new video loaded: Aircraft Wreckage Is Recovered From Potomac River Recovery teams worked to pull parts of an American Airlines jet and a U.S. Army helicopter out of the Potomac River on Monday.
Officials say the conditions of the Potomac River complicated recovery efforts of the bodies of those killed on Wednesday in a midair collision between American Airlines Flight 5342 from Wichita ...
A National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration plane used a green laser Saturday to search the Potomac River for ...
The mangled remains of the Black Hawk helicopter involved in last week’s deadly midair plane crash in DC were pulled out of the Potomac River Thursday, the National Transportation Safety Board ...
Feb. 6 (UPI) --Salvage crews have recovered the last large pieces of aircraft wreckage from the Potomac River on Thursday and are focusing on collecting small pieces from the crash site where 67 died.
Officials in Washington, D.C., identified 55 bodies pulled from the Potomac River during a strenuous multi-day recovery operation following the midair collision between a commercial plane and a ...
Crews remove more wreckage of the American Airlines jet from the Potomac River as they continue recovery efforts from last week's fatal midair collision that killed 67 people near Ronald Reagan ...
Salvage crews worked on the Potomac River on Thursday morning and could be seen pulling out pieces of the Army Black Hawk helicopter that crashed with a plane last week, killing everyone on board ...
Crews are on the scene on the Potomac River to retrieve the submerged wreckage of an airliner and an Army helicopter that collided midair in the deadliest U.S. air disaster since 2001 ARLINGTON ...
Languages: English. A body was found in the Potomac River in Washington, D.C.—the crash site of where an American Airlines flight and Sikorsky H-60 Black Hawk military helicopter collided on ...
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.
The bodies of 55 of the 67 victims killed when a plane and helicopter crashed near Reagan National Airport have been recovered from the Potomac River, officials said in a news conference Sunday.