Authorities began pulling the wreckage of doomed American Airlines Flt. 5342 from the Potomac River on Monday — as most of the bodies of the 67 people who died in the tragedy were recovered.
Recovery crews and divers searched the Potomac River for remains and cleared wreckage Saturday from the midair collision of a passenger jet and Army helicopter that killed 67 people. A Coast Guard ...
An aircraft engine and the fuselage belonging to American Airlines Flight 5432 were lifted out of the Potomac River on Monday, beginning the complex job of removing the last of the wreckage after ...
D.C., that sent the airliner and an Army Black Hawk helicopter crashing into the Potomac River. Crews began work Monday to salvage the wreckage, recovering the battered midsection of the plane's ...
All 67 people on board the plane and the helicopter were killed. Hundreds of families are in mourning after an American Airlines regional jet collided with a U.S. Army Black Hawk helicopter on ...
This live blog has ended. Recovery operations continued into Friday after an American Airlines flight and an Army helicopter collided and crashed into the Potomac River near Ronald Reagan ...
Divers facing cold water, strong currents in Potomac River Large amounts of debris will make recovery operation more difficult More than 40 bodies have been recovered from the river Divers facing ...
Washington, D.C., officials released updates about the investigation of the Jan. 29 Potomac River midair collision on Saturday, detailing what bodies and debris have been removed from the water.
D.C. Fire and EMS Chief John Donnelly said Friday that the American Airlines plane must be removed from the Potomac River in order to successfully find and recover all 67 bodies from the crash site.
Dozens of loved ones gathered by the Potomac River to commemorate the 67 killed. Family members of the victims of the plane crash in Washington, D.C., visited the crash site on Sunday morning.
But instead, I ran a mile through the snow to the 14th Street Bridge. There was a plane down in the Potomac, amid all our pacific marble monuments. I was working as a reporter at the Time magazine ...