National Transportation Safety Board holds news conference on deadly DC aircraft crash National Transportation Safety Board holds news conference on deadly DC aircraft crash. ––– Subscribe to ABC News on YouTube: Watch 24/7 coverage of breaking news and live events on ABC News Live: Watch full episodes of
CBS News confirmed only one air traffic control worker was managing the helicopters when the crash between a military helicopter and passenger plane occurred in Washington D.C. That is a job normally done by two people.
U.S. authorities restricted helicopter flights near Reagan Washington National Airport on Friday, after a midair collision between an American Airlines (AAL.O), opens new tab passenger jet and a military helicopter killed 67 people this week.
Investigators recovered the so-called black boxes from the plane, an American Airlines Bombardier jet carrying 60 passengers and four crew members, which collided with an Army Black Hawk helicopter and crashed into the Potomac River as it prepared to land at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport on Wednesday night.
No chute or slides appeared to be deployed from the American Airlines plane, according to J. Todd Inman, a member of the National Transportation Safety Board. “It was a very quick, rapid impact,” he said.
Instead of using the deaths of 67 people to speculate over whether hiring minorities makes us all less safe, Donald Trump ought to clam up and let investigators do their jobs.
they are formidable combatants and, combined with the Courts' political and economic influence, the Court of Owls is one of the most deadly and dangerous teams in DC Comics.
I believe it is time to form a National Transport Safety Board (NTSB) encompassing all six modes of transportation: road, rail, maritime, aviation, multimodal, and pipelines. The body should be administered under the aegis of a single independent ...
Dark Horse Comics announced on X last weekend that it would no longer release its illustrated series based on Gaiman's novel, “Anansi Boys.” The seventh of eight planned editions came out ...
President Donald Trump suggested without evidence on Thursday that the deadly midair collision of two aircraft in Washington was the result of the Federal Aviation Administration’s efforts to hire a more diverse workforce.
A deadly collision between a commercial jet and an Army helicopter is bringing renewed focus on the federal agency charged with investigating aviation disasters