After an American Airlines jet and an Army Black Hawk helicopter collided and crashed into the Potomac River last week, ...
Salvage crews continue to remove parts of the American Airlines jet before they turn their focus to the Black Hawk helicopter.
All 67 victims who died in the midair collision near Reagan National Airport has been positively identified, Unified Command confirmed Wednesday.
Get all the news you need in your inbox each morning. The deaths came after the passenger jet was preparing to ...
The pilot and a passenger on the American Airlines plane that collided with a Black Hawk helicopter in Washington, D.C., Jan.
Since 2014, the National Transportation Safety Board’s Office of Marine Safety has published the Safer Seas Digest, an annual ...
Divers and salvage workers are adhering to strict protocols and stopped moving debris at times when human remains were being ...
Washington, D.C., officials released updates about the investigation of the Jan. 29 Potomac River midair collision on Saturday, detailing what bodies and debris have been removed from the water.
Recovery crews and divers searched the Potomac River for remains and cleared wreckage Saturday from the midair collision of a passenger jet and Army helicopter that killed 67 people.A Coast Guard ...
Languages: English. A body was found in the Potomac River in Washington, D.C.—the crash site of where an American Airlines flight and Sikorsky H-60 Black Hawk military helicopter collided on ...
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is expected to begin removing the wreckage of both the jet and helicopter involved in Wednesday's midair crash in Washington, D.C., from the Potomac River on ...
The U.S. Army identified the third service member who was killed when a Black Hawk helicopter and an American Airlines flight crashed over the Potomac earlier this week. Capt. Rebecca Lobach ...