Recovery efforts are underway Thursday morning after a passenger jet and an Army helicopter crashed mid-air Wednesday night ...
The Black Hawk helicopter that crashed into an American Airlines plane was alerted to the plane’s presence by air control twice, the first time at least two minutes before the deadly crash ...
An Oklahoma State University graduate was among the 67 people killed when a plane and an Army helicopter collided Wednesday night near Washington, D.C.
A military Black Hawk helicopter and an American Airlines passenger jet collided in midair Wednesday night in Washington D.C. in a catastrophic crash that is believed to have left no survivors.
The US Army was facing mounting backlash for running military helicopter training exercises near one of the United States’ most congested airports in the wake of Wednesday’s crash. U.S. Coast ...
A passenger jet and a Black Hawk helicopter collided in midair Wednesday and crashed into the Potomac River near Reagan National Airport near Washington, D.C. President Trump confirmed Thursday ...
An American Airlines plane and an Army Black Hawk helicopter collided in midair near Reagan National Airport on Wednesday night. Both aircraft crashed into the Potomac River in Washington.
January 30, 2025 • A commercial flight hit a military helicopter at Washington, D.C.'s Ronald Reagan National Airport Wednesday night. The airport has a history of crashes and near-misses going ...
Black boxes, which record flight data and voices of pilots in the cockpit, were recovered from both the airplane and helicopter involved in the fatal crash that killed 67 people on Wednesday ...
Not much is known about why the helicopter crashed into the plane, but images shared online showed a fiery explosion as the two collided midair over the night sky. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth ...
Air traffic control audio recorded the final moments before and after the crash of an American Airlines regional passenger jet and a U.S. Army Black Hawk helicopter. Audio from LiveATC.net ...
Several people involved in the crash that killed 67 people in Washington D.C. have ties to Oklahoma in some way.