Crews have finished recovering the wreckage of a plane and helicopter that collided mid-air, killing 67 people.
A National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration plane used a green laser Saturday to search the Potomac River for ...
Recovery efforts continue on a smaller scale on the Potomac River, according to the NTSB, after crews last week recovered all ...
Ten days after a passenger jet and a Black Hawk helicopter collided over the Potomac River near Washington, D.C., killing all 67 people on board, investigators have recovered most of the debris ...
The bodies of all 67 victims of the Jan. 29 plane crash along the Potomac River have now been recovered. Among those were Alexandria residents 12-year-old Olivia Eve Ter and her mother Olesya Taylor.
The section of the Potomac River affected by the Jan. 29 midair collision of an American Airlines regional jet and a U.S.
Six days ahead of schedule, officials on Tuesday announced the section of the Potomac River affected by the deadly collision ...
The wreckage from the two aircraft, which crashed January 29 over the Potomac River near Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, has been taken to a secure airport facility for further ...
As the airplane was on final approach to Runway 33 at Reagan National Airport, it was struck by the helicopter and fell into the icy cold waters of the Potomac River, killing all 64 people on the jet.
All of the "major" pieces of wreckage from the collision between a Black Hawk helicopter and American Airlines Flight 5342 have been cleared from the Potomac River, officials said. The recovered ...