Recovery crews and divers are searching the Potomac River for remains and clearing wreckage from the midair collision of a passenger jet and Army helicopter that killed 67 people.
On Saturday, officials are bringing salvage equipment to help remove the passenger plane and helicopter and retrieve the rest of the bodies.
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.
An American Airlines regional jet went down in the Potomac River near Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport.
An American Airlines plane with 64 people on board collided with an Army helicopter over Washington, D.C., and crashed into ...
A regional jet departed Kansas and headed to one of the country’s most congested and complicated flight approaches, just ...
An American Airlines jet carrying 60 passengers and four crew members collided Wednesday with an Army helicopter while coming ...
Investigators have recovered the black boxes from both aircraft involved in the deadly midair collision near Washington, D.C.
A timeline of the tragic collision between a commercial plane and a Black Hawk helicopter over the Potomac River, with ...
Investigators are seeking clues into this week's deadly midair collision, the deadliest aviation disaster in the U.S. almost ...
Sixty passengers and four crew members from the plane and three Black Hawk helicopter personnel are feared dead as a recovery ...
The Army Black Hawk is said to have been flying higher than it should have been when it collided with a passenger jet, killing 67 people. And the air traffic controller on duty was doing a job usually ...