
It started with a message that never got a reply. And for one café owner, that silence said everything.
A routine night turned tragic at LaGuardia — and now, heartbreaking stories are emerging. Friends and students reveal the life Mackenzie Gunther was just beginning before everything changed overnight.

MacKenzie Gunther seen in a post dated March 27, 2026 | Source: Facebook/6ixbuzz
A Text That Never Came Back
Daniel Biro, owner and roaster of Rapid Ends Coffee in Peterborough, Ontario, thought it was just another day when he reached out to one of his regulars.
But as hours turned into a full day, a quiet dread set in. “When I didn’t hear back after a day, I thought it isn’t [sic] a good sign,” said Biro. That unanswered text would soon carry a devastating weight.
A Routine Flight — Until It Wasn’t
Late Sunday night, March 22, 2026, what should have been a routine landing at LaGuardia Airport turned into chaos. A jet collided with a Port Authority fire truck on the runway, leaving over 40 passengers and crew injured. Among those who didn’t survive were co-pilots Mackenzie Gunther and Antoine Forest.
But while headlines focused on the shocking crash, those who knew Gunther were left grappling with something far more personal.
The Regular Who Ordered Cold Brew
To Biro, Gunther wasn’t just a name in the news — he was the familiar face who came in weekly during his school days. “MacKenzie was an amazing young man. He just graduated a couple years ago. He was a regular here every week while he was in school,” Biro said, adding that the pilot had been recently married.
That detail — recently married — makes the loss feel even heavier. “He had his whole life for him. It’s super tragic.”
Gunther had stopped by just two weeks before the crash, ordering his usual: a cold brew, black, or an espresso over ice. A simple routine, now frozen in time.
A Passion That Took Flight
For those who chatted with him across the counter, Gunther’s dream was no secret. “That was his passion, flying. It was a life taken too young,” Biro said.
He even described him as a coffee “purist,” someone who appreciated the details — whether in a perfectly brewed cup or, perhaps, in the precision of aviation.
Now, Biro is channeling grief into tribute. The café plans to honor Gunther with a signature drink that combines his favorites — Haitian coffee and cold brew — served free while customers sign cards for his widow. “He was an upstanding young man,” Biro said.

MacKenzie Gunther takes photo with a woman. | Source: Instagram/mack.gunner
A Dream Just Taking Off
Gunther was a young aviator who had only recently begun his professional career. He served as the co-pilot on the plane that crashed. Gunther graduated from Seneca Polytechnic with an Honours Bachelor of Aviation Technology in 2023.
Through the Jazz Aviation Pathways Program, he moved directly from graduation into the first officer seat — making Flight 8646 part of what was still a very new chapter.
Before aviation, his LinkedIn shows steady, unglamorous groundwork: a co-op stint as acting ramp lead at Porter Airlines in 2022, and seasonal landscaping work before that. He had been building toward this for years.
Seneca mourned him publicly, calling the news “tragic for our community.” Flags at all Seneca campuses were lowered to half-mast on Tuesday, March 24, in his honor.















