A US Army helicopter was flying higher than permitted limits when it collided in midair with an American Airlines Group Inc.
Officials have positively identified 66 of the 67 people killed in Wednesday's midair collision between an American Airlines ...
Crashes of Army helicopters and fatalities are at the highest rates in over a decade. Veterans say it’s a result of a deadly ...
The National Transportation Safety Board has released drone video of investigators surveying the wreckage of the Washington ...
Readings have been compared from the black box recovered from American Eagle flight 5342 and the air traffic control tower ...
Data from air traffic control radar showed the military chopper was flying at 300 feet on the air traffic control display at ...
The Army pilots were juggling dark skies, low altitude, a busy airspace and a cockpit without certain traffic detectors before the helicopter’s midair crash with a regional passenger jet.
American Airlines flight 5342 and a US army Black Hawk helicopter collided near Washington DC’s Reagan National Airport, ...
The military helicopter was flying above the maximum recommended altitude at the time of its collision with a passenger plane.
Washington, D.C. officials have now positively identified 66 of the 67 people killed in Wednesday's midair collision between ...
The remains of all 67 victims of the midair collision between an airliner and an Army helicopter near Reagan National Airport ...
Pilots who agree initiate a swooping turn that on final approach brings them north west and low across the river — the path ...