Crews have begun removing wreckage from the Potomac River from the deadly midair collision last week that killed 67 people.
Fifty-five victims of the Wednesday collision near Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport between an American Airlines ...
Federal accident investigators began to piece together the last moments before a U.S. military helicopter and passenger jet ...
At least 55 victims have been positively identified from Wednesday night's midair collision between an American Airlines jet and a military Black Hawk helicopter, Fire Chief John Donnelly of the ...
The Army Corps of Engineers is expected to begin removing wreckage following the deadly collision of an Army helicopter and a passenger plane.
Sixty-seven people are presumed dead, as tributes flow in for some of the victims of the collision between American Eagle ...
An internal preliminary report from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) reportedly showed that the number of staff ...
Engineers will start by working to remove the remnants of the jet from the Potomac River, which they expect to take three ...
The U.S. Army on Saturday identified the third soldier who died last week during a training mission that ended in a midair ...
Family members of the victims of the plane crash in Washington, D.C., visited the crash site on Sunday morning. Dozens of the ...
Preliminary data from the deadliest U.S. aviation accident in nearly 25 years showed conflicting readings about the altitudes of an airliner and Army helicopter when they collided near Washington.
An American Airlines plane with 64 people on board collided with an Army helicopter over Washington, D.C., and crashed into ...