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.
Data from air traffic control radar showed the military chopper was flying at 300 feet on the air traffic control display at ...
Divers and salvage crews have recovered the remains of all 67 victims of last week’s midair collision near Reagan National ...
Recovery crews completed the removal of all 67 bodies from the remnants of the Army Black Hawk helicopter and American ...
Wind gusts and tidal conditions could slow operations today as officials try to pull wreckage from the icy Potomac River.
The National Transportation Safety Administration says the Army Black Hawk helicopter that collided with an American Airlines ...
NTSB says that Blackhawk was flying more than 100ft higher than its allowed altitude when collision took place ...
Sixty passengers on the plane and four crew members were killed in Wednesday's accident along with three soldiers aboard the ...
Becoming familiar with the night raptors in your neighborhood is worth exploring. Many owls are comfortable with human ...
The remains of all 67 victims of last week's midair collision of an American Airlines flight and an Army helicopter near ...
Crews are trying to recover the plane’s cockpit and the rest of the remains of the 67 people who died in the midair collision ...
The bodies of all 67 people killed when an American Airlines plane and a US Army helicopter collided at Ronald Reagan ...