The Army Black Hawk helicopter involved in the fatal midair collision in Washington, D.C., had a tracking system turned off, ...
A key safety system was turned off in a US army helicopter when it crashed into an American Airlines flight last week, ...
Investigators trying to determine what caused last week’s deadly midair collision between a US military Black Hawk helicopter ...
Hundreds of families are in mourning after an American Airlines regional jet collided with a U.S. Army Black Hawk helicopter ...
He indicated 27 bodies had been recovered from the airplane, and one from the helicopter.
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.
NTSB investigators have recovered the Black Hawk helicopter from a Washington, D.C. collision with an American Airlines ...
An American Airlines flight crashed into a U.S. Army Black Hawk Helicopter over the Potomac River as it approached Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport.
Data from air traffic control radar showed the military chopper was flying at 300 feet on the air traffic control display at ...
Sixty passengers and four crew members from the plane and three Black Hawk helicopter personnel are feared dead as a recovery ...
The Army official said that the pilots were on a routine training flight along a familiar flight path that isn't particularly ...
Investigators are currently working to download data from helicopter and jet black boxes to uncover additional information ...