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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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- 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.
- 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.
- Aside from East Hampton, she lived in different parts of New York including Manhattan, New York City.
- She attended Dwight School in New York City and Syracuse University in Syracuse, New York.
- In September 2001, she founded her own boutique real estate firm called Adina Equities.
- 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
- 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.”
- In 2014, she purchased a house in East Hampton.
- In 2017, she decided she wanted to choose to become a mother. She suffered through miscarriages and failed rounds of in-vitro fertilization.
- From July 2018 to February 2020, she worked for The Corcoran Group in The Hamptons, New York as a licensed associate real estate broker.
- On September 28, 2020, she gave birth to her daughter Aria Azarian.
- From May 31, 2023 to June 3, 2023, she visited her father in North Carolina, USA with Aria and Aria’s nanny.
- 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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