It might help if you quit trying to throw your spaghetti at the greased stainless steel backsplash. I don't know enough about this accident to say the plane did not run out of fuel, but even if it did, that would not have caused the plane to behave as it did. It was most likely some sort of structural failure, whether pilot induced or wear induced. It is actually much, much easier and more likely for an overspeed event to happen while the engine is capable of - and currently is - producing full power. As far as the pictures go, I don't see an "obvious grass fire", as the plane looks like it was mostly burning in the cabin and inboard wing area, which would correspond with leaking wing tanks and fuel from said tanks being the main fuel of a fire, not an outside influence such as grass.. The sheriff also said that they had received multiple reports of an explosion in the area at the time the plane went down. Last time I checked, grass fires don't create explosions but planes crashing with even what may be only ten gallons of fuel left generally do create some sort of fireball.