Washington DC Midair Collision: Bodies Recovery Efforts, Investigation Findings - What We Know So Far
(MENAFN- Live Mint) A tragic midair collision between an American airlines passenger jet and a US army helicopter near Washington D.C.'s Reagan National Airport on Wednesday night has claimed the lives of all 67 people on board . The incident, which sent both aircraft crashing into the Potomac River, marks the deadliest air disaster in the US in more than two decades. As investigators work to determine the cause, recovery efforts are ongoing, and authorities are piecing together the final moments leading up to the crash . Here's what we know so far.
Recovery efforts underway
By Friday afternoon, recovery teams had retrieved 41 bodies, with 28 positively identified. Authorities have informed 18 families about their loved ones' deaths. Search efforts are ongoing to locate the remaining victims and debris.
Investigation underway
Federal investigators are analysing communication between air traffic controllers and both aircraft. A key question is whether the Army helicopter was flying above its authorized 200-foot altitude. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth confirmed that the Army will review flight data before drawing conclusions.
Investigators have recovered the cockpit voice recorder and flight data recorder from the plane, as well as the Black Hawk's black box . Authorities are working to extract and analyze the data. Interviews with air traffic controllers have begun, with at least one controller already providing testimony to the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB).
Victims of the crash
Among the 67 victims were members of the Skating Club of Boston returning from the 2025 US Figure Skating Championships. Notable victims included teenage figure skaters Jinna Han and Spencer Lane, their mothers, and Russian-born coaches Evgenia Shishkova and Vadim Naumov, the 1994 world pairs skating champions. Also aboard were a group of hunters returning from Kansas, nine students and parents from Fairfax County, Virginia, four steamfitters from Maryland, and two Chinese nationals. The plane's captain was identified as Jonathan Campos, 34.
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