Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said during a press conference Friday that 120 people have been accounted for while at least 159 people are still missing.

Four deaths have been reported. The Miami-Dade County Medical Examiner Department identified three of the four people who died in the Surfside condo collapse, but the department has only announced one of the names publicly, 54-year-old Stacie Fang.

Fang was pulled from the rubble and transported to Aventura Hospital, where she died Thursday, WSVN 7 reported.

Among those still unaccounted for, 31 are from six Latin American countries. Six are Venezuelan citizens, nine are Argentine, six are Colombian, three are Uruguayan, six are Paraguayan and one is Chilean.

The sister of Paraguay first lady Silvana López Moreira is one of the missing six from the country, Paraguay Foreign Minister Euclides Acevedo told local media. Her husband, three children and a family assistant are also not accounted for.

The Times of Jerusalem reported Thursday that 20 of those missing are Jewish, although it is unclear if any are Israeli citizens.

Israeli Foreign Minister Yair Lapid spoke with Maor Elbaz, the Consul General of Israel in Miami, and updated him on the state of operations in the area due to the collapse of the building.

“The Foreign Ministry personnel in Miami and here in Israel are doing everything they can to help the wounded and the families,” Lapid told The Times of Israel. “It is a difficult and complex event, and it will take time to deal with it. We are here for the victims for any assistance they may need.”

Miami-Dade Fire and Rescue Chief Raide Jadallah said 37 people were pulled from the rubble, at least 11 people with injuries have been treated and four of those were transported.

President Joe Biden approved a Florida emergency declaration Friday and ordered the Federal Emergency Management Agency to assist search and rescue efforts at the Surfside building collapse, a White House release said.

Search and rescue officials are urging people to call 305-614-1819 if they know someone who may have been in the building Thursday morning. The Surfside Community enter has become a reunification center for families still searching for their loved ones.

Officials still do not know what caused 55 units of the condominium tower to collapse. Surfside Vice Mayor Tina Paul told Newsweek that the building passed a roof inspection the day before it collapsed.

The condo development was built in 1981 on the beach in the southeast corner of Surfside. The current asking price for a few two-bedroom units was listed at $600,000 to $700,000.

Surfside is located about six miles from Miami Beach.

The live updates for this event have concluded.

Matilde Fainstein reported seeing water seeping through cracks in the outer wall in 2014, which she said damaged her outdoor terrace. Fainstein filed a suit that year, and the owners were found responsible for the damages.

She filed another suit the next year, saying the building owners “failed to repair or negligently repaired the common elements and the outside walls of the building,” Insider reported.

Whether improperly maintained outer walls were the cause of the collapse has not yet been determined, but a Florida International University study from 2020 found that the building had been sinking up to two millimeters per year since the 1990s.

Read more from Newsweek.

Additionally, families waiting at the centers have been asked to provide DNA samples to aid in the identification process for any bodies found in the rubble.

Read more from Newsweek.

He stressed the important of getting an accurate yet prompt reason for why the 40-year old building collapsed.

“It’s an explanation that we don’t want to to get wrong obviously, but at the same time I do think it’s important that it’s timely because you have a lot of families here. You have families that lost loved ones in this building collapse. They have a right to know,” he said.

He also asserted that there were people throughout the Surfside community and the rest of the state wondering how a building’s structure could suddenly fail.

“The state will support whatever we can to do this right,” he said.

“I just spoke about an hour ago with President Biden, and he reiterated his administration’s full support. They’re all in,” DeSantis said during a news conference. “And so we really appreciate having the support of the President and the people of Florida.”

Biden also confirmed that he and DeSantis had been in contact, affirming his support for Florida during White House remarks Friday.

“We sent the best people from FEMA down there. We’re going to stay with them, with the disaster declaration we made, provide for everything from housing to, God forbid, whether there’s a need for moratoria for the bodies to be placed and everything in between,” he said.

Fang was pulled out of the rubble after the collapse and was transported for treatment to Aventura Hospital, where she died from blunt force injuries Thursday, WSVN reported.

In a statement obtained by WSVN, a family friend said there were “no words to describe the tragic loss of our beloved Stacie,” and asked the public to respect the privacy of her loved ones and son, Jonah Handler, as they grieve.

“The members of the Fang and Handler family would like to express our deepest appreciation for the outpouring of sympathy, compassion and support we have received. The many heartfelt words of encouragement and love have served as a much-needed source of strength during this devastating time.”

“We’re working to set up a call between the President and the governor that should be happening this afternoon and we’ll give you all a readout of that when it happens,” Psaki said.

Biden and DeSantis have not spoken since part of the condo caved in early Thursday, CNN reported. However, the governor’s office requested an emergency declaration Thursday night, approved Friday by Biden, and DeSantis has communicated with other top White House officials since the collapse.

The approved declaration of emergency gives Florida access to federal resources and equipment to aid search and rescue work.

The report, by Department of Earth and Environment professor Shimon Wdowinski, cited previous studies on the “property damage and disruptions to daily life” that coastal cities can experience as a result of rising sea levels and tidal flooding.

The cause of the condo collapse that killed at least four has not yet been determined, but the National Institute of Standards and Technology is sending six scientists and engineers to investigate.

“If a full investigation or study is conducted, its ultimate goal would be to determine the technical cause of the collapse and, if indicated, to recommend changes to building codes, standards and practices, or other appropriate actions to improve the structural safety of buildings,” NIST said in a statement.

The firm is representing Manuel Drezner, who lives near the building, and others “similarly situated.”

The lawsuit alleges that repair needs for the building had been diagnosed, “but they had not been implemented.” Additionally, it states the building association could have evaded the collapse “through the exercise of ordinary care, security measures and supervision.”

She said that the Surfside town manager and a building official confirmed with her that the condo underwent inspection. She added that the building might have already initiated its 40-year certification process, which is standard for buildings of that age, at the time of the collapse.

While speaking to CNN’s Poppy Harlow on Friday, Paul mentioned that she recently learned work had been done on the building’s roof when a now missing couple who lived in the building complained to her about the smell of tar.

“The smell was just overwhelming for them even with the windows closed,” Paul said.

The six are part of at least 31 citizens from six Latin American countries who have not been found after the collapse, CNN reported.

Florida Sen. Marco Rubio acknowledged in a Tweet Thursday that a “substantial number” of the missing were originally from overseas.

“We are working with the Consulates of various countries in the Western Hemisphere to help secure travel visas for family members who need to travel to the U.S.,” he wrote in a later Tweet.

The first lady’s sister, Sophia López Moreira, her husband Luis Pettengill and their three children were in Miami for COVID-19 vaccinations when the collapse occurred, Paraguay’s Foreign Minister Euclides Acevedo told local media.

The first lady, her parents and her brother-in-law’s parents all traveled to Florida Thursday as they awaited news of her sister, the Paraguay presidency’s office of communication told CNN en Español.

Sophia’s husband and children, as well as a family assistant who traveled with them, represent the six known people from Paraguay currently missing in the wreck.

The emergency declaration gives the Department of Homeland Security and FEMA the authority to “coordinate all disaster relief efforts” that have “the purpose of alleviating the hardship and suffering caused by the emergency on the local population.”

FEMA can also provide equipment and resources “at its discretion” to aid those excavating the site. Thomas J. McCool was named the Federal Coordinating Officer for Federal recovery efforts in the area.

“We are very, very grateful that our president has now authorized FEMA support,” Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said in a press conference Friday. “That is going to assist us in our recovery efforts, as well to assist the families.”

Meanwhile, the number of people accounted for rose to 120, which the mayor said was “very good news.”

“The search and rescue team worked throughout the night, and it was a very active scene from above and below,” Cava said. “We also brought heavy machinery onto the site to assist with the operation.”

Cava said that the current numbers are “very fluid” and the county would continue to provide updates if they change.

Craig Setzer at Miami CBS affiliate WFOR posted a brief video to Twitter from the station’s realtime doppler showing a storm front coming into the Miami Beach area.

“Unfortunately, rescue efforts likely to be disrupted for an hour or so as heavy storms race toward Surfside. Stay safe as the storms pass. #CondoCollapse,” he wrote.

Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava gave the statistics at asaid at an evening press conference, and said that the 99 who are unaccounted for may include people who were not in the building at the time of its collapse.

While city and county officials are leaving the scene for the evening, Miami-Dade Fire Chief Alan Cominsky said that first responders’ work will continue throughout the night.

Rep. Debbie Wasserman-Schultz (D-Fla.) said that the White House would be approving all requests for aid.

“There will be unprecedented resources that will be sent and available to the families in need, to the cities and the local government for the cleanup costs that are going to be so essential,” Wasserman-Schultz said.

Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) spoke about the diverse makeup of the community.

“This is an international community. We are the gateway of Latin America. This community in particular has so many Israeli families and many of them have international family members who are longing for information about their loved ones. We’re working with constituents to help get visas processed quickly so we can get their family members over here, to be able to make sure that they can be standing by to get the critical news they’re all looking for,” Rubio said.

The next official update is expected at about 7:30 or 8 a.m. Friday.

The Heat, working with its charitable fund as well as the Coral Gables Community Foundation, The Key Biscayne Community Foundation, John S. and James L. Knight Foundation and The Miami Foundation, have set up the fund, according to the Miami Herald.

Contributions can be made here.

“#MDFR #TRT & #FLTF1 are working in the basement parking garage at Champlain Towers. Firefighters continue working on locating possible victims, while dealing with heavy damage and changing conditions in the parking garage. #SurfsideBuildingCollapse,” the Miami-Dade Fire Rescue posted.

They had to shift resources to a parking garage underneath the building that will allow them to tunnel through the rubble to conduct search and recovery efforts on each floor of the building.

“All operations are occurring underneath the rubble,” Jadallah said. “They are occurring underneath the parking garage where we have teams of firefighters constantly as they continue making cuts, breaches and placing sonar devices, search cams to locate victims.”

“The process is slow and methodical,” he added.

Their operations could shift the rubble which may result in falling debris and small fires.

Jadallah confirmed that crews did encounter a small fire earlier this afternoon as a result of shifting rubble. He said it was extinguished within 20 minutes and then went back to conducting their search.

Jadallah said 37 in total have been pulled from the structure and 11 patients are being treated at local hospitals. Officials are still only reporting one death.

He also denied reports that crews rescued two people heard under the rubble earlier this afternoon.

“We did receive sounds,” Jadallah said. “Not necessarily people talking, but sounds. What sounds like people banging, not people but sounds of a possibility of a banging. We haven’t heard any voices coming from the pile.”

Search and rescue efforts will continue into the night and fresh crews will be brought in tomorrow morning.

Miami-Dade Police Director Freddie Ramirez said police are “doing everything to bring information to families.”

He understands the families are frustrated but asked for their “painful patience.”

She said 102 people have been accounted for, almost double the amount from the last update. She said those accounted for are safe.

However, at least 99 people are still unaccounted for.

Families at the reunification center are being briefed on which of their loved ones are and aren’t accounted for.

Cava also said she declared a state of emergency and that Florida Governor Ron DeSantis “has an emergency order on his desk” as well.

This means, she said, Surfside will get FEMA support from President Joe Biden.

She added that local officials have provided food, hotel lodging, medical aid and social services. An emergency fund has been set up at supportsurfside.org

He said FEMA is waiting for Florida Governor Ron DeSantis to declare a state of emergency.

“We are on top of it, we are ready to move from the federal resources immediately,” Biden said. “If in fact we’re asked for it. But we can’t go in and do it, but FEMA is down there taking a look at what’s needed.”

Biden said his chief of staff Ron Klain and members of his cabinet are “deeply involved” in the movement of federal resources.

“I say to the people of Florida, ‘Whatever help you want that the federal government can provide, we’re waiting, just ask us, we’ll be there,’” Biden said.

Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava urged Governor DeSantis to declare a state of emergency for the building collapse in order to receive federal aid and resources.

DeStanis’ communication team told Florida State Capitol reporter Forrest Saunders that “DEM and the state has responded to every request and at this time every need has been met. If they have additional requests or a need for a local state of emergency we stand ready to respond.”

“This is 12 miles from our arena,” Heat vice president and charitable fund executive director Steve Stowe told The Miami Herald. “We heard about this, and our immediate reaction was that we had to find a way to help.”

So Stow rounded up guard Tyler Herro and assistant coaches Chris Quinn and Eric Glass and others to fill up a truck with water, food and other essentials for front liners.

“Kind of like what we do when [Hurricane] Irma hit or when any of these tragedies happen, and we went to ground zero and unloaded all the supplies,” Stowe said. “They spoke to the first responders just to lift their spirits a little bit.”

The Heat’s partner, World Central Kitchen and Direct Relief, were also on their way “to deliver more hot meals and food trucks and help with some of the displaced victims.”

“The bigger picture is this is going to be going on for a while,” Stowe added. “But we wanted to just get there and show everybody that we’re with them and it’s really nice that Tyler took the time this morning to do that.”

Brian Fincheltub, Venezuela’s consular affairs director, said on Twitter that they have identified four citizens that are in the building.

“We are already in contact with the authorities that are searching and their families,” he tweeted.

The Argentine consulate in Miami said nine citizens are currently missing, according to a press release shared on Twitter.

Paraguay President Mario Abdo Benítez’s ministry of external relations said relatives of first lady Silvana López Moreira are unaccounted for following the collapse of the condo building in Surfside.

The sister of first lady Silvana López Moreira lives with her husband and three children on the 10th floor of the partially collapsed building.

Six Paraguayans are unaccounted for at this time, the ministry tweeted Thursday.

These updated numbers come from Miami-Dade Police Director Alfredo Ramirez.

Ramirez also said that 53 people have been accounted for, but their condition is unknown at this time.

Those who are still unaccounted for may not have been home when the building collapsed.

There is still only one fatality reported at this time.

Cohen said he and his wife were awoken by what they thought was a thunderstorm early Thursday morning.

When they got up and opened the door leading out to the hallway, they saw a pile of rubble and smoke.

“I couldn’t walk out past my doorway,” Cohen, 63, said. “A gaping hole of rubble.”

They tried to take the stairs down to the pool area but the door wouldn’t open. So they descended to the basement and found rising water there.

The couple returned upstairs, screaming for help. They were eventually rescued by firefighters using a cherry-picker used to lower people to the ground, he said.

“I thank them,” Cohen said. “They had such a hard job. It’s amazing what they do. I’m always happy to be alive, but I’m even happier today.”

WTVJ reporter Ryan Nelson said it seems firefighters actively putting out a fire. He said he smelt something burning and then saw water sprayed on the building by firefighter hoses.

Other reporters at the family unification center said they heard fire engines race to the collapse site.

“I have spoken with the mayor, I’ve spoken with the congresswoman, and I’ll have more to say later,” he told reporters at the White House.

An official told CNN that the White House and the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) are working with local officials to provide assistance.

“This morning the President spoke with Mayor Levine Cava and offered federal assistance and support for dealing with the terrible tragedy in Surfside,” the official said. “White House Chief of Staff Ron Klain spoke with Congresswoman Wasserman-Schultz, in whose district the building is located, and the White House and FEMA are coordinating with local officials to provide assistance if needed.”

“Our hearts go out to the families of those who lost their beloved as a result of this horrific incident – and to those families who wait in anguish as search-and-rescue teams assess the situation,” the official added. “The White House is continuing to monitor the situation, and we send our gratitude to the heroic first responders who are working tirelessly to save lives this morning.”

He called it a “tragic day” as he toured the complex and spoke with a local official and said that the images on television do not do justice to the destruction on the scene.

He said that search and rescue efforts are continuing this afternoon and that crew members have made contact with survivors in the rubble.

DeSantis said that engineers are looking into the cause of the collapse. Although they are “Working diligently,” there will not be “immediate answers.”

He added that the Red Cross has set up short-term setups in hotels as well as blankets and clothing for survivors to ensure displaces people have somewhere to go.

City, county and state officials are working on longer-term needs.

Five state agencies, including law enforcement, health and medical and Department of Transportation forces, are on the scene to assist local officials.

The video is from a motion-sensor camera set up inside her family’s two-bedroom condo on the 7th floor of the building.

“That’s our apartment, my family apartment,” Santan told CNN. “I actually left for the weekend yesterday and I always set up a camera when I leave, so that was the footage I got. It only records when it detects movement so… it detected movement, it recorded that piece, and then it lost connection.”

She said the apartment was “basically a vacation home,” but she has been there for the past three weeks.

The apartment was one of those that collapsed.

“It’s just dust, there’s no hope for it basically,” she said.

The form asks residents to fill out their name, contact information, building unit number and whether or not all the people living in the apartment have been accounted for.

Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava called the situation at the family reunification center “heartbreaking.”

She said the center is full of loved ones of residents and people staying in the building on vacation.

“People are in despair,” she added during a press conference.

A WTVJ reporter said that people, including young children, who were evacuated from the building are also at the center.

Miami-Dade Commissioner Sally Heyman told CNN about an hour ago that rescue crews have completed searching and are now transitioning to recovery efforts.

“The rest of the search and rescue efforts has been done by manpower on the outside, search on the barrier quarters, also with drones and with dogs,” she said. “It has shifted now or started to shift to recovery.”

She said fire rescue and first responders went through the entire part of the building that is still standing.

“We have 51 people that were assumed to have been there, but you don’t know between vacations or anything else, so we’re still waiting,” Heyman told CNN by phone. “The hope is still there, but it’s waning.”

Heyman said those 51 people who “supposedly” lived in the building were a mix of year-round families and part-time “snowbirds” who live in Florida during the winter months.

Heyman told clarifying to WTVJ that these people are not necessarily missing, they are just unaccounted for because officials do not have a record of which residents were in the building at the time of the collapse.

She added that this number comes from sources she has in the Miami-Dade police and fire departments.

Officials are urging people to call 305-614-1819 if they know someone who may have been in the building at the time of the collapse.

Families are gathered at the Reunification Center at the Surfside Community Center trying to find their loved ones who are still unaccounted for.

Nicolas Fernandez told the Associated Press that he has been waiting since early Thursday to contact close family friends who lived in the collapsed section of the building.

“Since it happened, I’ve been calling them nonstop, just trying to ring their cellphones as much as we can to hep the rescue to see if they can hear the cellphones,” he said.

At a press conference at Hillsborough Community College Thursday morning, he thanks first responders and said he spoke with local mayors and has dispatched state resources to assist in rescue efforts.

“The state will help out in any way we can,” he said.

However, DeSantis said he is “bracing for bad news giving the destruction.”

Florida Senator Marco Rubio tweeted about the “horrible images” emerging from the building collapse.

Residents were in shock as they described the chaotic scene in the aftermath of the building collapse to local reporters. Many described the sound as a bomb or earthquake.

Santo Mejil told the Miami Herald his wife works as an aid for an elderly woman in the condo. He said she called him from the building.

“She said she heard a big explosion. It felt like an earthquake,” Mejil told the newspaper. She called him later to say that rescuers were bringing her down.

Building resident Ofe Osin-Cohen told WTVJ that many people in the Towers were snowbirds and weekenders who have homes in other parts of the state. She said the pool area has been crowded with “quite a few people.”

Osin-Cohen said she “doesn’t want to think about the screams” she heard as she evacuated the building. She wasn’t sure where those screams were coming from.

One survivor told WTVJ that he believes his apartment is “demolished.” He described a “cloud of dust and cement” in the aftermath of the collapse.

There are year-round and seasonal residents living in the building. It is unclear how many people are missing. The building owner keeps a log of visitors but does not have a record of residents inside as of Thursday morning, according to WTVJ.

She said that about half of the 136 units in the Champlain Tower have collapsed.

She referred families to the emergency number to report missing loved ones and to check in to account for those who are safe. She also said that a range of social services, including a chaplain, are on the scene and will be available for the survivors and families of victims.

Miami-Dade Commissioner Jose “Pepe” Diaz called this a “very sad moment for the community.”

Miami-Dade Fire and Rescue Chief Raide Jadallah said units arrive at the scene at approximately 1:30 a.m.

He said 55 units on the northeast corridor collapsed. As search and rescue efforts continue, Jadallah said 35 people were pulled from the structure and 2 people were pulled from the rubble. Officials do not know the exact number of people who were in the building and therefore do not know how many people are still missing.

Ten people were treated on-site and two were transferred to the hospital, where one person has died.

The press conference was cut short due to lightning. Incoming rainfall over the area may hinder some recovery efforts, officials said.

They are also rerouting traffic near the collapse site. Southbound traffic is being diverted west on 96 street. Northbound traffic is being diverted at 85 and Collins Avenue.

Miami-Dade Transits also reported that routes 119 S and 120 are being detoured between 81 Street and 96 Street on Collins Avenue. They told travelers to expect delays this morning.

A family reunification center is set up at 9301 Collins Avenue for anyone looking for unaccounted or missing relatives. Family members are encouraged to call 305-614-1819 to account for missing loved ones.

The Miami-Dade Police Department will hold a press conference at 9:15 a.m.