An American Airlines flight crashed into a U.S. Army Black Hawk Helicopter over the Potomac River as it approached Ronald ...
The NTSB said Army Black Hawk crew may not have heard a message to "pass behind" the D.C.-bound passenger plane before the ...
The Black Hawk pilots who collided with an American Airlines plane last month may not have heard vital information given by ...
A preliminary analysis of the flight data and voice recorder on board a Black Hawk helicopter leading up to the collision ...
The National Transportation Safety Board said the helicopter’s cockpit voice recorder didn’t capture key directions from ...
The Army helicopter appeared to be experiencing other issues with its communications and technology, according to safety ...
Seventeen seconds before the deadly Jan. 29 crash, which killed all 67 people aboard both flights, the Black Hawk was ...
The Black Hawk is a US Army workhorse helicopter. It has been flying for decades. One tragically collided with a passenger ...
Aviation experts tell PEOPLE it's possible that the U.S. Army Black Hawk helicopter did not see the American Airlines passenger plane before the two collided on Wednesday, Jan. 29, killing 67 people.
Investigators suspect the Army helicopter crew that collided with an American Airlines jet near Washington, D.C., might have ...
More than 60 people are believed to have been killed after an American Airlines plane collided with an army helicopter while landing at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport near Washington, DC.
An Army Black Hawk helicopter collided midair with an American Airlines flight from Wichita, Kansas, at Reagan National Airport on Wednesday.