Even as crews continued to comb the Potomac River for victims' remains, the Army Corp of Engineers began recovering the ...
A timeline of the Washington, D.C., plane crash on Jan. 29 details the moments before and after an American Airlines ...
You can get in touch with Anna by emailing a.commander@newsweek.com. The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) issued an update on the investigation into the fatal midair collision near D.C ...
The NTSB said information fused from “multiple radar sensors and ADS-B data,” which provides the “best quality flight track data to air traffic control” fed by Potomac Terminal Radar ...
The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) on Tuesday said the Army Black Hawk helicopter that crashed into a PSA Airlines CRJ700 airliner on Jan. 29, killing 67, 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 the time of the fiery Jan. 29 crash, according to the NTSB. The maximum ...
The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) on Tuesday revealed that the U.S. Army Black Hawk helicopter involved in a fatal midair collision near Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport ...
"Currently, the CRJ (plane) based on the data recorder at the time of impact was 325 feet, plus or minus 25 feet," National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) member Todd Inman said at a Saturday ...
Tuesday’s update from the NTSB doesn’t fully clarify an already murky situation. Although the air traffic control display at Reagan National should have shown the Black Hawk was flying at ...
WASHINGTON (7News) — The NTSB investigation into last week’s midair collision on the Potomac River will include examining the wreckage of the American Airlines plane crews spent days recovering.
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