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Adina Azarian was a real estate broker from East Hampton, Suffolk County, Long Island, New York, United States. Here are 13 more things about her:

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  1. She is the adopted daughter of John Rumpel and Barbara Rumpel. John is a pilot who runs Encore Motors, a company in Melbourne, Florida, USA that owns a Cessna 560 Citation V.
  2. An advocate for several anti-violence and environmental organizations, she supported Evelyn Alexander Wildlife Rescue Center, LVIS-Ladies Village Improvement Society, the Peconic Land Trust and The Retreat.
  3. Aside from East Hampton, she lived in different parts of New York including Manhattan, New York City.
  4. She attended Dwight School in New York City and Syracuse University in Syracuse, New York.
  5. In September 2001, she founded her own boutique real estate firm called Adina Equities.
  6. In 2011, she gave up her position as the Adina Equities president to become the chief executive officer of Keller Williams Realty, Inc. in East Hampton
  7. In 2012, she was one of the only 10 female brokers among 100 real estate experts whose submissions were published in “Trump: The Best Real Estate Advice I Ever Received.” 
  8. In 2014, she purchased a house in East Hampton.
  9. In 2017, she decided she wanted to choose to become a mother. She suffered through miscarriages and failed rounds of in-vitro fertilization.
  10. From July 2018 to February 2020, she worked for The Corcoran Group in The Hamptons, New York as a licensed associate real estate broker.
  11. On September 28, 2020, she gave birth to her daughter Aria Azarian.
  12. From May 31, 2023 to June 3, 2023, she visited her father in North Carolina, USA with Aria and Aria’s nanny.
  13. On June 4, 2023, she, Aria, Aria’s nanny were on the Encore Motors’ Cessna 560 Citation V, returning home from North Carolina to East Hampton. At around 1:13 p.m. that day, the flight took off from Elizabethton Municipal Airport in Elizabethton, Tennessee, USA and was bound for Long Island MacArthur Airport in Ronkonkoma, New York. At around 1:28 p.m., the pilot was given a command from air traffic control to level off at 31,000 feet. The pilot did not respond and the aircraft entered restricted airspace around Washington, D.C., USA. At around 3:30 p.m., the aircraft went down and crashed near Montebello, Virginia, USA, killing all four people onboard. She was 49.
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