Three Shot In Lamborghini

Public reports described three people shot, but official details about the vehicle and victims remained limited.

MIRAMAR, FL — Police were reviewing a shooting report in Miramar after public accounts said three people were shot in or near a Lamborghini, but officials had not released a full public account confirming the vehicle, victims or arrests.

The report drew attention because it involved a luxury vehicle and multiple possible victims in a city that has seen several high-profile shootings in recent years. As of Sunday, key facts remained unconfirmed in public records, including the exact location, the conditions of the people shot and whether police had identified a suspect.

Miramar police have previously responded to several shootings across the city, including incidents near busy roads, gas stations and residential areas. In one recent case, a fatal triple shooting at a gas station left 19-year-old Christian Corea dead and two others injured after an exchange of gunfire. Officials in that case said the confrontation began when someone walked up to a car at the station, leading to an altercation. Surveillance video later showed people near a sedan before gunfire broke out. That case underscored how quickly a brief encounter near a vehicle can become a major crime scene.

The latest report described three people shot and referenced a Lamborghini, but publicly available information did not establish whether the car was moving, parked or targeted. It also was not clear whether the people shot were inside the vehicle, standing near it or caught in nearby gunfire. Police had not publicly released the names or ages of the people involved, and no agency statement reviewed Sunday confirmed whether the shooting was tied to a robbery, road rage, a dispute or another motive. Those gaps left investigators with several basic questions still open.

Luxury vehicles have appeared in other South Florida shooting investigations, though those cases involved different cities and facts. In 2022, state troopers investigated a rolling shootout on Interstate 95 in North Miami-Dade after a woman said she was injured by glass when gunfire between people in a Mercedes and a Lamborghini SUV crossed her path. In 2025, Miami police said a Lamborghini driver fired his gun after three people approached him during an armed robbery attempt near Biscayne Boulevard and Northeast 31st Street. Those cases did not involve Miramar, but they show how high-value vehicles can become part of fast-moving gun investigations.

In Miramar, past shootings have unfolded along major corridors and public areas where police had to secure traffic, collect shell casings and search for surveillance video. A 2021 roadway shooting killed three men after gunfire struck a white Ford Mustang on State Road 7 near Southwest 37th Street. Police said another vehicle pulled alongside the Mustang and someone opened fire, causing the driver to veer off the road and crash. Investigators at the time searched for the gunman and the second vehicle. That case remains part of the city’s recent record of violent incidents tied to vehicles.

The next steps in the latest report would typically include confirming the shooting location, identifying victims, checking hospital updates and reviewing video from nearby businesses, homes or traffic cameras. Detectives also would look for shell casings, damaged vehicles and witness statements. If a Lamborghini was involved, police could use registration records, license plate readers or tow records to determine who had the vehicle and whether it was damaged by gunfire. Any formal charges would depend on whether detectives identify a shooter and present evidence to prosecutors.

Residents near prior Miramar shooting scenes have described heavy police responses, blocked streets and a search for answers after gunfire. In the gas station case, witnesses and family members spoke publicly about the shock of a brief encounter ending in death. In cases involving vehicles, investigators often must sort through competing accounts because drivers and passengers can leave quickly, and bullets may strike people or property away from the original target. Police had not said Sunday whether the latest report involved one shooter, multiple shooters or return fire.

As of Sunday, no official public update confirmed arrests, victim names or a motive in the reported Lamborghini-related shooting. The next milestone is a formal statement or incident report from Miramar police that establishes what happened, where it happened and who was injured.

Author note: Last updated July 5, 2026.