a $10 million campaign to encourage business leaders to move to the Sunshine State, The Post reported.
“The only place a CEO or founder can scale from 10 employees to 10,000 will be in South Florida,” Ross previously told The Post. “While other cities are still special, they no longer support building business and supporting ambition like you can find here.”
The campaign targets CEOs and investors with national ads and direct outreach, as well as a dedicated concierge program that can help executives relocate operations and navigate state regulations.
Apple has already expanded its presence in South Florida with a new Miami campus, while software company ServiceNow has committed to opening an office in West Palm Beach.
Amazon earlier this year signed a massive office lease in Miami’s Wynwood neighborhood.
Billionaire Peter Thiel – Palantir’s chairman and co-founder – has ramped up his investments in South Florida, opening a new Miami office for his investment firm Thiel Capital late last year.
His venture capital firm Founders Fund opened a Florida office in 2021, near his Miami Beach mansion, and the businessman has even switched his voter registration to Florida.
Citadel’s Griffin – who lived in Chicago for nearly three decades – was one of the most outspoken business leaders to vouch for Miami after his 2022 move.
“I’ve lived in a failed city-state. I lived in Chicago for 30-some years. I had two colleagues who had bullets fly through their cars,” Griffin previously told Fox News.
“I had 25 bullet holes in the front of my building where I lived. You can’t live in a city awash [with] violent crime.”
Miami, FL
Police: 1 dead after triple shooting in Miami
MIAMI — Police officers in Miami are investigating a deadly shooting.
It happened Monday at approximately 6:45 p.m. in an alleyway in the area of Northwest 15th Street and 13th Avenue.
According to police, officers responded to the scene after receiving a Shot Spotter alert and found a 19-year-old who had been shot.
Police said that man was rushed to Jackson Memorial Hospital where he was pronounced dead.
According to authorities, two other people suffered non-life threatening injuries in the shooting.
Officers said an 18-year-old was shot in the leg and ran to nearby Charles Hadley Park, where he called the police.
That victim was taken to Jackson Memorial in stable condition and is expected to make a full recovery, police said.
A third victim who was also shot in the leg called 9-1-1 and was taken to Ryder Trauma Center at Jackson Memorial Hospital, according to authorities.
Police said a group of young males was hanging out near the alleyway, and everyone ran off once the shots rang out.
According to police, they are “looking at” the deceased teen as one of the shooters but are seeking at least one more.
Officers also said that a rifle was located, but that their investigation remains active and ongoing.
🏠 News From Your Neighborhood
Copyright 2026 by WPLG Local10.com – All rights reserved.
Miami, FL
Miami Dolphins make roster moves
The Miami Dolphins announced today that they have released the following players: offensive lineman James Daniels, wide receiver Tyreek Hill (failed physical) and wide receiver Nick Westbrook-Ikhine.
Daniels is an eight-year NFL veteran, who spent time with Chicago (2018-21), Pittsburgh (2022-24) and Miami (2025). He has appeared in 91 career games with 85 starts – 23 at left guard, eight at center and 54 at right guard. In 2025, he started one game at right guard before suffering a season-ending injury. Daniels entered the league as a second-round selection (39th overall) by Chicago in the 2018 NFL Draft. He played collegiately at Iowa (2015-17), where he appeared in 37 games with 25 starts in three seasons with the Hawkeyes.
Hill spent the previous four seasons with Miami (2022-25), where he started in 54 games and recorded 340 receptions for 4,733 yards (13.9 avg.) and 27 touchdowns. In 2023, he became the first player in Dolphins history to lead the league in receiving yards (1,799), setting a new franchise single-season record. His 13 touchdown receptions tied for the NFL lead, and his 119 receptions ranked second, which also tied a team record that Hill set in 2022. A 10-year NFL veteran, he has appeared in 145 career games with 127 starts with Kansas City (2016-21) and Miami (2022-25). He has totaled 819 receptions for 11,363 yards (13.9 avg.) and 83 touchdowns, along with 114 rushing attempts for 819 yards (7.2 avg.) and seven touchdowns. Hill has tallied 92 punt returns for 1,055 yards (11.5 avg.) and four touchdowns while adding 14 kickoff returns for 384 yards (27.4 avg.) and one touchdown. He is a five-time first-team All-Pro (2016, 2018, 2020, 2022 & 2023) and an eight-time Pro Bowl selection (2016-23). Hill entered the NFL as a fifth-round selection (165th overall) by Kansas City out of West Alabama in the 2016 NFL Draft.
Westbrook-Ikhine, who signed with Miami as an unrestricted free agent on March 13, 2025, played in 15 games with 3 starts, tallying 11 receptions for 89 yards (8.1 avg.). He is a six-year NFL veteran, appearing in 93 games with 42 starts with Tennessee (2020-24) and Miami (2025). He has recorded 137 receptions for 1,862 yards (13.6 avg.) and 19 touchdowns in his career. Westbrook-Ikhine entered the league as an undrafted college free agent in 2020 with Tennessee. He played collegiately at Indiana (2015-19), where he appeared in 51 games with 36 starts and totaled 144 receptions for 2,226 yards and 16 touchdowns.
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