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The NTSB said the Army Black Hawk crew may not have heard a message to "pass behind" the D.C.-bound passenger plane before the Jan. 29 midair crash over the Potomac River.
Black Hawk pilots may not have heard a critical directive from air traffic control to fly behind the American Airlines plane in the seconds before it collided with the jet, and may have had “bad ...
Data retrieved by the National Transportation Safety Board confirmed the Army Black Hawk helicopter that crashed into a passenger plane near D.C. was flying too high.
The Black Hawk asked for 'visual separation,' meaning, 'We got this.' "It was basically pilot error,” this source believes. American Airlines plane tried to pull up at the last minute ...
The Army Black Hawk helicopter that collided with an American Airlines commuter plane near Reagan Washington National Airport in Virginia Wednesday was on a “training flight” when they crashed ...
It has been more than a week since the Black Hawk and commercial flight crashed mid-air, killing 64 people on the American airlines flight and three people aboard the helicopter. Recovery of the ...
The Black Hawk crew may have never heard the words "pass behind the" during the transmission from the controller because the helicopter's microphone key was depressed right then, Homendy said. The ...
Aviation experts tell PEOPLE it's possible that the U.S. Army Black Hawk helicopter did not see the American Airlines passenger plane before the two collided on Wednesday, Jan. 29, killing 67 people.
All of the "major" pieces of wreckage from the collision between a Black Hawk helicopter and American Airlines Flight 5342 have been cleared from the Potomac River, officials said.
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