A Black Hawk helicopter collided with a passenger jet near Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, resulting in 67 fatalities. The U.S. Defense Secretary pointed to altitude issues as the cause.
Flight data posted online appears to show another Army helicopter flying higher than the maximum altitude allowed around Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport in Washington, D.C., before last week ...
The flight traffic data NTSB has obtained confirms the helicopter was flying at 300 feet, the air traffic control display ...
It has been nearly a week since a commercial jetliner and an Army helicopter collided in midair near Washington’s Ronald ...
The incident comes a week after an American Eagle regional jet collided with an Army Black Hawk helicopter over the Potomac River near Washington D.C.
The Army Black Hawk helicopter that collided with an American Airlines passenger plane was flying too high, according to the ...
(CNN) — Newly released data from ground-based radar came out Tuesday suggesting an Army helicopter was higher than it was supposed to be when it collided with American Airlines Flight 5342 a week ago, ...
The recent midair collision near Washington, D.C.'s Ronald Reagan National Airport, resulting in the tragic loss of 67 lives, has left the nation in mourning. As the National Transportation Safety ...
The National Transportation Safety Board says the helicopter must be recovered from the Potomac River so it can get more ...
Using radio traffic, flight data and leaked footage of an air traffic control radar screen, we examine what was happening in the moments before the midair collision near Reagan National Airport that ...
Preliminary data released by the USA's National Transportation Safety Board indicates the incident Sikorsky UH-60 was flying ...
The air traffic control display showed the Black Hawk helicopter was flying at 300 feet when it collided with an American ...