Dive teams worked in rough conditions on the Potomac River to raise several pieces of the American Airlines jet ...
Almost a week after a helicopter and airplane collision in Washington killed 67 people, investigators are still at work as salvage crews pull out chunks of aircraft.
Wind gusts and tidal conditions could slow operations today as officials try to pull wreckage from the icy Potomac River.
The pieces of wreckage recovered Tuesday were lifted by a crane and placed onto a barge with other parts recovered from the ...
All 67 victims killed in the helicopter and plane collision have been recovered from the Potomac River, the Unified Command ...
The wreckage from both the plane and the helicopter will be taken to a hangar to be examined as part of the investigation ...
Ian Epstein, a flight attendant who died last week in a mid-air collision between an American Airlines plane and a military ...
Two employees with the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority are facing stiff consequences for allegedly leaking ...
Crews in Washington, DC, working at the site of the deadliest aviation disaster in a generation are balancing two important ...
As a salvage team continues to work in cold winter conditions to lift debris from the frigid water, key questions into the ...
A midair collision between an Army helicopter and an American Airlines flight from Kansas has killed all 67 people aboard the two aircraft ...