The National Transportation Safety Board disclosed new details about the collision between the helicopter and an American ...
The National Transportation Safety Board is examining "bad data" the crew of an Army Black Hawk helicopter may have relied ...
The National Transportation Safety Board gave an update on its investigation into the deadly midair collision between an American Airlines plane and a Black Hawk helicopter.
The National Transportation Safety Board said the helicopter’s cockpit voice recorder didn’t capture key directions from ...
Black Hawk pilots may not have heard a critical directive from air traffic control to fly behind the American Airlines plane ...
Voice recordings from the Black Hawk helicopter involved in the crash with a commuter plan in Washington, DC, on January 29 ...
On Jan. 29, an American Airlines passenger jet and an Army helicopter collided as the plane prepared to land at Washington ...
There’s no indication the U.S. Army Black Hawk crew could tell there was an impending collision before its devastating crash ...
Investigators are currently working to download data from helicopter and jet black boxes to uncover additional information ...
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 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 ...