An American Airlines plane with 64 people on board collided with an Army helicopter over Washington, D.C., and crashed into ...
First parts of plane wreckage are lifted from Potomac after families visit disaster site - None of the 67 passengers and crew are believed to have survived ...
The Army Corps of Engineers recovered part of the plane wreckage from the Potomac River on Monday (February 3), after last week's midair collision between the American Airlines passenger jet and U.S.
A regional jet carrying 64 people collided with an Army Black Hawk helicopter. Reagan National Airport grounded all flights.
Crews will begin removing the wreckage of the passenger jet from the Potomac River at first light Monday morning as search ...
Crews were on the scene on the Potomac River on Monday to retrieve the submerged wreckage of an airliner and an Army ...
Sixty passengers and four crew members from the plane and three Black Hawk helicopter personnel were killed, and a recovery ...
Families of victims of the deadliest U.S. air disaster since 2001 visited the crash site Sunday and divers scoured the ...
The Army has released the name of the third soldier who died Wednesday when an Army helicopter collided with an American ...
Dozens of people walked along the banks of the Potomac River near Reagan National Airport, close to where an American ...
O’Hara, 28, of Lilburn, Ga., served as a Black Hawk repairer in the Army from July 2014 until his death. He was the crew ...
Families of victims of the deadliest U.S. air disaster since 2001 have visited the crash site just outside Washington, D.C.