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Fifty-five of the 67 victims recovered from midair collision in DC

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February 03, 2025
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Fifty-five of the 67 victims recovered from midair collision in DC

Families of victims of the deadliest US air disaster since 2001 visited the crash site and divers scoured the submerged wreckage for more remains as authorities said they've recovered and identified 55 of the 67 people killed.

Washington, DC Fire and EMS Chief John Donnelly said officials were confident all would be found. Divers are working diligently to locate remains as crews prepare to lift wreckage from the chilly Potomac River near Reagan National Airport as early as Monday morning, Donnelly said at a news conference.

Colonel Francis B. Pera of the Army Corps of Engineers said divers and salvage workers are adhering to strict protocols and will halt work on moving debris if a body is found. The "dignified recovery" of remains takes precedence over all else, he said.

"Reuniting those lost in this tragic incident is really what keeps us all going," Pera said. "We've got teams that have been working this effort since the beginning, and we’re committed to making this happen."

Portions of the two aircraft that collided over the river on Thursday — an American Airlines jet with 64 people aboard and an Army Black Hawk helicopter with three people aboard — will be loaded onto flatbed trucks and taken to a hangar for further investigation.

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Search and rescue efforts are seen around a wreckage site in the Potomac River from Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport (Source: Associated Press)

Donnelly, Pera and other officials spoke hours after dozens of people who lost loved ones in the crash arrived in buses with a police escort to the Potomac River bank near where the two aircraft came to rest after colliding. The jet, en route from Wichita, Kansas, was about to land. The Black Hawk was on a training mission. There were no survivors.

Federal investigators were working to piece together the events that led to the collision.

The National Transportation Safety Board, which is leading the probe, didn't hold a press briefing overnight but did release a photograph showing investigators on a small boat looking at wreckage and another of them examining a flight data recorder.

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy on Sunday said he wanted to leave federal investigators space to conduct their inquiry. But he posed a range of questions about the crash while appearing on morning TV news programmes.

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy speaks in the James Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House. (Source: Associated Press)

"What was happening inside the towers? Were they understaffed?… The position of the Black Hawk, the elevation of the Black Hawk, were the pilots of the Black Hawk wearing night vision goggles?" Duffy asked on CNN.

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Army Staff Sergeant Ryan Austin O’Hara, 28, of Lilburn, Georgia; Chief Warrant Officer 2 Andrew Loyd Eaves, 39, of Great Mills, Maryland; and Captain Rebecca M. Lobach, of Durham, North Carolina, were in the helicopter.

The plane's passengers included skaters returning from the 2025 US Figure Skating Championships in Wichita and a group of hunters returning from a guided trip.

The NTSB said Saturday that preliminary data showed conflicting readings about the altitudes of the airliner and the helicopter.

Investigators also said that about a second before impact, the jet’s flight recorder showed a change in its pitch. But they did not say whether that change in angle meant that pilots were trying an evasive maneuver to avoid the crash.

Data from the jet's flight recorder showed its altitude as 99m, plus or minus 7.6m, when the crash happened, NTSB officials told reporters. Data in the control tower, though, showed the Black Hawk at 61m, the maximum allowed altitude for helicopters in the area.

The discrepancy has yet to be explained.

Investigators said they hoped to reconcile the difference with data from the helicopter’s black box, which was taking more time to retrieve because it became waterlogged after the Black Hawk plunged into the river. They also said they planned to refine the tower data, which could be less reliable.

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"This is a complex investigation," investigator in charge Brice Banning said. "There are a lot of pieces here."

Banning said the jet’s cockpit voice recorder captured sound moments before the crash.

"The crew had a verbal reaction," Banning said, and the flight data recorder showed "the airplane beginning to increase its pitch. Sounds of impact were audible about one second later, followed by the end of the recording".

Full NTSB investigations typically take at least a year, though investigators hope to have a preliminary report within 30 days.

NTSB member Todd Inman said he has spent hours meeting with victims' families. The families are struggling, he said.

"Some wanted to give us hugs. Some are just mad and angry," Inman said. "They are just all hurt. And they still want answers, and we want to give them answers."

More than 300 responders were taking part in the recovery effort at a given time, officials said. Two Navy salvage barges were also deployed to lift heavy wreckage.

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On Fox News, Duffy said the Federal Aviation Administration was looking into staffing in the Reagan Airport control tower.

Investigators said there were five controllers on duty at the time of the crash: a local controller, ground controller, assistant controller, a supervisor and supervisor in training.

According to an FAA report obtained by The Associated Press, one controller was responsible for helicopter and plane traffic. Those duties are often divided between two people but the airport typically combined them at 9:30pm (local time), once traffic slowed down. On Thursday, the tower supervisor combined them earlier, which the report called "not normal".

"Staffing shortages for air traffic control has been a major problem for years and years," Duffy said, promising that President Donald Trump's administration would address shortages with "bright, smart, brilliant people in towers controlling airspace".

With the nation already grieving, an air ambulance crashed in Philadelphia on Friday, killing all six people on board, including a child returning home to Mexico from treatment, and at least one person on the ground.

First responders work the scene after a small plane crashed in Philadelphia. (Source: Associated Press)

Also Friday, the FAA heavily restricted helicopter traffic around Reagan National, hours after Trump claimed on social media that the Army helicopter had been flying higher than allowed.

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"It was far above the 200-foot limit. That’s not really too complicated to understand, is it???" Trump wrote on Truth Social.

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Thursday's crash was the deadliest in the US since November 12, 2001, when a jet slammed into a residential neighbourhood in the New York City borough of Queens just after takeoff from Kennedy Airport. The crash killed all 260 people on board and five people on the ground.

Experts regularly stressed that plane travel was overwhelmingly safe, but the crowded airspace around Reagan National could challenge even the most experienced pilots.