Federal crash investigators have said a helicopter route used by an Army Black Hawk for training when it crashed midair with a passenger aircraft over Washington, D.C., in late January, killing all ...
On Jan. 29, an American Airlines passenger jet and an Army helicopter collided as the plane prepared to land at Washington, D ...
The NTSB issued its preliminary report on the midair collision between a passenger plane and helicopter over Washington, D.C.
Two Black Hawk County deputies and one Bremer County deputy were determined to be justified in their use of force that led to ...
The Jan. 29 collision between an Army helicopter and a passenger airplane over Washington killed 67 people. That makes it the ...
The Federal Aviation Administration announced a "series of steps" it will take to address safety concerns after a fatal ...
Federal investigators looking for the cause of the January collision between a passenger jet and an Army helicopter near ...
U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy on Tuesday said the agency will make permanent restrictions to prevent helicopters ...
The Federal Aviation Administration says helicopters will be permanently banned from flying near Washington, D.C.’s airport on the route where an airliner and an Army helicopter collided in midair.
WASHINGTON -- Helicopters will be permanently ... and emergency medical services. The Army Black Hawk involved in the January crash belonged to the 12th Aviation Battalion based at Davison Army ...
A partial ban on military helicopters flying into Ronald Reagan National Airport in Washington D.C. is being recommended by ...
The agency says the approved helicopter route is too close to the approach to the runway where an American Eagle plane was attempting to land in January.