Shots Fired, Lamborghini Out of Control and a Quiet Miramar Neighborhood Woke Up to This
Most people on Sunshine Boulevard were still asleep. It was a Sunday morning, the tail end of a Fourth of July weekend. A quiet residential block in Miramar. Same families living there for close to ten years.
Then the ShotSpotter went off.
At 5:30 AM on July 5, 2026, a fluorescent green Lamborghini SUV was moving west through the 2700 block of Sunshine Boulevard when a white BMW pulled alongside it and opened fire.
Multiple rounds, rapid. The Lamborghini lost control, rolled through a stop sign, and crashed directly into a home one block away.
The Car That Could Not Hide
A fluorescent green Lamborghini at 5:30 in the morning on a residential street is not exactly discreet. Police believe the vehicle was followed there. This was not a random block and it was not a random target.
Two men and one woman were inside. All three were struck. Miramar Fire Rescue rushed all three to Memorial Regional Hospital in Hollywood in critical condition. Shell casings and evidence markers were spread across the road when officers arrived.
Neighbor Carlos Regueiro told reporters what he heard that morning. “Me and my family heard what sounded like gunshots around five to six in the morning.
It definitely is scary. Whoever was involved, we might know them.” That last line says a lot. A block that tight does not expect to wake up to this.
What the Police Are Saying
Miramar Police Chief Delrish Moss was at the scene early and did not hold back.

“This is no way to wake up on a Sunday morning. It’s a chaotic scene,” he told reporters. “Listening to the ShotSpotter, it was quite rapid fire.”
He also confirmed what most other outlets buried: the vehicle was specifically targeted, not the neighborhood, and investigators are working to determine if the victims were followed in or someone was already waiting. No arrests have been made.
The white BMW remains unidentified as of publication.
Why a Quiet Neighborhood Absorbed Someone Else’s Violence
This is the part that stays with you. The home that got hit was not the target. The street was not the target. The people who heard gunshots through their windows on a holiday weekend had nothing to do with any of it.
But the Lamborghini came to their block. And the crash ended on their wall.
This pattern shows up more often than people realize. A car crash in Gnesen Township knocked out power for over 100 homes in one night the same way: one incident, one block, and everyone nearby absorbs the damage.
There is a WhatsApp channel that covers South Florida crime and property stories as they develop. Worth having if you follow these stories before the news cycle catches up.
Why This Matters
This is not just a crash story. It is a targeted shooting that ended inside a residential home because three people left a party in a car that was impossible to miss.
According to SpotCrime data on Broward County, 53 shootings were recorded across the county in a recent three-month window. These are not random spikes. They are targeted incidents that keep landing in neighborhoods that never asked for them.
ShotSpotter flagged the gunfire before a single 911 call came in. That is the only reason officers arrived as fast as they did.
It is also not the first time a vehicle has become a homeowner’s nightmare with zero warning.
A fire truck crash in New York left 5 residents displaced and one family completely shaken, and in Katy, Texas, a Tesla came through a home wall and killed a 76-year-old grandmother who was simply inside her house.
In every case, the people inside had no warning and no way to prepare.
Key Takeaways
- The shooting happened at 5:30 AM on July 5, 2026, on Sunshine Boulevard in Miramar
- Two men and one woman were inside the fluorescent green Lamborghini SUV when fired upon
- A white BMW is the suspect vehicle. No arrests made as of publication
- All three victims were transported to Memorial Regional Hospital in critical condition
- Police confirmed the car was specifically targeted, not the surrounding neighborhood
- ShotSpotter detected the gunfire and alerted officers before any 911 call was placed
- The Lamborghini crashed into a residential home after traveling approximately one block
What do you think about neighborhoods absorbing violence that was never meant for them? When a targeted shooting ends in someone’s wall, who actually carries that? Drop your take in the comments. Genuinely want to hear what people think.
Wrapping Up
A neighborhood that had nothing to do with any of this woke up to a car in someone’s home and crime tape down the street. The people inside the Lamborghini were the target. The street was just where it ended.
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Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only. All details are based on publicly available reports at the time of publication. The investigation is ongoing and details may change.


