By David Shepardson and Jeff Mason WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Crews worked to pull the remains of the U.S.' deadliest air disaster in two decades from Washington's Potomac River on Friday, searching for ...
Emergency teams will continue efforts to retrieve the bodies of those who died when a passenger jet and helicopter collided.
Part of the wreckage is seen as rescue crews search the waters of the Potomac River after a passenger plane on approach to Reagan National Airport crashed into the river after colliding with a US Army ...
Runway operations at the airport are expected to resume at 11 a.m. "The NTSB will lead the investigation. We are working with local officials and will provide any additional information once it ...
American Airlines Flight 5342 from Wichita, Kansas, was attempting to land when the plane and a Black Hawk helicopter ...
Investigators have retrieved the voice and data recorders from the passenger plane following Wednesday's crash which killed 67 people.
Sixty passengers, four crew, and three US Army personnel are believed to be dead after the collision 400ft over the Potomac ...
An NTSB-led investigation is in full swing to identify factors that led to the Jan. 29 midair collision between an American ...
Recovery work continues at the crash site in Washington, where all 64 people on board an American Airlines flight died along ...
Officials say there are no survivors among the 67 passengers on the aircrafts that collided above Washington, D.C.
Authorities have switched to a recovery mission in the Potomac River following a midair collision between an American Eagle ...
An American Airlines regional jet went down in the Potomac River near Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport after ...