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Tragic new details reveal final moments of plane that crashed in upstate New York and killed family of six

Tragic new details reveal final moments of plane that crashed in upstate New York and killed family of six

Daily Mail​10-05-2025

Tragic new details have emerged about the final moments of a family who were killed in a horror plane crash in upstate New York.
Federal investigators have put together a timeline of the events which led up to the deaths of the six victims on April 12.
Former MIT soccer player Karenna Goff, her physician parents, Dr. Michael Groff and Dr. Joy Saini, her brother, Jared Groff, and his partner, Alexia Couyutas Duarte and Karenna Groff´s boyfriend, James Santoro were aboard the aircraft when it went down.
The Massachusetts family was heading to the Catskills to celebrate Karenna's 25th birthday and the Passover holiday.
Their private plane departed Westchester County Airport in White Plains, New York, at around 11:30am heading north to Columbia County Airport in Hudson, according to a National Transportation Safety Board preliminary report issued Friday.
The aircraft was piloted by Michael Groff, 55, who had left the Boston suburbs early Saturday morning, picking up Karenna Groff and Santoro in White Plains.
But at about 11:57am Michael Groff informed air traffic control that he had missed the initial approach to the runway at Columbia County Airport, according to the report.
The controller then gave him new instructions for the landing, which Groff acknowledged a little after 12pm.
But around a minute later the controller warned Groff the plane was flying at a low altitude, the report states.
The pilot never responded and despite multiple warnings, air traffic control received no further radio transmissions from the plane until radar contact was eventually lost.
The Mitsubishi MU-2B-40 crashed in snow covered terrain roughly 10 miles south of the airport.
Investigators didn't provide an exact cause of the crash in the preliminary report.
But they noted that all major components of the aircraft found within a 150-foot debris field and that no significant weather advisories were in effect in the region at the time of the crash.
NTSB officials have previously said overcast conditions may have impacted the pilot's visibility and that an initial investigation had not turned up any issues with the aircraft.
The crash orphaned the Groff's youngest daughter Anika Groff, who had recently announced she would attend the University of North Carolina in the fall.
James's father, John Santoro described the victims as, 'a wonderful family'.
'The world lost a lot of very good people who were going to do a lot of good for the world if they had the opportunity. We're all personally devastated,' he said.
Karenna was the NCAA's 2022 woman of the year, her boyfriend was an MIT graduate.
Karenna's father was a neuroscientist and her mother was a urogynecologist.
Duarte was due to attend Harvard Law School, while her boyfriend Jared Groff was a paralegal.
Michael Groff was certified and had also been flying for 'a number of years' and 'from a very young age', according to officials.

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Is it better to neglect your garden?
Is it better to neglect your garden?

BBC News

time3 hours ago

  • BBC News

Is it better to neglect your garden?

Gardens packed with blooming flowers or adorned with neat insect hotels, are extremely popular. But are these highly curated creations actually helpful – or would it be better to allow nature to take its own course? When she's not leading garden-based learning at Cornell University's School of Integrative Plant Science in New York, Ashley Louise Miller Helmholdt is a mum who likes to garden. She has a few different gardens on her property, as well as a patch of lawn for her son to play on where clover occasionally crops up. "I have a little plot that's just wild," she says. "I have a native plant and pollinator garden. So I have a little bit of everything." Miller Helmholdt doesn't consider herself a master gardener by any means. Still, she has "a bit of background in this" and knows that a biodiverse, native plant-based garden, even with some so-called "weeds" in it, bolsters the biodiversity in her local ecosystem. There's a lot of emphasis today on creating gardens designed to support pollinators. Pollinator populations have been declining precipitously worldwide since the 1990s due to habitat loss, pesticide use, and climate change. The US Western Monarch butterfly population, for example, dropped to just 9,119 individuals in 2024, the second lowest count since records began in 1997. Expanding lawns and a lack of native flowers in urban and suburban areas are doing them a disservice. Even a small, pollinator-friendly wildlife garden on your property can help revive pollinator populations in your area. "Gardens, backyards, community gardens, school yards, parks, we have this incredible mosaic of green spaces scattered across the country that can help bring habitat back into our neighbourhoods and communities," says Matthew Shepherd, director of outreach and education for the Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation in Portland, Oregon. But what's the best way to go about this? As beautiful, pollinator-friendly gardens pop up across the globe, with neat "bee hotels" attached to fences and immaculate patchworks of wildflowers, some experts are questioning whether this is truly what wildlife needs – or if a bit more neglect could be more environmentally supportive in the long run. The leaves of many so-called weeds are food for insects at different life stages, while heaps of messy debris provide vital habitats – should we really clear these things away? A new approach As it happens, creating a wildlife garden doesn't just mean planting flowers that provide nectar and pollen. A true wildlife haven offers a year-round habitat for local species, and this may translate to letting areas of your green space get a little messy. "There's new excitement about supporting the full annual cycle of insects," says Desirée Narango, a conservation biologist at the Vermont Center for Ecostudies, Vermont. This doesn't just mean the plants that they need for food, for example, but also where they spend the winter, she says. "We want to support everything that these insects need to have sustainable populations, because then they can be more resilient against the myriad of other things that they have to deal with out there," she says. Narango lives in rural Vermont, and her entire backyard is a meadow of native plants that basically takes care of itself. "We have a beautiful, pristine habitat all around us that's sourcing a lot of really amazing native plants, and so I don't have to do anything, because they're dispersing into that area on their own," she explains. She does have to remove dandelions from time to time to keep the non-native, invasive species from getting a foothold, but she picks her battles. "There is evidence from North America and Europe that native plants support a greater variety of species than non-native plants," says Shepherd. Having some non-native plants in the mix can also support pollinators by increasing the nectar supply, as long as they're kept in check (invasive species have a proclivity for taking over and wiping out less hardy native species). Narango's scenario, however, is not what you'll find in the typically suburban backyard where turf often reigns supreme. If you're hoping to create a wildlife garden in this environment, you'll likely need to remove what's there and start from scratch to give native plants a chance to thrive, says Miller Helmholdt. "If you're starting from scratch, you'll be getting rid of some of those weed seeds in the seed bank that aren't going to be great." She recommends tilling the soil a few times to remove weed seeds in the soil so they don't all germinate and compete with the native species you plant. A moment for weeds Despite their reputation, so-called 'weeds' in a garden or lawn serve a purpose in supporting pollinators. A 2016 study found that increasing the amount of white clover in the UK would help significantly with increasing the amount of nectar available to pollinators. Meanwhile, stinging nettles are known to support over 40 species of insects in their native range across Europe, parts of Asia and North Africa. Considering that, it might seem counterintuitive to constantly remove these plants if you're trying to promote biodiversity. But Narango says there's a catch. Outside their native range, Narango explains that so-called weeds such as clover and dandelions mostly just support generalist species of insect – pollinators which aren't picky about which flowers they visit. "…they're not really supporting specialist species, vulnerable species, or species of high conservation concern. That's where you need the native [plant] species," she says. That said, in some areas, white clover is native and therefore not considered invasive. "If you live in an area where clover is native, it's a very different story than if you're in an area where it's non-native," says Narango. You don't need to go entirely native Turning your entire plot into a wildlife garden is a boon for biodiversity, but it's not an attainable goal for everyone. According to a recently published study Narango co-authored, converting at least 70% still makes a notable difference. It considered the impacts native and non-native landscaping have on food availability for birds (largely insects), and found non-native plants do reduce insect count, which ultimately impacts bird population growth. But there's a silver lining: "We were able to identify a threshold so that we could provide targeted [non-native plant] goalposts for people to strive for," says Narango. The researchers found that if more than 70% of your garden's biomass is native, that allows birds to sustain their populations. Doing less with your garden and letting things get a little messy, especially during strategic times of year, such as early spring, can help to protect emerging wildlife. For example, the international campaign No Mow May encourages people [in the Northern hemisphere] to stop mowing for the entire month of May, to allow plants to bloom and set seed without being flattened or decapitated. However, Susannah Lerman, a research ecologist for the United States Department of Agriculture's Forest Service Northern Research Station and adjunct professor at the University of Massacresetts in Amherst, US, prefers the term "Slow Mow Summer". Her research on the effects of mowing frequency found that mowing less in general leads to more flowering plants and therefore more bees. "A lot of [pollinators] are ground-nesting bees, so actually not mowing until April or May is a good thing, because it allows them to come out of their winter nesting grounds. So, there are benefits to a little bit of neglect," says Miller Helmholdt. What if you just do nothing? There are benefits and challenges to letting your garden go completely. For one thing, in the absence of human intervention, the most aggressive, non-native species have an opportunity to take over. "When you have hyper-aggressive plants, that's the enemy of diversity, because they outcompete a lot of what could have been there," says Larry Weaner, an ecological landscape designer and founder of Larry Weaner Landscape Associates Designs, based in Pennsylvania. What you're left with is a more homogenised garden, which is not great for native pollinators who might be struggling to sustain their population. "You might get an overabundance of some weedy species that might look like they're good for bees, but in reality, are not doing very much," says Narango. Shepherd says the result could be a "tangled mess" that "will provide some food and shelter, but I'd expect its overall value for wildlife will be less than if it were a tended plot supporting a greater diversity of native plants." However, there are totally neglected landscapes that have seen wildlife proliferation. Some so-called brownfield sites – areas of land that previously had a commercial or industrial use – such as defunct and derelict factory properties, are now home to endangered species in the UK. This includes the distinguished jumping spider, which enjoys salty, sandy environments, and is found at just two locations – both brownfield sites near London. Though brownfield sites were never managed gardens, they demonstrate how, when properties are just left, "there were lots of opportunities for plant communities to reoccupy the sites," says Shepherd. Similarly in the US, Detroit's industrial decline led to a multitude of abandoned sites that now teem with wildlife. While experts recommend doing a little less mowing and pruning in the spring and summer, it's also recommended to let some things pile up in the autumn, specifically leaves. The Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation, a non-profit organisation focused on the conservation of invertebrates, promotes an initiative called Leave the Leaves that advocates for this to protect insects that overwinter on your property. More like this:• The alien shrub that can't be stopped• The beautiful flowers that bees can't use• What is 'low-carbon gardening'? "[You shouldn't] take the rake and the leaf blower and cut down all the dead things, especially under trees, and in your meadow areas, because a lot of insects are overwintering in those dead stems and in that leaf litter," cautions Narango. Take the luna moth. In its caterpillar stage, the insect drops from a tree in the hope of finding a safe place to pupate. 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Mum's in a care home. Dad has a new girlfriend
Mum's in a care home. Dad has a new girlfriend

Times

time11 hours ago

  • Times

Mum's in a care home. Dad has a new girlfriend

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The day my dead daughter visited me from the spirit world and gave me irrefutable evidence to prove it. Military chief SUZANNE GIESMANN'S family tragedy changed her life. Now she tells how our loved ones never really leave
The day my dead daughter visited me from the spirit world and gave me irrefutable evidence to prove it. Military chief SUZANNE GIESMANN'S family tragedy changed her life. Now she tells how our loved ones never really leave

Daily Mail​

time11 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

The day my dead daughter visited me from the spirit world and gave me irrefutable evidence to prove it. Military chief SUZANNE GIESMANN'S family tragedy changed her life. Now she tells how our loved ones never really leave

When I became a medium, the messages I was given by the spirits sounded so much like my own thoughts that it was often hard to distinguish them as coming from a separate entity. But the voice I heard one morning in 2009 was unmistakable. Although it had been three years since I had heard my stepdaughter Susan speak, the tone and inflection brought her back to me as vividly as if she had never been struck by the lightning bolt that killed her and her unborn baby.

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