A timeline of the tragic collision between a commercial plane and a Black Hawk helicopter over the Potomac River, with ...
The FAA and NTSB have launched an investigation into how an American Airlines flight collided with a military helicopter over the Potomac River.
The NTSB flew in its own on-staff Black Hawk certified pilot from Alaska to help investigators to remain independent from the DoD.
Investigators confirmed they have recovered a cockpit voice recorder and a flight-data recorder from American Eagle Flight 5342, which will undergo analysis.
Two new videos of the fatal American Airlines crash on Wednesday night are adding to speculation about how it happened.
All 67 people aboard an American Eagle flight from Kansas and an Army helicopter were killed in a collision Wednesday night ...
A passenger jet hit an Army helicopter with three soldiers as the plane got ready to land at Reagan National near Washington, ...
An American Airlines plane with 64 people on board collided with an Army helicopter over Washington, D.C., and crashed into ...
An air traffic controller was given the job of two people after one worker clocked off early on the evening the American Airlines jet and U.S. military helicopter collided in Washington, DC, according ...
The Army Black Hawk is said to have been flying higher than it should have been when it collided with a passenger jet, killing 67 people. And the air traffic controller on duty was doing a job usually ...
An American Airlines regional jet went down in the Potomac River near Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport.
Emergency teams will continue efforts to retrieve the bodies of those who died when a passenger jet and helicopter collided.