Trending Topics

Victim identified in Miami-Dade Fire Rescue facility explosion

Authorities identified a man who was killed in an explosion at a Miami-Dade Fire Rescue maintenance facility that also injured four others

By Milena Malaver
Miami Herald

MIAMI — The Miami-Dade Sheriff’s Office has identified the man killed in an explosion at a fire-rescue maintenance depot.

Leomar Suris, 36, was found dead just after 10 a.m. Monday at the facility at 6100 SW 87th Ave., north of Kendall, deputies say. The depot is where fire-rescue vehicles get fueled up and serviced.

| NEW RESOURCE: Performance stations: Design for health, resilience and readiness

Suris “leaves behind two children along with a community of loving family members, coworkers, and many friends,” according to a GoFundMe page set up to raise money for his funeral and family. The fundraiser has raised $18,000 in donations as of Thursday.

Deputies responding to the explosion encountered heavy smoke as they began evacuating the depot.

Three people, including a MDSO lieutenant, were taken to the hospital by Miami-Dade Fire Rescue. Another man transported himself to the hospital. All were in stable condition.

MDSO’s homicide detectives, the state fire marshal and Miami-Dade Fire Rescue are investigating.

Trending
A volunteer firefighter continued fighting the Aspen Acres Fire even after learning the wildfire had destroyed his family’s home
Three Sterling firefighters received their official helmets after completing a year of training, evaluation and service with the department
The new training center features a five-story live-fire tower, technical rescue props and decontamination facilities, allowing Gig Harbor firefighters to train closer to home
A structural failure at the former Pfizer headquarters prompted mass evacuations and fears of a collapse before engineers stabilized the building

©2026 Miami Herald.
Visit miamiherald.com.
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Company News
Built specifically for the fire service, the new platform serves as a centralized hub for firefighters, officers, and decision-makers seeking trusted information, resources, service and maintenance options and solutions to improve air quality and safety inside the station