The Army Black Hawk helicopter involved in the fatal midair collision in Washington, D.C., had a tracking system turned off, ...
Officials with the National Transportation Safety Board are expected to give an update on their investigation into the D.C. plane crash last month.
In an update on Tuesday, officials say that transcriptions for both aircrafts cockpit voice recordings are ongoing.
Potomac River near Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport in Washington, D.C. No one survived. Sixty-four people were on ...
Andrew Eaves, a Black Hawk pilot with the Army, was killed in a helicopter-plane crash in Washington, D.C. He will be buried ...
Transgender pilot speaks out after she was falsely identified as Black Hawk captain - None of the 67 passengers and crew are ...
The military helicopter that collided with an American Airlines flight this week was conducting training to prepare for a ...
As to what may have gone wrong and caused an American Airlines commercial jet and a military helicopter to collide, we spoke ...
Diving crews are still searching the icy waters of the Potomac River looking to retrieve the bodies of all the people killed ...
The controller was in touch with the Black Hawk, which indicated it could see the plane and would maintain separation. Democratic Sen. Maria Cantwell of Washington questioned last week why the FAA ...
indicating the plane pulled up prior to the crash. NTSB investigators continue to transcribe the cockpit voice recorders for both aircraft. Synchronization work for the Black Hawk flight data ...
The Army Black Hawk that collided with an American Airlines plane was hundreds of feet outside air traffic control's predesignated, approved route ahead of the deadly crash over the Potomac River.