The National Transportation Safety Board gave an update on its investigation into the deadly midair collision between an ...
The Black Hawk pilots who collided with an American Airlines plane last month may not have heard vital information given by air traffic control to fly behind the passenger jet seconds before the crash ...
The NTSB gave an update Friday on the devastating crash in Washington, D.C., between an American Airlines plane and U.S. Army Black Hawk helicopter.
Flying is still considered one of the safest modes of transportation, but any crash involving aircraft feels like one too ...
A regional jet carrying 64 people collided with an Army Black Hawk helicopter carrying three soldiers. Here's what we know ...
A preliminary analysis of the flight data and voice ... be when the aircraft collided with American Airlines Flight 5342 more ...
Officials confirmed the crew of the Army Black Hawk helicopter that collided midair with an American Airlines ... crash. The Jan. 29 crash over the Potomac River, which happened during an Army ...
Homendy said. “It’s possible.” About two minutes before the crash, air traffic control radioed to the Black Hawk that the American Airlines plane was just south of the Wilson bridge ...
The causes of the crash remain under ... the task of tracking other aircraft. At 8:46 p.m. the Black Hawk was flying south along the Potomac and the American Airlines jet was heading north on ...
Investigators are releasing new details about what happened in the seconds leading up to the deadly D.C. plane crash — and ...
The crew also may not have clearly heard that the American Airlines flight was “circling ... At the time of the fiery crash, the Black Hawk was flying at 278 feet, Homedy said, adding ...