Some may have heard of Saturday's crash of a C172 on Coney Island, NYC... This hits me hard as I've made a few pleasant runs there under the JFK Class B tier in the same type.
The vultures have descended... I'd post a link to a news item, but perusing a few made me a little sick. Some eyewitnesses say he was "circling" when the engine quit; one said "looping". Right. A loop in a 172, near gross with four adults aboard, at 500 AGL tops! And I sure wouldn't even circle in a C172 at 500 AGL, at least not with a full load. And of course there's the usual folderol in the news about "stalling" engines and "plummeting" airplanes.
Anyway, it seems the pilot was maneuvering or did maneuver when the relatively new powerplant went south, and he attempted to land on the sand with black smoke trailing from the aircraft.
Naturally I've considered having to do the same, every time I've flown there. There are some photos of the wreck out there- whatever happened, it seems to have hit hard, nose-first and pitched down somewhat. With the smoke, or a fire in the cabin, with hardly a minute to make an approach, I doubt I'd make it either. It's a calculated risk, and when I have passengers, they get to veto that low passage if they don't accept that risk.
But that really doesn't matter... four people lost their lives in a 4-year-old airplane on a beautiful day. A very sad day.