The NTSB issued its preliminary report on the midair collision between a passenger plane and helicopter over Washington, D.C., in January.
Previously, there were several other factors revealed about the Army Black Hawk helicopter's flight, including that the crew members were likely wearing night vision goggles. Sean Payne ...
Congress will hold a hearing Thursday morning about what we know so far about the deadly midair collision above the nation's capital that killed 67 people in January and what might have caused it.
Two-thirds of those encounters occurred at night, the NTSB found ... from the tower telling the helicopter to “pass behind” the regional jet. But the Black Hawk’s cockpit voice recorder ...
Brig. Gen. Matthew Braman, center, answers questions during a Senate Transportation Subcommittee hearing Thursday on the Jan. 29 midair collision of an Army Black Hawk helicopter and an American ...
Whether you’re in your backyard or cheering at a game, you’ve probably looked up and seen a military aircraft flying through the sky. It’s one of those moments that can make you stop, watch ...
A UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter executes its fire suppression mission in support ... western North Carolina and northeast ...
The three soldiers in the helicopter were conducting an ... the NTSB added. The Black Hawk crew was likely wearing night vision goggles throughout the flight, Homendy said.
Nearby, the Army Black Hawk, with three soldiers on board ... Investigators have said the helicopter crew was wearing night-vision goggles that would have limited their peripheral vision.
FILE - Rescue and salvage crews pull up a part of a Army Black Hawk helicopter that collided midair with an American Airlines jet, at a wreckage site in the Potomac River from Ronald Reagan ...